Randy Bettis

DJ Randy Bettis
Birth name Raymond Randall Bettis
Born (1959-03-10) March 10, 1959
Jacksonville, Illinois, US
Genres House, progressive house
Occupation(s) Musician, DJ, record producer
Years active 1997–present
Website djrandybettis.com

Randy Bettis (born Raymond Randall Bettis, on March 10, 1959 in Jacksonville, Illinois) is an American DJ, remixer of, and producer of, dance-music.

History

Randy Bettis's family consists of country singer and former shipping department manager for the defunct J. Capps & Sons, Bob Bettis (deceased) and seamstress Iris J. Gregory (deceased), brother Robert E. Bettis Jr. and sister Shari Lynn Bettis. He attended Southern Illinois University on a partial scholarship as a member of the Saluki Gymnastics Team, coached by multiple-time Olympic coach Bill Meade, where Bettis broke numerous records in both floor exercise and vaulting. In his final year, he competed at the NCAA National Gymnastics Championships and placed sixth in floor exercise. After three years working at Opryland USA in Nashville, Tennessee, as a dancer and then assistant to the choreographer, he went on to pursue a career in musical theater. He toured with the Hamburg, Germany, production of Cats and two years later returned to the United States to join the fourth national tour of Cats as Tumblebrutus, eventually joining the Broadway company from 1989–91 and 1995-97. In 1992 Bettis was a part of the dance group Boys Back East who were the grand national champions on Star Search[1] In 1997 Bettis left the theater to pursue a career as a nightclub DJ and a music producer and remix artist.

Bettis broke through in 2005 with back-to-back performances at three of the largest dance parties in the world: The Saint at Large's New Years Day Event, at Capitale; Saint at Large's the Black Party, at Roseland Ballroom; as well as the Heritage of Pride Pier Dance in New York City. That same year, Bettis was named by Billboard to the nationwide panel of club DJs who create Billboard’s weekly Hot Dance Club Play Chart. In 2006, he embarked on his first self-produced national tour to promote his latest album, GayDays Tour 2006.[2] The tour visited 26 cities nationwide and was voted best circuit tour of 2006[3] (and again in 2007 and 2008) by the members of JustCircuit.com. That same year he launched a weekly mixshow on G.I.R.L. (GayInternetRadioLive.com) with satellite broadcasts on SIRIUS Radio’s OutQ “Saturday Night Out.”

Bettis made his Chinese debut in 2011, and has headlined the official Riptide event in Orlando, Florida, part of Gay Days Weekend in 2011 and 2012.

Residencies

BetBoyz

In production, Bettis works with music partner David J. Boyd (AKA BetBoyz) on original and remix productions. Specializing in dance music, they also collaborate on musical theater and pop productions. BetBoyz has worked with and created remixes for some of the industry’s biggest artists: Taylor Dayne, Alicia Keys, Levi Kreis, Inaya Day, Jenn Cuneta and Ari Gold. BetBoyz has appeared at charitable events such as Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS' Dancers Responding to AIDS, AVP: The Anti-Violence Project and Marriage Equality. In 2009 they co-wrote/produced Free To Love (The Equality Project) with Robbyne Kaamil; created the original mix and secured additional mixes from remixers DJ JST, Amy Alderman/Bryan Reyes, Tony Ruiz, Almond Brown and DJ Nawttyboy; and donated 100% of the proceeds to Broadway Impact, a marriage equality branch of BCEFA. In 2010, BetBoyz wrote and produced the music for the hit Off-Broadway musical “My Big Gay Italian Wedding” (co-produced by Housewife of New Jersey’s Dina Manzo, Sonia Blangiardo, AnnDee Productions, Eileen Caruso, Teresa A. Cicala, Donna DiCrescento, Frank Levinson and Dolores Naso) and co-wrote/produced the single Up To The Sky for Reichen Lehmkule. On July 23, 2012, "The Groove Factory" (co-produced by BetBoyz) premiered at the Theatre at St. Clement's, part of the 2012 New York Musical Theatre Festival. The musical includes the first-ever all-electronic score and chronicled the story of friends at the turn of the millennium, at the end of what was known as "the heyday of New York City Clubland" and starred recording artist Kim Sozzi.

Personal life

Bettis resides in New York City with his husband, Patrick Sean Dwyer. Together since 1997, they were married April 8, 2011.

Discography

Albums

BetBoyz Remixes

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.