Tag Archives: CHERYL

CHERYL: ALIEN

Awwwww yeeeah, the delightful cats of CHERYL have asked me to spin at their next party! Check it out.

cherylalienforweb-465x607

From them:

Your rusty pickup rattles down the highway. The sky is orange. You pull into Buckaroos, the local watering hole, where a dad-band is jamming on an extended version of “Comfortably Numb” while couples lasciviously and drunkenly grind on one another. There is a man standing stoically, holding a leash attached to his monstrous, equally stoic dog. There is a woman at the bar with Tammy Faye eyes, her arm around a cowboy with a melted face. Two exotic dancers, a tribal man with a rooster head and a girl with webbed fingers, dance on a pedestal for nobody. The entire place reeks of sincerity and earnestness. There is a total, otherworldly lack of sarcasm.

You are an alien in this desert land.

Suddenly, you receive the long-awaited dispatch from the planet-island of Go-Go (located in a portal in the middle of the River Gowanus). Your captain is finally requesting your presence on THE SHIP with the big-headed, big-eyed GREY CHERYL.

An infinite beam of luminous, cheap, fawn-colored hair violently juts through the clouds and coils around your legs, dragging you skyward, upside down, at light speed. Once through the atmosphere, as weightlessness sets in, the mother ship comes into view behind the moon: a giant droplet of blood hovering silently in space. As you approach the giant, smooth red spacecraft, a portal opens in its side. The GREY CHERYL appears, greeting you with Go-Go’s customary gift of shoulder pads and glitter. Your mission is complete.

Thank God, you think. Give me an invasive autopsy, stat.

TRUST NO ONE.

TRUST CHERYL.

Saturday May 18, 2013
11pm to 4am
Public Assembly Loft (N.6th St) Brooklyn

RESIDENT DJ Nick
SPECIAL GUEST DJ Fake Money

$5 all night long

 FACEBOOK EVENT IS HERE.

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CHERYL: My Super-Sweet Sweatsuit Semi-Formal

This Saturday the 29th I will be in the awesome position of spinning some rad loud tunes at THIS PARTY.

CHERYL throws one of the best dance parties around. This month is certain to be no exception. It’s five bucks before midnight ($10 after), it’s at a great venue (the Bell House) and the people are amazing. Get suited up and come break a sweat with us!

If you’re not familiar with the CHERYL phenomenon, check out their latest video here or the totally entertaining archives here.

sweatpant

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The Party Whip

I spent a good portion of my late teens installing ridiculously loud stereos in my car on a tight budget. I recently got to dust off some of these dormant skills to make the magic happen in the back of the Cheryl party van, now quite possibly the coolest Dodge Caravan in Brooklyn.

This thing sounds amazing. CHERYL are going to be throwing mobile flashmob style dance parties around NYC for the rest of the summer and for the rest of your short but totally-memorable life. Follow them on Twitter to receive updates about when they’re heading out and where they’re going to be. Throw some glitter, get sweaty, make a new friend, rinse, repeat.

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BEING A DJ IS EASY

So, why don’t you try it?


(photo: Maro Hagopian)

Okay. CHERYL is an awesome, fun, super-inclusive, very successful monthly dance party at the Bell House in Brooklyn. It’s my favorite place to get down. I know Nick, Cheryl’s resident DJ, and we’ve talked tunes a few times. Our tastes don’t always line up but I’ll always give his recommendations a shot because I trust him. Dude has a strong compass–he listens a lot and only plays music that he thinks is amazing. There are a few common threads, but enough outliers that I’ll never be able to make a reliable prediction about his setlist. And there are always a few that I sit out. I don’t always have to like what the DJ is doing to appreciate what they’re going for. Sometimes it works, sometimes it fails and invariably there will be people who disagree. And I’m not even touching on the subject of transitions and beatmatching and DJ nerdery here, I’m speaking strictly of good taste and good instincts. Nick’s got ‘em. The DJ curates the dancefloor all evening. He’s got a huge role in crafting the experience for the night. He’s got to take risks if he wants to keep things interesting, and balance it with a healthy serving of the comfortable-and-familiar. If I’m committing my Saturday night out to dancing and getting stupid and and loose, I’d like to trust that the DJ is going to be good to me, not waste my time, show me some new things, get creative with context, tell a good story with a beginning, middle and end, provide some dynamics and some surprises and keep the floor engaged. It’s a daunting task, when you think about it: a given night only happens once, and you’re expected to act as a filter for this vast and constantly growing catalog of The Music that Exists In The World you’ve got to handpick and artfully present a few dozen tracks that will define everyone’s evening. Of course there are happy accidents, of course we can play it loose and shoot from the hip, and the people who want to have fun will always find a way. But it’s a service, and just like a great waitress can do a great deal to improve your breakfast experience and a bad one can do a lot to ruin it, a DJ whose heart is in it has a lot to think about. A great waitress can spill my drink and mess up my order and still make me smile and tip generously, and a great DJ can make some questionable decisions or have a trainwreck and hopefully not have the whole room turn mutinous if he’s taken the time to earn their trust. It’s easy, right? A DJ is just a dude with some headphones and records like a painter is just a dude in a dirty smock. You might not think what they do is difficult, but you’ll know when it sucks.

I remember hearing this old story, I think it was about Larry Levan, who played Taana Gardner’s “Heartbeat” when it was new, in the middle of one of these legendary club nights and completely cleared the fucking floor with it. His response? He played it again, and again and again, saying “Listen, y’all aren’t going to hear anything else until you get up and dance to this shit. It’s hot, and it’s new, and I’m here to make you understand it.” And people got into it, and remembered it, and it’s a classic, and it’s been sampled by everyone everywhere and you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone saying Fuck That Track. In 2012, “Heartbeat” is not a risky move. Playing Miley Cyrus at 4am is a risky move. (And yeah, now people know it and love it expect it because it’s a signature track and it wouldn’t be a Cheryl without it. See how that works?)

Not every track is going to be a 5-alarm banger, and some of the best stuff won’t appeal to you right away. Sitting around criticizing the DJ is like fucking with your underwear on–you’re not going to catch anything but you’re probably not going to get off, either. For me the “this is a room full of cool people in great costumes, they come here every month and they get excited and creative and they make out with each other and they always leave happy, and perhaps I should try a little harder to get into this groove and explore what it’s about instead of immediately dismissing things that don’t grab me in the first fifteen seconds” factor has led me to appreciate a lot of music I never used to care for. There’s still some stuff that I just don’t get, but that’s fine–you gotta piss and grab a drink sometimes.

CHERYL still has my vote.

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