FEATURE: Saluting the Queens: DJ Paulette

FEATURE:

 

 

Saluting the Queens

PHOTO CREDIT: Lee Baxter

 

DJ Paulette

_________

A definite D.J. queen…

and an all-round legend, I wanted to shine a spotlight on the amazing DJ Paulette. She is someone who has inspired so many other D.J.s. One of the most renowned in the world, she releases the book, Welcome to the Club: The Life and Lessons of a Black Woman DJ, on Tuesday (23rd January). With a foreword by another D.J. legend, Annie Mac, this is a must-read book. I am going to come to interviews with a giant in the music industry. First, and I would suggest people buy this book, is some more details:

In Welcome to the club, Manchester legend DJ Paulette shares the highs, lows and lessons of a thirty-year music career, with help from some famous friends.

One of the Haçienda’s first female DJs, Paulette has scaled the heights of the music industry, playing to crowds of thousands all around the world, and descended to the lows of being unceremoniously benched by COVID-19, with no chance of furlough and little support from the government. Here she tells her story, offering a remarkable view of the music industry from a Black woman’s perspective. Behind the core values of peace, love, unity and respect, dance music is a world of exclusion, misogyny, racism and classism. But, as Paulette reveals, it is also a space bursting at the seams with powerful women.

Part personal account, part call to arms, Welcome to the club exposes the exclusivity of the music industry while seeking to do justice to the often invisible women who keep the beat going”.

You can follow DJ Paulette on Instagram. Without doubt one of the most important D.J.s ever, it is a timely moment to celebrate her talent and voice. As if you needed more reason to buy a book that should be on everyone’s shelf. One that I am going to get and explore in great detail. The reviews and feedback is incredible:

'Imagine the DJ is taking notes while everyone in the club is dancing. Welcome to the club is exactly that, notes of a DJ - the irrepressible sunlight of DJ Paulette. A fascinating insight into the music business by a northern Black woman.'

Lemn Sissay, author of My Name Is Why


'Icon. Trailblazer. Activist. Warrior. DJ Paulette has led the way for Black women and women everywhere in a global music industry riddled with racism and misogyny. She has blown apart the myths. This is a magnificent book. A manifesto for our times and a rallying call for the future.'

Maxine Peake, actress and activist


'Paulette continues to light the way for others, building in relevance and significance, wowing crowds, annihilating dancefloors. I would recommend Welcome to the club as an essential read for anyone and everyone. I thoroughly enjoyed it.'

Craig Charles, actor, comedian, DJ, television and radio presenter


'Paulette is someone I've always respected, admired and been inspired by. This book is beautifully written, incisive, dry, witty and real - true Mancunian honesty. What an adventure and a truly fascinating life.'

Rowetta, member of the Happy Mondays


'Paulette is a pioneer, a ground-breaker, a trailblazer and never afraid to hold a mirror up to the world to show that there is still so much more to do. A self-assured shimmy of a book that instantly transports you to the dancefloor and beyond. I love it!'

Arielle Free, BBC Radio 1 presenter

'DJ Paulette's Welcome to the club is a testament to her ability to witness the dancefloor while blending memorable anecdotes that bring new life to the UK underground music scene. More than her fabulous landing in Paris, where she built a new world of listeners around her name and sound, it's the fact that Paulette turns notable moments in her thirty-year career into a close listening experience. There's a musical quality to this book that sounds like what Black women DJs have tried to tell the world - our unique experiences turn any party into a lively classroom. Paulette leaves curious students waiting for the next chapter so they can hear it like a song.'

Lynnée Denise, DJ, writer and interdisciplinary artist


'When I first met Paulette, back in that pivotal space of early 1990s Manchester, I don't think any of us really understood what we were getting out of nightlife beyond raw enjoyment. Now we've had a chance to re-evaluate those codes, to understand how much they meant in forming us as people. This book explains why nightlife matters, beamed in from a vanguard position behind the DJ booth. Paulette understands the philosophy of the nightclub because she was there when it was at its very best.'

Paul Flynn, author of Good As You: 30 Years of Gay Britain

'I arrived in 1990s Manchester, found a place to live and a job then got dragged up, went clubbing and there was DJ Paulette on the decks. She made being an outsider look hot, and I wanted in. Her energy and music were the soundtrack to my queer gender-bending dance floor years. Decades on I still want to be in her club. If music and clubbing played an important part in your life, then so will this book.'

Kate O'Donnell, Artistic Director of Trans Creative

'I now realise the weight of the obstacles and challenges Paulette overcame, her fortitude to compete in male-dominated arenas, the racism she undoubtedly encountered. Her mettle and contribution have clearly opened doors for the diversity and equality we strive for today.'

Simon Dunmore, DJ and Founder of Defected Records & Glitterbox

'With fierce resilience and passion, DJ Paulette's travels through clubland reveal her personal triumphs over life's adversities. A book filled with music and love, positivity and enthusiasm. '

Princess Julia, DJ, model and music writer

'Any list of the pioneers of the Manchester club scene, and the international scene it so heavily influenced, is not complete without the name of DJ Paulette. Ours is a city that celebrates those who challenge elites, break down barriers and open doors for others to walk through. Paulette has done all of those things and more and that is why we are so proud of her.'


Andy Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester

'A thrilling ride around the world through the lens of a Black female DJ. Covering the good, the bad and the ugly, DJ Paulette tells it like it is. There are few visible Black female role models in the music industry and DJ Paulette is a passionate advocate for racial, gender and LGBTQ+ equality, but most of all she's a legendary DJ. If you want a fresh, original voice on electronic dance music, culture, politics and more, this is the book for you!'

John Shortell, Head of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, The Musicians' Union

'A refreshingly honest and positive queer voice. DJ Paulette's memoirs are everything that club culture needs at the moment: Written with warmth and passion, this book continues the trend of female professionals telling their stories - the good and the bad ones - so that we learn how clubs can once again become the places of Peace, Love, Unity and Respect.'

Dr Beate Peter, The Lapsed Clubber Project

'A true original of the UK club scene, Paulette has experienced the highs and lows of dance music culture, and this heartfelt and insightful book tells the story of what she saw and learned with her distinctive style, warmth and wicked wit.'

Matthew Collin, author of Rave On and Altered State

'DJ Paulette has written a story that needed to be told, and as only she could tell it. Rich with experience and careful research, Welcome to the club is a must-read for anyone interested in house music, DJing and the power of life narrative.'

Audrey Golden, author of I Thought I Heard You Speak

PHOTO CREDIT: Danny Sargent

'Welcome to the club is joyful, funny and furious. DJ Paulette's essential read doubles up as an alternative history of dance music, told from the middle of the dancefloor. It's a sparkling and generous ride through international high times and low moments, documenting music industry racism, sexism and homophobia with fabulous clarity. This pioneering DJ and musical instigator has written a full-bodied celebration of the myriad ways music can save your life - and can also make your life. '

Emma Warren, author of Dance Your Way Home

'This book is a timely reminder that history or herstory is not written yet and never over. It gives a valuable and personal account of the development of DJing as a professional music career and its beginnings in the LGBTQ community in Manchester at the start of the 1990s. At moments it is a disturbing and hard read, but read it one must. This is a much needed and powerful account for anybody interested in the music business and the development of dance music internationally.'

Sally Anne Gross, music industry practitioner and academic

'Paulette's rollicking memoir takes you through unmarked doors vibrating with bass to celebrate a life lived to the full in dance music.'

Frank Broughton, DJ History”.

I will come to some interviews with the iconic DJ Paulette now. Before coming right up to date, let’s head back a bit. To last year and Ban Ban Ton Ton’s interview. There are some really interesting exchanges and answers that opened my eye:

You’re from the magnificent city of Manchester. What are the things that you love about your hometown? What are the characteristics of a good Mancunian?

A good Mancunian doesn’t need the sunshine to be happy – we lap it up when it comes though. Manchester people are the best in the world. You can talk to anyone anywhere here – it’s not considered weird – and we happily engage in the conversation. Manchester people are open, helpful, really good listeners and if we can’t help you we can put you in touch with someone who can. Humble mavericks. Rule breakers… and we have a naughty sense of humour too.

Who are the icons from your city in your opinion?

There are so many, old and new: Anthony H Wilson, Marcus Rashford, Emmeline and Christobel Pankhurst, Maxine Peake, ANZ, Afrodeutsche, Andy Burnham – he’s from Warrington but he’s an honorary Manc, Marie Stopes, Rowetta, Diane Modahl, Alex Ferguson, Caroline Aherne, Victoria Wood, Lemn Sissay, Sacha Lord…

Where were your first gigs? What kind of music were you playing? Who were the DJs you looked up to back then?

My first DJ gig was at the Number 1 club on Central Street in Manchester. I was heavily influenced by a Manchester DJ called Tim Lennox, who was the resident DJ at the club when I was a dancer there. I played a mixture of everything – disco, rare groove, soul, funk, house, early techno, from the likes of Evelyn ‘Champagne’ King, Gwen McCrae, Larry Heard, Kevin Saunderson, Marshall Jefferson, Earth Wind and Fire, James Brown, Salsoul, Prince, The Jacksons. Anything that sounded good together went into those long sets.

You were awarded a DJ Mag’s Top 100 Lifetime Achievement Award – sincere congratulations for that Paulette! What did that that feel like? Your people must be pretty proud.

It was indeed a very proud moment for me. At first I thought they were asking me to vote for the category, or asking my advice on who the winner should be. When I read that I’d been nominated as the winner I honestly didn’t believe it. I slammed my laptop shut and hid in the dressing room I was that triggered. I didn’t think it was real. I had to read the email about five times before it fully sunk in.

As a strong woman in music, do you feel that the male-dominated tide is finally turning? What has changed? What still needs to change?

Yes I can confidently say that things are changing. There are way more women in the business now than ever before, both in front of and behind the scenes, but we are still relatively outnumbered. It’s great to see people like Jaguar and Jamz Supernova making huge strides, whilst people like Annie Mac and Honey Dijon are icons and shining beacons for us all. We need more women and non-binary people throughout the chain, but these changes do not happen overnight. It’s a case of baby steps. Applause. Then more baby steps until we get to a fully balanced, diverse, safe, and equally paid environment. It is great though and it gives me a massive buzz every day to see women smashing it better than men and on the daily. It gives me hope”.

I want to move to this recent interview, where we get some real insight into the career of DJ Paulette. Why she is so important and respected. For D.J.s following her, there are so many wise and powerful words that will resonate. It shows that Welcome to the Club: The Life and Lessons of a Black Woman DJ is an essential purchase:

What were your first steps in this industry?

When I was 18 years old, I started working at Piccadilly Radio. I sent in an application for this new show, which was a teen magazine/lifestyle show. I sprayed my application with CK’s Obsession perfume (you have to get noticed in this game) and they liked my application, I was invited to audition and I was chosen. It was a youth programme but I absolutely loved it. I was working with two bright young stars, Chris Evans and Becky Want. The programme taught me how to interview people. It taught me how to go to gigs and write good scripts and reviews for clubs and listings. It introduced me to the celebrity side, because I got to interview people like Martin Fry from ABC.  It really gave me a taste of the music industry. But aside from that, my mum was a singer, she sang jazz and cabaret, so all of the family were really musically trained, we were all into music, buying records, that kind of thing. I'd also been clubbing since I was 15 years old.

Then I sang in bands and got fired a lot. Not because I was rubbish. Whenever I'd be in rehearsals, I'd always be in tracksuits. So when it came to the gigs and I dress up like that, it was like “you're not really a backing singer, you're fired”, which wasn't fair. So when DJing came along, I thought this is a way of performing and a way of delivering my music that is down to me. Nobody could fire me. I could look how I wanted. I could play what I wanted. And I could just entertain people for as many hours

Years later, a friend of mine called Tommy introduced me to a woman called Adele. She was putting on a party at The Number One Club where I was dancing. Adele had run out of money for a big DJ name and she was looking for someone to play records for the night. Tommy told her that I had lots of records. So we met, we talked about music and for some reason (was she desperate or did she think I'd be good at it, I don't know) she chose me to do it. I was studying for my degree at the time, so I thought, I could earn money doing something that I really love, that I wanted to do. I loved clubs, I loved clubbing. I'd never DJed before. I didn't have my own decks or anything like that, but I just thought it'd be a good idea. She paid me 30 pounds (from 9pm till two in the morning). It was 1992, so that was actually quite decent money (well, it was better than nothing). But then I went out and spent my entire grant money on records. The rest is history.

From there, I met Paul and Lucy (A Bit Ginger Productions), they were putting on a new party at the Hacienda called Flesh, and they needed somebody to host their second room. I was suddenly thrown into the deep end and DJed once a month at the Hacienda downstairs.

It was a big gay night in Manchester and attitudes to anything gay in the 90s weren’t that cool, so I hid it. I didn't tell anyone at Uni. I was the boring, married, mature student, so if anyone from my class ever turned up at Flesh, I hid from them.

Then it - and I -  became more public as time went on, because I was good at what I did. And I became a face in Manchester. So it's like, well, you can hide but not for long. I became successful and I started DJing in Nottingham, at Venus in Leeds at Vague and started moving around. And then the next thing I knew I was being picked to DJ at Heaven in London, at the ZAP Club in Brighton. When I graduated, I intended to become a teacher, a professor, you know, do an MA, go the full academic route, but DJing came along and that was the end of that.

Your book “Welcome to the Club” is the first self-penned book by a black female DJ, can you share with us the inspiration behind writing this book?

My inspiration for writing “Welcome to the Club” came from many places. First of all, lots of people asked me why, if I've been doing this for 30 years, why has it taken me so long to get any kind of flowers for the work that I've been doing over the years? I needed to explain certain challenging aspects of my career that were hidden and also put my history out there because it wasn't out there. People couldn't really understand anything about me because if you Googled me, there wasn't really that much information. 16 years in Europe had created a bit of a blind spot. So I thought, either I could wait for somebody to write a book about me or I could do it myself. And I'm very much a self-starter.

I didn't pitch this book to anybody. The publishers came to me with the idea during the second lockdown. I've been really mercenary about saying ‘yes’ to this publisher, because I knew that this book was going to go into the libraries. So then history is set. It's not just an ordinary book. It is an academic book, which means it goes into every university library from here (UK) to the United States to France, to wherever. I'm making a point of creating a history for this particular subject. And it's never been done before.

I also became aware that it wasn't just me that had the hidden histories. There were a lot of other women around me that had hidden histories that weren't counted into the development or the evolution of the culture and I wanted to tackle that subject as well. When people say, “oh, we've never heard of you”, it’s because you're not included in the story. It was important to me to put a story there to create some kind of balance or be a counterbalance to all the other books that didn't mention and all the other books that didn't talk about this particular thing.

Another key factor was writing and working through the pandemic. Nobody is talking about the pandemic because it has only just happened. I wanted to talk about how we, as people and as creatives, dealt with the pandemic. As the events and hospitality and as the industry had to deal with the pandemic; the rules, the regulations, the financial implications, all of that. There are two chapters that really talk about what happened and how we came out of it. It's a really strong Manchester story because we were kind of the guinea pigs for the government with all of the rules and regulations. It also talks about the limitations, not earning any money, not getting any support and it talks about mental health.

In the book, you have spoken to a few very influential women from the industry.

A lot of the time women work for companies where it's like “maybe they'll do it one day” or “maybe one day I'll get the award”. This is why my book is really throwing a brick through that window. We as women have to stop accepting that being written out, not getting our flowers is okay. It’s not okay.

I decided to talk to a big group of my peers (Jamz Supernova, Jaguar, Caroline Prothero, Lakuti, Marcia Carr, Gladys Pizarro, Judy Griffith from fabric, DJ Colleen Cosmo Murphy, Sophie Bee, the creative director of the Warehouse Project, Eruica McKoy, NIKS (from Black Artists Database) a lot of very successful women. I found out about what their experiences and challenges have been (working in the music industry) and lots of things became apparent. There are ways that women are treated in the industry that just don't happen for men. Men never have to think about certain issues; about how they are promoted through the industry or how they are always going to have to knock the door down.

I wanted the reader to hear other voices and not just have the words pouring out of my mouth.  It's not just my experience that you get to read in the book, you get to read lots of other people's experiences. We sat together and discussed the frequently asked questions that we always get when we're interviewed; is it difficult being a woman, a female DJ, you know, the gendering of the job?

Why is DJing even gendered? We all do the same things. We use the same USB sticks. We use exactly the same equipment. There is no reason why this job should be separated into male and female DJs. We are all DJs but we are not paid on the same level. We're not given the same billing. We're not given the same breaks, even when it comes down to branding and sponsorship. We're not given the same opportunities or deals.

There's the other side of it where biological and physical things can happen for women that can signal the end of their career. Pregnancy, breakups, menopause, ageing. For some reason, 40 seems to be the cutoff where women start suddenly not getting any work anymore, whereas guys can work for their entire life without really having to think “Am I over the hill?” You know?

It views that aspect, through a lot of other women's eyes. And one of the things that became clear is that ageism is a really annoying factor. People just don't like successful older women. I mean, Madonna has it, (you know, she's in her 60s and people are still trying to say she is too old, should stop and isn't relevant). It's like hold on a second. Why isn’t Madonna relevant? Because Piers Morgan says so? A white cis middle aged straight man? How many column inches are wasted on trying to say that this woman is not relevant after 40 years smashing practically every glass ceiling and leaving a legacy that every newcomer somehow uses as a blueprint. She has spent years in the music industry breaking barriers, waving the flag for LGBTQ+ rights before anybody else did it. What is wrong with people?

It was important to have this conversation with Jamz Supernova. It was important to have that conversation with Marcia Carr, Kath McDermott and Colleen Cosmo Murphy. They can tell you the truth about how sickness overtook them or how agents wouldn't book them.

It's really interesting to talk about Jamz’ case because it gives us hope that there is a way through it. It's easier now than it was for Colleen Cosmo Murphy and Marcia Carr when they literally had to stop work for three, four years while they reared their children, whereas Jamz has gone straight back to work. It's interesting hearing them discuss what that journey is. The book talks about all of those things and the psychological impact of going through that and the push to come out on the other side.

What message do you hope it sends to aspiring DJs? Especially those who may face similar challenges as you did?

First of all, I say that I forgot that I was in the top 100. I really did forget it and I didn't take it as seriously as maybe I should have. Or I didn't take it as seriously then as people take it now, because, I didn't know what I was doing when I started this. I didn't even have my own decks. Now, it is more of a business.

So the advice I would give to people is take it as seriously as you need to take it. If you want to make a career out of it, make a career out of it, but be very focused about it. You can be giddy and you can enjoy it certainly, but have a plan and ask for help, which I didn't do. Always ask for help. Find your tribe. Build your team”.

I know this is a pretty long future, though I think it is important to give proper respect and salute to DJ Paulette. Also, with a book out on Tuesday, there are a lot of people who are getting her story. Keen to hear from one of the true greats. I am going to finish with Mix Mag and their interview. I think that there is still imbalance and inequality. DJ Paulette has said how things are improving - though, when we see rankings of the most important and best D.J.s around, they are dominated by men. Women having to work twice as many gigs as men to get the same recognition. The tide is slowing turning, though there is still a way to go. There is no doubt that someone like DJ Paulette is both inspiring change in the industry and so many women coming through:

“The ‘good’ in DJ Paulette’s story is detailed in exhilarating detail, bringing to life the excitement and chaos of the formative years of club culture in the UK. DJ Paulette describes how her first booking came about because the promoter had spent the whole budget on flyers and how her residency at Flesh dealt with a makeshift DJ booth fashioned out of a metal flight case and two wobbly bar tables for the turntables to stand on. Then there’s the laugh-out-loud recollection of when she DJed on ecstasy pills, that turned into a complete disaster when DJ Paulette lost the ability to read the print on the sleeves of her records. She left her twin sister Paula to take the reins, only to find that her sister was playing the same record over and over as DJ Paulette slumped down grinding her teeth in a toilet cubicle, unable to do anything about it.

PHOTO CREDIT: Danny Sargent

The ‘bad’ takes on sexism, racism and classism that DJ Paulette and her peers have experienced, but also subjects like the loneliness of DJing and struggles with mental health, doing so with candour and often humour. “If I’ve had a breakdown, I’m not going to gloss over that and jump to the next chapter of happy, I want to deal with how that affected me, and how that affected all the people around me; I think it’s important to tell that too,” she says. She also explores how a career in DJing affects relationships and shines a light on fellow female DJs’ experiences, including the struggles of juggling playing out with motherhood. Many of the younger voices in the book illustrate how much the music industry has evolved for the better.

But as much as DJ Paulette shares her literary stage with others, from Colleen ‘Cosmo’ Murphy to Lakuti and Jamz Supernova, it’s her own story that’s the most remarkable thing about Welcome to the club. Although well documented in articles through the years, there are aspects of DJ Paulette’s career that don’t make the cut in limited word count profiles; in book form there’s room to demonstrate just what the secret to DJ Paulette’s endurance is. Arguably, it’s her ability to predict what’s coming next, and getting one step ahead. In the mid 1990s it was internet radio, in the early 2000s, it was having her own website and blog. It’s also been about constantly evolving her skillset, from doing PR for Mercury Records to A&R for Azuli and Defected.

PHOTO CREDIT: Lee Baxter

It’s also been about DJ Paulette’s ability to predict developments in music and adapt accordingly. “I don’t make music myself and because of that I’ve had to find music that I can create a body of music around me with, that people will identify as my sound, so I’ve had to really stay ahead of the game,” she says. This approach is in full flow during her Haçienda reunion set, where the music she plays – mostly harder tech-house mixed with choice soulful house numbers the crowd will know – contrasts with the purely nostalgic vibe of most of the other DJs. “The crowd changes, music sounds different now, you need a bigger kick, you need a more compressed middle, to fill a room that holds 10,000 people. Some of those old tracks don’t travel anymore because the production values are different,” she says.

Some of the biggest highs in DJ Paulette’s book relate to her time in Paris. “I was so popular that people copied what I wore, how I looked…Clubs placed metal barriers outside to restrain my fans from surging forwards as I entered,” she recalls. But she also doesn’t shy away from describing mistakes she’s made, like selling her flat in London and spending the profits on high fashion. Other low moments were the result of developments outside of her control. For example, she writes about how the rise of lad mags in the late 1990s meant a new type of woman was being fetishized, and as a result, DJing changed too. “Still only in my thirties, I no longer ticked any of the boxes required to advance. I was free-falling without anything or anyone to stop it,” she writes in a chapter aptly titled ‘How to kill a DJ’, that also recounts how at a dinner with an agent, a booker and a promoter – all men – she was told that “no club will ever book a Black, female DJ with grey hair.”

PHOTO CREDIT: Lee Baxter

In an industry characterised by Instagram-filtered careers where discussing failure is taboo, DJ Paulette is refreshingly open about the downsides of being a DJ, not least the fact that what she terms ‘DJ death’ is cyclical: “It might have soothed me to know that I would soon find a way to climb out of the hole that I was in. I think I would also have liked to know that, like Groundhog Day, the hole would suck me in again.” In this way, her book acts as a manual for both aspiring and established DJs alike, that she didn’t have the access to when she was starting out. But it’s also full of universal truths and advice that not only DJs or those working in the music industry will find useful. It’s how DJ Paulette intended it: “I wanted to present a more accessible way of talking about music than getting locked into the anorak-geeky [route of] ‘this record, that tune, that DJ, this producer,’ which is only interesting to DJs, it’s not interesting to a lawyer that’s reading it in New York or a doctor that’s reading it in India,” she says. “But if I talk about it in terms of how you structure your life and career, then it starts to make a bit more sense and you can transfer those skills to other disciplines.”

Still, in some ways, DJ Paulette sees her work as only just beginning, especially when it comes to advocating for changes in publishing: “Magazines are still full of white guys, bros, and they say they can’t put older people on the cover, but they’ll still put Carl Cox or Gilles Peterson on the cover. Why can’t they put [women like] Cosmo or me on? And I think, why has it taken this long for someone to commission a book written by an older, Black female DJ? Because it’s the way it is, because it’s systemic.” DJ Paulette is intent on changing this, as she has been with breaking previous glass ceilings. “I always try to be the first to do it or the best. If I can’t be the best, then I’ll be the first,” she says. “If you’re the first it doesn’t matter if you’re the best, at least you’re the person with the balls to just do it, and then everyone that comes after, maybe they’ll be a million times better, but it took you doing it before they could be seen to be brilliant and better.” And this, perhaps, is the biggest lesson of Welcome to the club and DJ Paulette’s life story – be brave and fearless and you might just pave the way for the next generation”.

Within that interview from Mix Mag is a link to one that talks about how the industry is not a meritocracy. It is hardest on Black women. A 2020 article about how there is misogyny, violence and sexism in Dance music is still relevant in 2024. Even articles from a few years ago still ring true. Whilst there are some incredible women D.J.s out there, I wonder whether the industry truly acknowledges and hears them. Whether the landscape is safer for them. Things will eventually get there yet, right now, there is still a lot to be done. Pioneers and icons like DJ Paulette are to be saluted. She is such a crucial voice and role model. Welcome to the Club: The Life and Lessons of a Black Woman DJ shares her experiences of being a D.J. and what she ensured. There are positives and moments of strength among some darker days and obstacles. Go and seek the book out. I hope to interview DJ Paulette down the line. She is pretty busy now with a book launch! You can book her, and also keep up with the latest news. Such a remarkable and enormously important figure in music, I felt it was only right so salute…

A D.J. queen.