Mobile DJ for Anklam
An ideal DJ for an event in Anklam should be someone you would not only book, but someone you could genuinely imagine as a guest at your own celebration. So no forced showmanship, no awkward permanent grin on command, and no microphone work that makes the champagne reception quietly give up and leave.
What you will find here instead is a mobile DJ who believes in personal planning, suitable sound and lighting, and one clear goal: your celebration should not feel interchangeable. The evening should fit you – not some ready-made concept from the drawer labelled “it will probably do somehow”.
No celebration is just “something with music”
People getting married have different expectations from those celebrating a birthday. A family event often brings several generations to the same tables, a club evening has a different rhythm again, and at some parties it is obvious very quickly that the night may start gently but certainly should not end that way.
That is exactly why the occasion matters more here than the place name. The location is important, of course. But nobody remembers how often it appeared on the page. What matters is whether the celebration fits the people who are coming together there.
A few words about me
My name is Jens-Peter Weismantel, and I did not suddenly discover yesterday that music and loudspeakers might make a business model. I have been DJing since 1992, later spent about ten years in web radio, and in 2015 I made the move into self-employment and have been working under my own name ever since.
What interests me far more than any artificial DJ show is how an evening needs to fit the people who are celebrating. I am not a fan of treating every event with exactly the same concept. If you already know clearly what you want, great. If you only have a rough direction in mind so far, that is perfectly fine as well. The rest can be worked out together.
The right time to get in touch
Once the venue for your celebration in Anklam is fixed, the enquiry can follow straight away. For dates between May and September, a lead time of around 6 to 12 months makes sense. From October to April, 1 to 3 months is often enough. Of course there are always exceptions, but enquiring too early is usually far less of a problem than enquiring too late.
Summer is here and the dance floors are full. If you are still planning a celebration now, you should act quickly. Available Saturdays for weddings, birthdays and parties up to the end of September are becoming fewer by the day.
Frequently booked as DJ for:
➥ Family celebrations
A family celebration is not a club night and it is not a musical vending machine either. That is exactly what makes it interesting, because guests arrive with completely different expectations and should still end up celebrating together.
A family celebration is not a club night and it is not a musical vending machine either. That is exactly what makes it interesting, because guests arrive with completely different expectations and should still end up celebrating together.
The classic occasion is of course a birthday, often a milestone one. But it can just as easily be a confirmation, coming of age, anniversary or simply a family gathering where people want something more than coffee and cake. For me that means looking closely, staying musically flexible and not pretending forty guests will automatically share the same three favourite songs.
Some people imagine the DJ’s job to be surprisingly simple: press a button, music plays, dance floor full. If only it worked that way, I could take a lot more breaks. Especially at private celebrations, the real work lies in bringing together very different guests musically without the evening falling apart.
In Anklam, that is no different from anywhere else. There too, people with very different ideas of party music sit around one table, and in the end as many of them as possible should feel that the evening suited them properly.
➥ Wedding celebrations
A wedding is also just a private celebration with family and friends. And no, it absolutely is not. Because unlike almost any other party, you do not want to end the night thinking it could all have been better with a little more planning.
A wedding is also just a private celebration with family and friends. And no, it absolutely is not. Because unlike almost any other party, you do not want to end the night thinking it could all have been better with a little more planning.
What I mean by that slightly confusing opening is simple: weddings demand even more care than an ordinary family celebration. Quite rightly, couples aim for a very high level of perfection, because unlike a birthday party that went slightly wrong, you cannot just say, “We will do it better next year.” This day is meant to be uniquely beautiful.
That is exactly why every wedding is something special to me as a DJ. I prefer to prepare weddings together with the couple in a personal meeting at the venue itself. In that final conversation we go through every highlight of the celebration so as little as possible is left to chance and typical planning mistakes can be avoided. I also speak with the person taking on the role of toastmaster so that guests planning surprises get the support they need as well.
By the time a couple starts looking for a DJ, the venue is often already fixed or at least very clearly taking shape. Maybe you have already made your choice, maybe you are still comparing two or three favourites nearby. Schloss Krugsdorf Hotel & Golf Resort might already be part of that picture as well. One way or another, The district of Vorpommern-Greifswald offers enough possibilities, and when date and venue are slowly becoming firm, it is worth not waiting too long with the DJ enquiry.
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania loves differently – how wedding couples celebrate in distinctive venues
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania is rich in natural beauty and offers many remarkable settings for couples planning to marry. Rivers, countless lakes, wetlands, great beech forests and of course the Baltic coast all shape the character of the region.
What the region offers less of is genuine big-city atmosphere. Even Rostock, the state’s only major city, feels more hanseatic and charming than truly urban. For many wedding couples that is not a disadvantage at all – it simply pushes the focus more strongly towards nature, architecture and atmosphere.
That is exactly why couples looking for something special here often choose between rural romance, historic architecture and waterside or seaside settings. Castles, hunting lodges, lakeside houses, old inns and Baltic venues all play a role, depending on what kind of wedding mood they want to create.
➥ Prom, graduation, finally done
When years of exams, tests, group projects and well-practised eye-rolling in the direction of the classroom finally come to an end, the celebration that follows may happily be more than just a pleasant dinner with obligatory smiling.
When years of exams, tests, group projects and well-practised eye-rolling in the direction of the classroom finally come to an end, the celebration that follows may happily be more than just a pleasant dinner with obligatory smiling.
That is exactly what makes proms and other graduation celebrations so special: they are expected to be several things at once. A little formal, a little emotional, a little reflective, and later on a proper party too. That works well when the running order and the technical side are prepared properly instead of being pushed together in a panic on the night itself.
I can support that with suitable sound for speeches, video clips or programme items, with wireless microphones and of course with music once the official part should finally make way for party mood. The evening may certainly become relaxed. It just should not wobble at the points that can easily be planned well beforehand.
And because your year group is not the only one trying to celebrate in late spring and early summer, here comes the slightly unromantic but important part: secure your date in good time. Around then, an astonishing number of people want to get married, celebrate or otherwise make noise.
➥ Sports festivals
A sports festival does not need to sound like a constant party all day long. But complete silence between competitions, award ceremonies and the sausage stand is rarely a great help to the atmosphere either.
A sports festival does not need to sound like a constant party all day long. But complete silence between competitions, award ceremonies and the sausage stand is rarely a great help to the atmosphere either.
Especially at school sports days, club events or smaller tournaments, it helps enormously when announcements are clear, music appears at the right moments and the whole thing does not sound as though somebody balanced an old kitchen speaker on the sprinkler system at short notice.
For smaller sports grounds and sports halls, I bring suitable sound reinforcement myself. Wireless microphones for announcements, award ceremonies or a commentator are also no problem. And if the site is larger than my usual setup can sensibly cover, the whole thing can be scaled up via a partner company instead of producing half-baked nonsense.
Music can help hold such a day together: before the start, during breaks, at award ceremonies or exactly at those moments when the energy on site begins to dip. And if there is a celebration afterwards, I am naturally happy to remain on site as DJ for that part as well.
➥ Business events
New products, an open day or an event for sales teams, clients and partners do not need to disappear into dry conference air. A good framework helps to make sure people do not just show up, but actually like staying there.
New products, an open day or an event for sales teams, clients and partners do not need to disappear into dry conference air. A good framework helps to make sure people do not just show up, but actually like staying there.
That is exactly where a DJ can make sense for reasons other than partying. Music can create atmosphere without pushing itself to the front, smooth transitions and give a business event more life without making it feel like a disco. Then there is the technical side: clear speech for announcements, wireless microphones for moderation and a setup that still works properly if the official part later turns into something more sociable.
I accompany such events in a way that keeps them professional without making them sterile. And if people do want to celebrate after the presentation, reception or award ceremony, there is no need to reinvent half the setup. The technical side is already there and the direction can simply be turned further.