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Party pros

DJ Lupe Loop and Paul Dailey
By DAVID DAY  |  September 6, 2007

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DJ Lupe Loop

Paul Dailey, "20th Anniversary Mix" (mp3)
Weekend Warriors, or WKND WRYRZ, is the Sunday-night lounge party at ZuZu in Central Square. And DJs TYRONE TANOUS, CLAUDE MONEY, and the UNDISCO KID, would be hard-pressed to find a crew to match their eclectic lounge mastery. But they did.

DJ LUPE LOOP shared the decks with the guys August 26. The Brooklynite (real name: Kathleen Cholewka) plays in the faux French band Les Sans Culottes as Edith Pissoff. Her DJ name is inspired by Cuban music legend La Lupe, and in an age of laptop DJ mixing, she plays strictly vinyl. “I’m nuts for it, I still am. I don’t go to the gym, I lift boxes of records. But believe me, the other day I came out into my living room and thought, ‘What am I doing with these?’ ” Lupe Loop’s vintage style fits right into the Sunday-night scene at ZuZu, which resurrects wax weekly. “I DJ everything, late-’60s/early-’70s Latin music, rock to ska to disco. I’m a total disco nut, I’m totally into that. But it all flows, it’s all a groove. One night after DJing, this guy came up and said, ‘I don’t know how you got from salsa to Dreamboat Annie, but you did, and that’s amazing.’ ”

On this particular night, Cholewka spins after Tanous, who has dropped the System’s “Don’t Disturb This Groove.” She goes from that electronic R&B jam into — what else — Gentle Giant. “I err on the side of liking everything. I like to be the spirit of the party . . . but I also like to impose my taste a little bit. Every time you listen to a DJ, you should learn something.”

Her record bag is very much an indication of her eclecticism — everything from reggae disco to French yé-yé. Her look, a fashionably tight black lace dress, is also right at home among the chic Sunday-night crowd at ZuZu. “I’ve been going out to clubs in New York City since I was 16. I like to keep it on an international funk tip, but expect the unexpected.” Practically the motto for Weekend Warriors.

“DJing is more about sociology than mixology,” says PAUL DAILEY via e-mail. “Good DJs sense other people’s tastes and value them as much as their own. A great DJ can read a dance floor like a book and pull out a song that exactly fits the place they’ve reached in tonight’s story.”

Dailey is writing to “Up All Day” on the eve of his 20th year DJing. He is Boston’s most successful techno DJ, with regular gigs all over the country, a satellite radio show, and a residency at Rise. “Unless you get very lucky, it is hard to make a career out of DJing and dance music. I decided that the best route for me was to work hard at my day job and then only take gigs doing what I love.”

Dailey was not always a techno DJ. He started out, as many DJs do, playing mostly hip-hop, and he mentions Edo G and EPMD as early faves. “I grew bored with the same old thing week after week. I got to play in London back in 1993, and the next night Carl Cox played in Brixton, and it just blew my mind. I knew at that point techno was what I wanted to play.”

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Related: Wired for sound, The Bladerunners, Techno or yes, part II, More more >
  Topics: New England Music News , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Hip-Hop and Rap,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY DAVID DAY
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  •   DAY BY DAY BY DAY  |  September 18, 2007
    Two years ago, the Phoenix asked me to write a weekly column about Boston’s growing electronic music and DJ scene.
  •   THE DUFF CONNECTION  |  September 12, 2007
    “I really haven’t had to deal with any crazy paparazzi, since we usually keep a low profile and sneak in the back door of places.”
  •   BASSTOWN NIGHTS  |  September 12, 2007
    If 2006 was the year Boston germinated, 2007 is the year it grows up.
  •   PARTY PROS  |  September 06, 2007
    Weekend Warriors, or WKND WRYRZ, is the Sunday-night lounge party at ZuZu in Central Square.
  •   CITIZENS OF BASSTOWN  |  August 29, 2007
    The proliferation of dance parties in Boston has led not only to a rise in the number of DJs but also to a growth in the ranks of dancers.

 See all articles by: DAVID DAY

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