SILENT DISCO
Welcome to the world of
ethical clubbing where headphone parties -everyone with a headphone listens to
the same music while grooving to it together -are taking over
Imagine everyone around you dancing
at a wedding but no neighbour being disturbed with loud music. Every guest is
wearing his or her personal headphone as the DJ plays the music. Instead of a
loudspeaker forcing your whole neighbourhood to be unwilling guests, you just
have your invited guests grooving. Well, there's still some time to go before
it becomes everyday reality, but Indian gaana-bajaana weddings apart, `quiet
clubbing' or `silent disco' as a concept is becoming quite popular in India.
From Kasuali, where DJ Paras plays in a silent disco to IIT, Mumbai's rocking
Techfest, to two silent discos at Palolem Beach, Goa, it's a new rage.
BUT, BUT... WHAT DOES IT MEAN
At a silent disco, you hear the
music on wireless headphones. There are no speakers, music is broadcast via an
FM-transmitter with the signal being picked up by wireless headphone receivers
worn by the participants. Those without the headphones hear no music, giving
the effect of a room full of people dancing to nothing. Often two DJs compete
for listeners.
As noise curfews become
sanctimonious, the rise of silent discos around India and the world is becoming
the next big thing.DJs Uri and Daniel Haaksman have been silently bringing the
silent disco revolution in India. Says DJ Kiran, “The concept works brilliantly
as it gives partyhoppers freedom from noise police. There's no external sound,
the feel is very loungy, music is techno, hip-hop, anything that you fancy. And
if you feel like striking a conversation, just remove the headphones.“
Says Dave, of Silent Noise, which
organises headphone parties around India, “We have organised silent disco
parties in Delhi, clubs of Bangalore, Chennai, Indore, college fests, and yes,
even at a few farmhouse weddings! Headphone partygoers love the individuality
of music, they feel as if the music is playing especially for them.“
DID YOU JUST SAY `SILENT INDIAN
WEDDING MUSIC'
At Pooja Arora and Pankaj
Bhatnagar's wedding sangeet in their Mehrauli farmhouse, near Delhi, guests
walked into a silent disco setting.Flashy neon lights, and silence! No
loudspeakers, no dhol and dhamaka. Everyone had headphones, the three DJs
changed the music, you could change the headphone channel to whichever DJ's
music you preferred at that moment. To someone without headphones, the scene
looked weird. Everyone seemed to be in a trance, dancing to silence! Says
Arora, “I had attended a headphone party in Goa, so I wanted to have the same
party at my wedding. I wanted my wedding sangeet to go on till 3 in the morning
and since there's a restriction after 10 pm, this was the perfect way to stage
the sangeet.“
You could have a headphone party
anywhere without disturbing anyone: on the beach, in the forest, on the
mountains, under the moonlight, in parks.
ETHICAL CLUBBING YOU SAID? OKAY
THEN...
The trend started in Europe and has
been a big hit at summer music festivals such as Glastonbury and Reading. DJ
Justin Ma son's headphone parties that originally started in Goa, are now being
held from Manali to Chennai.
He says, “Silent discos have given a
new edge to nightlife.“ Ravinder Singh recently hosted a silent disco party in
Ludhiana: “We didn't have to stop the music till 5 am in the morning. It's an
eth ical way to party, you don't disturb anyone. Neon lights, three channels of
music by three DJS, and night long dancing. It was the ultimate party.“
Nona Walia
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TL5JUL15
1 comment:
Very nice post. Goa even after being the smallest state, ranked on top for the best quality of life in India. It is a famous tourist destination and a trip to Goa is incomplete without the nightlife and disco in Goa.
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