DJ AM Passed

Originally Posted by Lrrr

Originally Posted by Ninjasonik

How did BFO die?
eek.gif

he had a heart attack
while he was deep sea diving i believe.


it was on the local news here
frown.gif





R.I.P. AM you were always one
pimp.gif
dj with one
pimp.gif
sneaker collection.
 
Originally Posted by CasperJr

Originally Posted by McL0vin

Some of ya'll r really just straight disrespectful. If any1 of ur family members died u wouldn't want ppl sayin "oh well he od'd on drugs" "he just survived a plane crash" "its his own fault"

R.I.P DJ AM
no one is being disrespectful its just the truth hurt and the truth is he did it to himself god gave him a 2nd chance and he blow it yes pun
U don't know the circumstances under which he had to live his life. U don't know the truth just like no one else does. Lets just give ourprayers and condolences to his friends and family and give him the benefit of the doubt. He deserves it
 
Originally Posted by lilpro4u

There are a lot of ignorant, crumby asss kids on here.
smh.gif


RIP to AM


QFMFT!!!!!!!!! Ban me if need be but there are a lot of ignorant SOBs on here not only unnecessarily speaking ill of the dead but talking @++ they know nothingabout. Myself (digdug), Ben, Homicide and a few fortunate others were blessed by G-D to make this mans acquaintance and in one way or another he touched ourlives in a way you S^% talking bastards could'nt even begin to comprehend. This man was pure 100% GOOD no matter what you are reading or choose to believeor what BS you choose to spew out your ignorant mouths. Just like him, we ALL have our demons. PLEASE BELIEVE, the world was a better place with Adam Goldsteinin it and its a bit darker now hes gone. Diplo put it best (but allow me to modify a bit) DJs and PEOPLE have a ceiling....Adam "DJ AM" GoldsteinLived on the roof.... RIP to my main Homejew, youre deeply missed already
 
Posted from Okayplayer:

[h1]Stepping Til The A.M., R.I.P. DJ AM[/h1]
Posted on 08/30/2009
i was one of those grumpy quasi music experts who dismissed neo
electronica as mindless cocaine drivel.
a means to get your inner sharon stone on in the middle of the club
body rock on.
no merit whatsovever.
i made my disdain vocal back then.
thank god.
withouth it i woulda never met my friend adam goldstein.


without getting uber dramatic about it i will say that of all the dj's
that i've encountered
in my life (i could write a bajillion paragraphs on flash, jay, jeff,
cash, cosmic kev, primo, muro, kon, amir, king britt, medina, and
cosmo) i believe its safe to say that adam's influence has infected me
the most.

why?

he truly taught me the art of taking risks.

we first met at a maxim superbowl party in 2005. as usual i was
shocked that he was in awe and happy to see me. he told me of his
philly roots and INSTANTLY stopped his uber pulsed 130 bpm electronic
fest that at that point even i will admit had me even hypnotized
--well this being my first type of party of this stature in which ever
cliche was going on around me on some sex, drugs, rock n roll
+++------to start playing....real hip hop?

i yelled "no man! dont do that for my benefit! do you see that 5 girl
make out fest on the floor? put that Daft back on man!!"

he laughed at me. "its past 1am....their already warmed up"

i didn't get it but he taught me the 1am rule. he said you spend the
first two hours in foreplay "warming them up"---but the second that
1am arrives (presuming the crowd has um....."warmed up" at the bar and
whatnot") THIS is when you establish your legend. you take risks and
you use their vulnerable state to truly establish an imprint in their
memory bank.

that night i was jaw dropped at how this mofo found a common thread
between michael jackson, herbie hancock, alan thicke's "different
strokes theme", a diplo Seinfeld remix and james brown.

that night changed my life forever.

and im not the only dj to tell this story.

those not in the know can scoff "blah blah nicole ritche all they
want"---dude was a maverick in the highest order.

i changed my entire approach to djing and my approach to how i
listened to music. yes you've heard me use that quip before when
describing the late great j dilla as well. but that is using all music
to create music. now i have to use all my knowledge of music to SHARE
music.

i mean of course i love the andy griffith theme...but how do i make it
work in a club context?

see! you have adam to thank all those times you've heard me go from:

-a breakbeat sample
-the song that used that sample
-a jazz song from the 40s
-some commercial +++ i would never imagine in a bajillion years
playing 10 years ago
-some crazy underground +++ you aint up on
-some rock +++ that my 80s patrons remember their big sibbling
listening to back in the day
-some funk jam their aunt and uncle played at the bar b que
-some real hip hop
-some disco song....

i mean i can go on and on and on.....i started treating records like
they were 10,000 piece puzzles that i had to assemble the right way in
order for you to have a good time....

before i just showed up and played whatever. never giving a thought to
a strategy.

now i spend a minimum of 20 hours days before testing and prepping
each step i take at the booth.

how can i shock em?
how can i move em?
how can i make em say "YO MAN HE IS MY FAVORITE DUDE ON TURNTABLES?!"
how can i match that night at the maxim party that i first saw DJ AM?

---adam was a humble man.

he loved music.
we aimed for hours sharing treats.
he was NEVER stingy with sharing his records and music with me
he put his money where his mouth was: i knew alot of cats who get the
spotlight and never use that moment to enlighten someone.

the fact that he used that light to bring aboard his mentor dj jazzy
jeff WITH him to introduce jeff to a whole nother audience is an
INCREDIBLE GESTURE.

he was a stand up dude. he spoke of his health issues that he had when
he was younger and sometimes we just spoke on +++ having nada to do
with the latest kanye remix or a breakbeat.

that dude was one of my favorite teachers. with the exception of dj
jazzy jeff, you will rarely to NEVER catch me in the club unless i
have to dj myself. but EVERYTIME he was in town i came to learn.

this is a sad sad sad painfully sad loss.

peace be with his family and friends and all who loved him.

-one love ad.

?uesto
 
Originally Posted by Caliking03

Originally Posted by TheTrapezeSwinger


What a hypocrite
5962525ef0fba8e68e860837f178490038cbc36.gif
obviously he wasn't a recovering user, not when they find prescription drugs by his body
the point of calling one-selves a recovering (note not former) is that they are struggling andfighting every day to stay sober....often times recovering addicts relapse..that's just a fact.
 
some touching words from his peers/friends in the industry. these are all good reads:

Diplo:
im sure that AM had to go day in and day out and negotiate all the music we appreciate for mass consumption, he had good nights and just ok ones..
but he wasnt a radio DJ or a programmer or part of a label . he was a straight up Djs dj, he picked his tracks to play out and had THE STYLE that defines our whole generation like it or not …and even if you didnt like his style (which ranged form deep top 40 to deepest old school hip hop to deepest hipster indy rock.. he would come to your party and do what u do better than you (he did it to me coupla times) he would put tracks out there before they were acceptable and he was always adapting to whatever was goin on.. not because he had to… but because he loved music. ..he was definitely a peoples champ
and in a world that doesnt really seem to care about you - promotors, fareweather friends, rich @*#@%$+$, alcholics, trendsters…. AM carved a whole pie out of it and built a giant empire that little of you even know about. He never ever ever didnt have time to talk to one of his dj homies, each and every one of the small wannabes like me still spoke to him still weekly. How many people do u know DJ wedding partys for billionaires, arenas for Jay z, and djs for roctakons !$!@%+ basment party in manhattan for free and then 20 k the next night.. each day he was still asking me for new music and tellin me how the wierdest of my tracks were starting to pick up momentum….. but.. i never knew how long it would last.
Djs have a ceiling, and Am lived on the roof. he sometimes would tell me a bit about his reservations in passing about his lifestyle and i feel like its a loveless place we all live in (DJs). but i dont think We will ever see another person built for it like AM.. he was THE Michael Jackson of this $#%*. so it really worries me a bit that hes gone , cause hes the only that i thought understood it all… he was a sweetheart and tried his damnest to be the best at it and still be the best at being himself
A-Trak:

http://djatrak.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/dsc01464.jpg


This was the first time I met DJ AM in 2004.

The DJ world just lost one of its brightest shining stars. As I type this less than 2 days after the fact, I'm still in disbelief. Perhaps last fall's plane crash made us all recollect on how much we cared about him, but also made us feel that after such a close brush with death he was now here to stay. I wrote a post about it at the time. It's unbelievably tragic to lose such a talented, kind and generous man just a few months later.

For me personally, AM's passing is a shock on many levels. First of all we lost a friend, and a true stand-up guy. A mensch, as we call them. Anyone who ever met Adam will tell you the same thing: he was such a likable character. Always full of energy and motivation, bursting with an almost child-like liveliness. You felt like this guy was just happy to be doing what he was doing. I've never seen him in a crummy mood. For all the flak that he may have caught over the years, especially with early doubters, I've never heard him say a bad word about anyone. He systematically took the high road, he was consistently humble and knew how to make you feel appreciated. I've rarely received as many compliments from a fellow DJ as from AM. As I type this I wonder if I ever conveyed to him how much I appreciated him not just as a DJ but as I person. I hope I did. We shared the same birthday, March 30th. We also shared a love for bad puns. One time he said "fo' sheez" in a sentence, to which I replied "fo' sheez pizza" (four cheese pizza). It's lousy, but he loved it. Then he kept saying "fo' sheez pizza" to me for years, it was our little joke.

We also lost a phenomenal DJ. Whenever a purist naysayer tried to doubt him, I'd reply: "AM's career is where it is for a reason." My man worked hard. I remember an old (admittedly low-fi) version of what was probably his first website. It had the AC/DC-inspired logo and when your mouse hovered over a button it played the classic Kool Moe Dee sample: "I go to WORK!" That exemplified 2 sides of AM: 1) he wasn't a new jack, he loved the old school, and 2) literally, he worked his %!* off! For some reason, in the DJ-geek community AM wasn't necessarily regarded as a turntablist; maybe because he didn't do the DMC's, maybe because he played jiggy clubs. But watch any DJ that used to do the DMC's play in a regular club and watch AM spin, I guarantee you that Adam freaked his records more. Playing those glitzy Hollywood and Las Vegas clubs is not easy, trust me. This guy was DJ'ing in a hostile territory and managed to play the most fast-paced, scratch-happy, genre-hopping sets you could find. He could have easily settled for spinning the hits, but he used to tell me: "I get bored". So he set the bar higher for himself and never stopped striving. He genuinely loved music and DJing. I remember seeing him play at Studio B in New York back in 2007. The first Kid Sister single had just come out and I went there with her. AM played "Damn Girl" when she and I were on stage and after his set I realized that he neither knew that I produced it nor what Kid Sister looked like. In other words he played the song purely because he liked it, and I took that as the biggest compliment of them all. Often times when I played more commercial clubs I used to hold back on the turntablism and whenever he was there he relentlessly urged me to do a routine. I mean he pushed me until I had to do it! He would grab the mic and tell the crowd "A-Trak didn't want to do a routine but I'm forcing him, you guys need to see this" and really got them psyched! Then he'd do air scratches during my juggles.

The first time he pulled that trick on me was at Avalon in 2007, check him out behind me:



The following picture was taken back in 2005. AM invited both Mixmaster Mike and myself to his house to have a scratch session and he was ecstatic. He filmed me doing my "Go DJ" routine and talked to me about it for years after.



AM was not only a great DJ but also a trailblazer, hands down one of the most important DJs in America and this is a topic that's very dear to me as well. I used to DJ just for the sake of it but in recent years by growing older, by starting Fool's Gold and whatnot, I became more concerned with what has an impact on people culturally, and what drives our scene in North America. AM broke down barriers for other DJs. Just a few years back, playing in the celebrity circles where he originally thrived meant having to play Top 40 records exclusively. But every time AM scratched and every time he played a record from "our scene", something a bit more underground or left-field, he opened his audience's ears and eventually opened the doors for the DJs and producers whose tracks he was playing. This had a tremendous impact for us. Remember when Justice beat Kanye at the European VMA's with "We Are Your Friends"? A couple weeks later I was touring overseas with 'Ye and AM hit me on BBM. He said something to the essence of: "Yo that song that your boy %%$%%$% on is actually killing it at my parties!" I think my first reaction, mentally, was: "no $#%*! It already won a VMA". But then I took a step back and realized how significant it was for him to play that record to the mainstream crowds. The floodgates were just starting to crack.

There's only a handful of DJs that have their own style, and there's definitely such a thing as an "AM set". There's a whole army of DJs who play those sets now, and they're booked by the agency that he launched. I'll even go further and say: there's only a handful of DJs that make kids want to start DJing. AM was without a doubt one of these pioneers in America and his absence leaves a huge gap.

The last time I saw AM was at Hard Fest in LA. He was wearing a Fool's Gold shirt and I smiled from ear to ear.



Adam, you changed your life around and stayed on a positive path for years. You touched thousands of people and made them dance night after night. You were a king among DJs, a role model and also a wonderful friend. My thoughts are with your family and loved ones. Rest in peace.


DJ Eli Escobar:

http://
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_pj7qrCbki2Q/SplvEYWFA6I/AAAAAAAABvs/XAaOc0DhZEY/s1600-h/am+eli.jpg
I'm writing this at 3am in my hotel room in San Francisco. I haven't really been able to talk to anyone yet or really deal with what happened today. Before I talk about anything else, first and foremost, I lost one of my best buddies today and that is what hurts the most. But this blog is about music and djing and A.M. was so passionate about both. And such a master of his craft. A trailblazer and a role model to so many young dj's and party people. And at the end of the day it all boiled down to his love of music.

We would spend hours going through new music, and talking about what songs went well together and comparing our set lists. I remember taking a three hour limo ride home from Atlantic City at 4am and, instead of doing what any logical person would do (sleep), trading the music we had heard each other play that night, the whole way home.
A.M. once told me how he felt it was important for working class dj's to get the same kind of respect (and money) in the industry that dance music producers were getting, and I think it is a certain fact that he achieved this. He kicked down doors and let a whole new generation of dj's follow him in. Gladly let them in I might add. He was ambitious as they come and made himself a star, but he also did it because he wanted to see other dj's get what they deserved.
I can count on one hand the amount of people who have unconditionally believed in me and my talent and he was definitely one of them. He exposed my music and edits to more people than anyone else. Even as recent as last week, he would hit me up on BBM and tell me he was playing some edit I made 4 years ago that no one else had and how much he loved it. I don't even know how he got some of those god awful songs!
This brings me to a really important thing that I don't think many people realize... A.M. might have existed in a more mainstream world than some other dj's but I think if anything he probably did more to get underground music heard by the masses than anyone else could have. The truth is, he was one of the biggest dj's in the world and he used that status to introduce people to the underground music that he loved. It takes guts to play music you believe in for a crowd that doesn't necessarily care and he did that every night he played. And like Diplo pointed out on the Mad Decent blog, he never put himself above any situation. When Stretch and I were trying to get our 205 party off the ground and A.M. was in town on a Wednesday he said to me "I'll dj tonight if you think it would help get people out" and we had an amazing night sure enough. This is the difference between a dj's dj and a "celebrity" dj or a superstar dance music dj. He loved what he did more than any other dj I've ever met and until the end he strived to be better and to learn.
The first time I ever dj'd with Adam is a night I'll never forget. It was at Crobar for Bill Spector and for probably the biggest crowd of people I had ever played for at that point. It was for the most part a normal gig until about 10 minutes before his set, I looked in back of me and about 15 of New York's biggest dj's were all standing there waiting to see him go on. He showed up, humble as ever, took over and my jaw proceeded to hit the floor for the next two hours. This was before people were making mash ups or edits for Serato and he was doing every little trick, every blend and every clever routine completely on his own. He worked so damn hard from the minute he started that I really almost felt embarrassed for the way I had been playing before hand. Most importantly though, the energy in the room sky rocketed. And to the most eclectic all over the place non traditional set. It was one time where I knew my position that night had been played. I could have never followed up this man. It really was breath taking and it will stay with me forever. I closed for him and was home by 5am on the phone with Sizzahandz on some "Yo and then when he did that..." or "how do you think he did that?" $#%*. We would play together tons more after that but that one night will forever remain magical in my mind.
There are so many more amazing memories, spending a week at his beautiful house working on our Weezer remix and not going out or djing at all, just kicking it with his cat Mugsy and eating crappy food at 3am, going sneaker shopping in New York, going to our favorite parties on nights off like the Do-Over or Eclipse and Primo at Apt, and mostly just having great talks and discussions. The last time I saw him was shortly after Michael Jackson died and we were trying to remix a !$!@%+ song by the Ting Tings and feeling really uninspired. So we ended up talking about growing up in the 80's, the almost unbearable yearning that heavy nostalgia can bring on and he seemed almost totally consumed by it. I tried to point out that we would probably look back at THIS time in our lives in 20 years and never be able to believe we had it so good. I hope I got through to him on some level and I hope I did all I could. I never thought I wouldn't see him again.

Recently I've been collecting dj sets from the Do-Over. It's a great way to hear dj's from all over the world playing the way they want to play and in a sense, a rite of passage. I emailed Adam and asked him to upload his set for me and of course the first thing he says is "Why? You would wanna hear that?" Of course I would Adam. We all would. Listen to this mix and know it was the man playing music he truly loved, for free, for fun and for the love of djing.
Rest in peace friend.

DJ AM AT THE DO-OVER

^^^ btw that set at the Do-Over..full of dope music
 
Premo on AM's death. . .
DJ Premier said he'd known AM for over 14 years and spoke about their relationship on his radio show last night.

"I met him when he was 14 years old at a Cypress Hill, House of Pain, Hooligans show. He was with Alchemist and Scott Caan, James Caan's son ... and we took pictures. The other day, he sent me the pictures, and I'm gonna make a T-shirt of that.

"I already heard people are trying to hate like he wasn't important, like he wasn't a dope DJ," Primo added. "Let me tell you something: He is the f---in' sh--. This dude's a f---in' maniac on turntables, for real. You have to experience this dude's tactics on turntables - he's sick with it. And if I cosign it, f--- any DJ who disagrees. You either haven't seen him spin ... and this dude's history, his knowledge of music, was intense."
 
Originally Posted by Caliking03

Originally Posted by TheTrapezeSwinger

Originally Posted by Zach13g

the interview part of this was filmed 1 month ago today.
http://www.youtube.com/v/c4h8g_ZhHTU&hl=en&fs=1&

What a hypocrite
5962525ef0fba8e68e860837f178490038cbc36.gif
obviously he wasn't a recovering user, not when they find prescription drugs by his body


Obviously he was in a plane crash almost a year ago and due to the injuries he sustained needed that medication, already a risky move for a recovering addict.He OPENLY talked about what his personal demons were, be a man and post yours
 
it's cool that you guys have shown so much love to a friend I grew up with...
you don't even begin to know how many loved ones I've lost in the last 5 years, but this one has killed me worse than even my grandma's death.

everyone knew the skinny successful AM, I knew Adam pre and post success, pre and post fat/skinny days.

if you guys are interested, follow my twitter or blog for updates on his funeral if you care to say your last goodbyes.
there will be 2 services (1 for family, 1 for fans/public) http://blog.ifandco.com www.twitter.com/benballer

we're also gonna throw an event. you guys don't get how crazy our circle of friends was, nobody knew 15 years ago that any of us would make an impactin any field the way a lot of our crew friends have. we all grew up in the same westside area of LA and I think AM surpassed so many if not all of us with howhe touched the world. he made everyone feel like they were important.

I'm just overwhelmed and I'm posting here because NIKETALK came up last night at the og homey gathering we had for adam. you know he loved sneakers.
he had love for niketalkers too.

I posted how I really feel on my blog
if you guys only knew, then maybe some of you wouldn't say some of the dumb $!$% you guys say.
a lot of people have totally different lives on the internet obviously.
I don't think I've ever mentioned my mom or direct family, kids or anything on the net, for a reason. some $!$% you keep online some you don't.
but most of you guys think you know everything, they say most rumors are true. so then at least 40% aren't right? thats still a high %

REST IN PEACE ADAM MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN.
I LOVE YOU BROTHER.....

AMC FOR LIFE AND YOU REPPED IT X 1,000,000,000
 
Back
Top Bottom