Marcel Woods to hang up the headphones

Ikoda

Well-Known Member
Marcel Woods says goodbye

There is a time for everything, and this is the time to announce that I’m retiring from DJ’ing and producing. Despite the love I always felt and still feel for my profession, I’m hanging up my headphones. Becoming a first-time father in 2011 was a turning point for me: I didn’t feel the urge anymore to constantly travel to faraway places. Don’t get me wrong: I’m very thankful for the level of sophistication that this extreme ‘hobby’ provided me with. Travelling the world to play my music lead me to the most beautiful places and taught me what this planet looks and feels like. But constantly crossing the continents is killing for your social life as well. When my wife and me were ‘just the two of us’, we were able to make that work. Birthdays, weddings, other parties; I simply wasn’t there... Party-time enough during my work weekends, right? Whenever it was possible, my wife Kuintje simply joined me on those moments.

Undoubtedly, the majority doesn’t know that I've been working on my music together with Wouter Janssen (who forms the duo Showtek with his brother Sjoerd) since 2000. In the background, I was already helping them out when decisions had to be taken on their careers and when things didn’t work out anymore between the brothers and their former booking agency, they asked me to step forward. Well, long story short: when I do something, I always give my all and this resulted in the start of 2-Dutch Agency and my role as an artist manager / booking agent. The combination of being CEO of 2-Dutch and travelling the world as Marcel Woods quickly bore fruit. All fell into place, resulting in a rapid growth of our company. The team we have formed here is fantastic and things are going very well.
Taking all of this in account, I suddenly was wearing a lot of badges: DJ / Producer / Husband / Father / Booker / Artist Manager / A&R of some record labels and of course keeping up with the daily affairs of 2-Dutch.

The last 18 months, I consciously slowly moved Marcel Woods to the background, resulting in fewer releases, interviews , podcasts and of course performances . Until I reached the unavoidable question: how do I want to continue this career? Well, not long ago, one morning my sweet daughter Sterre showed me the answer when I wanted to go to the office:
"Daddy, are you going to work ? Yes honey, Daddy is on his way to work. In another country, Daddy? No sweetie, Daddy is going to the office today. Oh that’s nice, otherwise Daddy will miss us, right?"
Hereby, I think I’ve made myself clear. Because indeed, Daddy missed you and your little brother and Mommy a lot when he was away. And when you and your little brother Zeb grow up and read back this letter on the Internet, you will understand that sometimes in life you face difficult decisions. I know that I have just made the right one.

P.S. Even if you won’t be hearing new releases or DJ sets with contemporary music anymore, I can and will not completely let go of my profession and will therefore sporadically tear down a party with the classics concept " Bring Back The Music".

https://www.facebook.com/marcelwoods/posts/10152523130279744?fref=nf
 
is this a big deal in the world of trance? is she still a big DJ? i recognise his name from the early 2000's.....
 
Not really been Trance for awhile, went down that 'electro' route that Tiesto and others have done.
 
ah, ok.

i was working at a trance show the other Saturday - the Gareth Emery album tour show in Manchester.....that your sort of thing mate?
 
ah, ok.

i was working at a trance show the other Saturday - the Gareth Emery album tour show in Manchester.....that your sort of thing mate?

How was it? The Albert Hall right?
Emery isn't so great in my books, but I believe Kearney played that night as well, who I do rate quite highly.
 
yeah...it was ok, not my thing musically at all really. The thing that i noticed most of all was the total and complete lack of 'warm up'. each DJ from the start (8.30 by the way!) just smashed it out! because of that i felt it was a bit strange because there was no musical direction to the night...

on the positive side the production was different level! Again, im not that into huge led screens, CO2 cannons etc - but if you like that sort of thing it was brilliant for you.

Bryan Kearney played late on - after Emery (who by way - playing only 1 and three quarter hours at your own night - very poor i thought!) and i thought that Kearney was the best DJ on the evening, playing more of a sound that i associate with the word 'trance'. Not old trance records as such, but a more mellower sound than what had gone before.
 
yeah...it was ok, not my thing musically at all really. The thing that i noticed most of all was the total and complete lack of 'warm up'. each DJ from the start (8.30 by the way!) just smashed it out! because of that i felt it was a bit strange because there was no musical direction to the night...

on the positive side the production was different level! Again, im not that into huge led screens, CO2 cannons etc - but if you like that sort of thing it was brilliant for you.

Bryan Kearney played late on - after Emery (who by way - playing only 1 and three quarter hours at your own night - very poor i thought!) and i thought that Kearney was the best DJ on the evening, playing more of a sound that i associate with the word 'trance'. Not old trance records as such, but a more mellower sound than what had gone before.

Kearney can be go in different directions, he tends to actually read the crowd. His extended sets (seen him play four hours before) are a proper journey.
Trance, in general... the warmup DJ doesn't exist so much these days for those kind of events. Also depends who is on warm up. If it's a 'known name' they will play only their own productions, which never have that warmup sound.

It's something I'm trying to keep hold of with my own night. Warm up, build up to headliner(s), then a closing DJ to finish the place off.
That's the kind of journey I like for Transcend.
 
Back
Top