The Opening Act


There is a lot of debate over what makes a good opener.  For 25-30 years people have argued about what type of set or music an opening act should play and whether or not they should tone it down.  At the end of the night, a DJ that reads the room, has deep crates, and builds trust with the dance floor becomes the ultimate support artist.
For almost as long as there have been live performances, there has been supporting artistsS. The main act is never alone,  at grassroots events supporting artists are the key to community.  It is the liaison between the ‘industry’ and the ravers.  Underground artist that support grassroot events often carry fan bases rooted in relationship.  These relationships are the foundation and body of the scene.  Without the underground, large-scale events don’t exist.  Without the underground, there is no scene.

READ THE ROOM  Everyone has heard it, but what does that actually mean?  What does that look like?  It starts even before arriving at the gig.  A good DJ is already considering who their audience is, the venue, the lineup of artists, and the type of event.  It’s not only about what music will be played, but who the DJ is playing for.  Once in the booth, the right opener will warm up the room based on the temperature of the floor.  Attendees at the bar and conversations are not to compete with; they just need a proper invitation to the dance floor.

DEEP CRATES  Opening DJs need deep crates to effectively serve the room. No matter how dialed in to the floor the DJ is, they cannot play the right tune at the right time if it is not in their collection.  An experienced DJ often carries a large collection of music whereas the underground talent is most likely bringing locally sourced tracks and vibes.  Recognizing the needs of the dance floor may require more than “one-size-fits-all” approach.  The opening act is going to set the tone for the night, (good or bad).  Make sure the opener has good taste, a Selector DJ.

BUILDING TRUST  Let’s face it: the crowd may only be there for the headliner.  A DJ that understands how to build trust with the dance floor is essential to the vibe.  In the hours leading up to the main act, the support artist has a job: to get the people on the floor energized and ready to ‘lose their minds for the main set.’  A good opener is playing something familiar to warm up a cold dance floor.  They prepare the room with increasingly energizing tunes.  The opening act is building a set that inspires the dancers to “stay for one more song.”  Building trust includes playing tunes that are NOT the headliner’s music (unless asked).  Building trust includes getting everyone on the floor, moving, and excited for the main event.  The room is going to remember the way the DJ made them feel.  The attendees remember if they felt welcomed to the floor and their anticipation was high or low.  If the floor goes crazy, the headliner looks good, leading to overall success.
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It is important to mention that many of the arguments surrounding support acts are about upstaging the headliner.  As a hired artist, do your art.  As the DJ and the one responsible for the dance, do what is right for the night.


Many of the greats have preached:
Don’t ever get bigger than the music.
The moment you think it is about you,
you have lost the plot.
It has always been about the music.
One Love.

TERRAN IT UP

How Art and AI Merge to Create new Possibilities

🧠Adobe AI Integration: More Than Just a Feature
Adobe’s AI platform, known as Adobe Firefly, isn’t a standalone tool—it’s deeply embedded across its creative suite, including Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere Pro, and more.
This isn’t just “AI added on.” It’s AI woven into the creative process itself.
🔍 1. Generative Fill: Redefining Image Editing
Generative Fill in Photoshop allows artists to:
Add entirely new objects with a text prompt
Extend backgrounds seamlessly
Remove elements while intelligently rebuilding the scene
PNG Example Concept:
Before: A portrait with a plain background
After (AI Fill): The same subject placed in a futuristic cityscape
This is especially powerful because it respects:
Lighting direction
Perspective
Color grading- The result feels like a natural extension of the original artwork—not an obvious edit.


🖌2. AI as a Digital Brush
Traditional digital art required hours of manual rendering. Now, AI acts like a responsive brush.
With Firefly integration, artists can:
Paint rough shapes → AI refines them into detailed textures
Sketch characters → AI enhances anatomy and lighting
Apply style prompts to transform entire compositions
PNG Example Concept:
Input: Rough line sketch of a model
Output: Fully rendered fashion editorial image with lighting and fabric detailThis mirrors traditional painting—but with exponential speed.


👓3. Non-Destructive AI Workflows
One of Adobe’s biggest advantages is that AI edits are non-destructive.
That means:
You can undo or tweak AI generations at any time
Layers remain editable
Artists retain full control over the final result
This is critical for professionals who need precision—not randomness.
️ 4. Cross-Platform AI Integration
Adobe isn’t limiting AI to static images.
Across its ecosystem:
Premiere Pro: AI-assisted video editing, auto-cutting, scene extension
After Effects: AI motion tracking and generative backgrounds
Illustrator: Text-to-vector generation
PNG Example Concept:
Frame 1: Raw video still
Frame 2: AI-enhanced cinematic lighting and background
 This creates a seamless pipeline from concept → image → motion.


5. Blending Traditional Art with AI
The real magic happens when artists combine:
Hand-drawn sketches
Photography
AI-generated enhancements
Workflow Example:
Draw a concept on paper
Import into Photoshop
Use Generative Fill to expand the scene
Paint over AI output manually
PNG Example Concept:
Stage 1: Pencil sketch
Stage 2: AI-enhanced environment
Stage 3: Final polished artwork with manual detailing


AI becomes part of the process—not the final product.
⚖️ The Balance: Control vs Automation
Let’s be clear—AI can generate impressive visuals instantly. But without direction, it’s just noise.
Adobe’s approach stands out because it keeps:
The artist in control
The workflow familiar
The output editable
This is why professionals are adopting it—not resisting it.


The Future of Art Creation
With tools like Firefly integrated into everyday software, the definition of an artist is evolving:
Less time on repetitive tasks
More time on creative direction
Greater ability to experiment without risk
The barrier to entry is lower—but the ceiling for creativity is higher.
 Final Thoughts
AI isn’t replacing traditional art—it’s amplifying it.
And platforms like Adobe are proving that the future isn’t about choosing between human creativity and machine intelligence…
…it’s about combining them into something entirely new.