person who plays recorded music for an audience
A disc jockey is a person who plays recorded music for an audience, typically at events like radio stations, clubs, or parties. They matter because they help shape what music people hear and enjoy, acting as a curator of sound for their listeners.
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DJ Pete Rock performing at Rahzel and Friends – Brooklyn Bowl, 2016 DJ booth in a nightclub, consisting of three CDJs (top), three turntables for vinyl records and a DJ mixer
A disc jockey, more commonly abbreviated as DJ, is a person who plays recorded music for an audience. Types of DJs include radio DJs (who host programs on music radio stations), club DJs (who work at nightclubs or music festivals), mobile DJs (who are hired to work at public and private events such as weddings, parties, or festivals), and turntablists (who use record players, usually turntables, to manipulate sounds on phonograph records). Originally, the "disc" in "disc jockey" referred to shellac and later vinyl records, but nowadays DJ is used as an all-encompassing term to also describe persons who mix music from other recording media such as cassettes, CDs or digital audio files on a CDJ, controller, or even a laptop. DJs may adopt the title "DJ" in front of their real names, adopted pseudonyms, or stage names.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).