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Karaoke Karaoke is an add-on to my Disc Jockey system. You must plan on a time for Karaoke to be available. A typical scenario for Karaoke success includes repeated announcements during cocktails/dinner or during the dance music sets that Karaoke will be available at a scheduled time. Music books will be located on all dinner tables or around the venue for guests to browse. Guests will be invited to bring up their requests and they will be put in line to sing. Then at a given time (maybe 15 minutes of each hour), we will bring them up to perform. In this way, guests who don't wish to participate in singing can enjoy dancing for the majority of the hour, then take a break as they normally would to cheer for the singers. Alternatively you can schedule an entire evening of Karaoke if you have enough people in attendance To "break the ice", I sing a song or two to show people you don't have to be Frank Sinatra to have fun. I also suggest for people to come up as groups--there is safety in numbers! Kamikaze Requests; They do happen! Kamikaze Request Tickets: The correct usage of a kamikaze is simple - you want someone other than yourself to try a song they've never done before, either because you think it would be funny or because you think they'd be great at it. Another reason, is to coax someone who perhaps is too shy to put in a ticket on their own, to get up and sing. You put in the ticket with payment of $1 to hear this song done by this person. Anyone asked to sing a kamikaze may either sing the song, or pay $5 to not sing the song. The high price to get out of the song is a little incentive to go ahead with it My Karaoke setup is NOT just an add-on player that you can buy at Wal-mart like many DJs use. It is completely computerized, digital professional grade gear! My Karaoke Add-on Includes:
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