Hi-Fidelity mobile DJ services

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Experienced DJ, PA systems. Corporate events & Private parties. We have experience across all ages, genres & event planning. Our Equipment is the finest.

We love what we do which infuses this energy into your family, Friends & Guests. Our musical knowledge with an unsurpassed vast library gets everyone up on the dance floor. We have done many weddings, corporate events, Holiday parties, festivals, biker gigs, beach parties, backyard Crawfish boils Even psychedelic paties to take Boomers back to the days of the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane & th

Photos 01/16/2026

Jayne Mansfield at the Whisky a Go Go, c.1964. Photograph by Julian Wasser.

07/21/2023

I mean… 🤷🏻‍♂️

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“Don’t Throw Your Love On Me So Strong” 
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Duke Robillard: “The kind of guitar T-Bone used was a Gibson ES5, a big one, an arch-type guitar with three pickups. It’s got a sound unlike any other. It was probably the first Gibson guitar with a pickup, now known as the Charlie Christian pickup. I think a big part of T-Bone’s sound is because he played that kind of guitar, an acoustic guitar amplified. From that you can get a lot of tonal colorings just by where you pick. 
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T-Bone may pick one phrase down by the neck, and for accent for another he may go up by the bridge. Guitar players today don’t do that at all, not in rock, anyway—none of the guitar players that I’ve heard in twenty years. Today the effects are almost all electronic, and something gets left out. 
Besides, T-Bone was really the first to use sustain, which all guitarists use today, but electronically—that is, by feedback. He had a way of strumming a chord—like when he’d go from one change to another in a blues, from r to the 4, say. If he used an A-flat, he might hit a D and then slide down to a B-flat and have the guitar up loud enough so that it would ring and the note would carry. The chord would carry enough to give it the effect of a whole horn section. 
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On his early records it sounds beautiful, two or three saxophones and maybe a trumpet, and T-Bone playing those chords. He was the first to do that, I think, though a million guitar players thought of doing it after. 
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Something different about T-Bone, something original, was the way he held the guitar. It takes some getting used to at first, but it’s a comfortable way of playing. When you hold the guitar out from yourself, like he did, against your chest, your hand just rests on the strings, and it seems good. You get a real loose feeling. T-Bone was a great influence on other guys, especially the way he worked the guitar in with the lyrics he sang. That had a definite influence on B. B. King, I feel sure. “

-Stormy Monday: The T-Bone Walker Story
By Helen Oakley Dance
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#tbonewalker 
#dukerobillard 
#bbking
#gibsonguitarse 
#dontthrowyourloveonmesostrong 
#helenoakleydance 
#blueshitbigtown 07/21/2023

. . . “Don’t Throw Your Love On Me So Strong” . . . Duke Robillard: “The kind of guitar T-Bone used was a Gibson ES5, a big one, an arch-type guitar with three pickups. It’s got a sound unlike any other. It was probably the first Gibson guitar with a pickup, now known as the Charlie Christian pickup. I think a big part of T-Bone’s sound is because he played that kind of guitar, an acoustic guitar amplified. From that you can get a lot of tonal colorings just by where you pick. . . T-Bone may pick one phrase down by the neck, and for accent for another he may go up by the bridge. Guitar players today don’t do that at all, not in rock, anyway—none of the guitar players that I’ve heard in twenty years. Today the effects are almost all electronic, and something gets left out. Besides, T-Bone was really the first to use sustain, which all guitarists use today, but electronically—that is, by feedback. He had a way of strumming a chord—like when he’d go from one change to another in a blues, from r to the 4, say. If he used an A-flat, he might hit a D and then slide down to a B-flat and have the guitar up loud enough so that it would ring and the note would carry. The chord would carry enough to give it the effect of a whole horn section. . . On his early records it sounds beautiful, two or three saxophones and maybe a trumpet, and T-Bone playing those chords. He was the first to do that, I think, though a million guitar players thought of doing it after. . . Something different about T-Bone, something original, was the way he held the guitar. It takes some getting used to at first, but it’s a comfortable way of playing. When you hold the guitar out from yourself, like he did, against your chest, your hand just rests on the strings, and it seems good. You get a real loose feeling. T-Bone was a great influence on other guys, especially the way he worked the guitar in with the lyrics he sang. That had a definite influence on B. B. King, I feel sure. “ -Stormy Monday: The T-Bone Walker Story By Helen Oakley Dance . . . #tbonewalker #dukerobillard #bbking #gibsonguitarse #dontthrowyourloveonmesostrong #helenoakleydance #bluesh*tbigtown

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