
Detroit electronic music artists DJ Minx and DJ Holographic
Clip: Season 9 Episode 23 | 8m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Detroiters DJ Minx and DJ Holographic discuss the city’s popular electronic music scene.
Detroit is known as the birthplace of techno music in America. For World Techno Day on Dec. 9, BridgeDetroit reporter Micah Walker talks with two Detroit artists Jennifer Witcher, who goes by DJ Minx, and Ariel Corley, who goes by DJ Holographic about their friendship, musical influences, playing at Movement Music Festival and coming out as queer artists in the electronic music scene.
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One Detroit is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

Detroit electronic music artists DJ Minx and DJ Holographic
Clip: Season 9 Episode 23 | 8m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Detroit is known as the birthplace of techno music in America. For World Techno Day on Dec. 9, BridgeDetroit reporter Micah Walker talks with two Detroit artists Jennifer Witcher, who goes by DJ Minx, and Ariel Corley, who goes by DJ Holographic about their friendship, musical influences, playing at Movement Music Festival and coming out as queer artists in the electronic music scene.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Detroit is known as the birthplace of techno.
Adding to that legacy DJ Minx, a legend in the city's techno scene, and DJ Holographic, who's learning from those who came before her.
How did the two of you meet?
Ariel and I met through, of course, music and being two black women from Detroit playing this thing called techno and house music.
- Yeah.
- And me being mentorish, once I know about a young lady doing some music, I've gotta meet them.
So I went to a party where she was just to meet her specifically.
- I love that.
- [Micah] Holographic looks up to Minx, and the two have formed a bond for music.
- I'm super honored to get to know her more and more every day.
And I'm trying to remember the first time I met you, but I know how many times I've heard of you.
I had so many people say like, "If you don't know Minx, you don't know nothing yet."
And I was like, "You're right."
And it just uplifted me to see you because I knew I'm in the right place at the right time.
- Both of you performed that Movement this year.
You've been there several times.
What makes each time so special?
- I would say each time is so special 'cause I've been going since I graduated high school, and I've been going every summer every year.
The Hart Plaza and being at the heart of the city of Detroit to hear music that African Americans made, house music, techno, it's gratifying.
For this past year, oh my god, it was like the best one.
I got to play a really fun and phenomenal (indistinct).
Then I gotta see some of my favorite artists like Terrence Parker.
And I got reinspired and getting to dance and express myself and seeing my other family.
'Cause that's what it is.
Movement is like another family.
- Absolutely.
Movement is like a family reunion every year, and a lot of people around the world actually know that.
- [Micah] Minx has been a fixture at the Movement Festival for more than 20 years.
- I have a stage every year, so I do a house show live stage.
And we bring in artists that a lot of them haven't played Movement or been there before.
But the elevating of these not only artists period, but LGBTQ community that come in and they play and they dance with us, it's like building another family on top of the one we already have.
- What were some of the music that that you grew up listening to?
- Motown, Michael Jackson.
- Diana Ross (indistinct).
- Diana Ross.
- Yes, the Jacksons, (indistinct).
- Aretha Franklin.
- Yep.
- A lot of Michael Jackson for me.
At 18, I started listening to Prince.
And then the radio.
It's the radio that really raised me for music here in Detroit.
- Electrifying Mojo.
- How has that shaped the music you're making today?
- First of all, with us talking about the Electrifying Mojo, he was on WGPR.
And he introduced me to a lot of the music that I still play today because this music is timeless as well.
He played a lot of Prince.
He played a lot of tracks that no one else played on different stations like the B502s, and (indistinct) Frequency 7 stuff.
He played a lot of new wave.
And this is stuff you hear right now that's being produced by house music DJs using the same samples, and we can still play that music today.
- How did clubs like the Music Institute help you realize that you want be a DJ?
- Going to the Music Institute and seeing those people dance like they cared about nothing in the world, and them, it's just being such a togetherness at this place, that was a feeling that I wanted to deliver.
I saw the DJ at the Music Institute and he would be getting down.
I was like, "Oh, I think I can be a DJ."
But realistically, it was my mentor that pushed me to say, "Well, if you wanna be a DJ, be a DJ.
The first thing I thought was, "Nope, I'm a woman.
I can't do that."
So, then I started hearing about the women that were DJing, like, there was Stent C. and there was K-Han, rest her soul, and Serena Tyler.
And I just, you know, started practicing and realizing that it is something that I as well could do.
- I worked at nightclub called Necto when I was 20, and I used to be in Nectarine Ballroom where Jeff Mills was the wizard like long ago.
And then he had a residency there.
And I would hear the DJs perform there every night and hear how he would get people to come to the dance floor but also let them go chat and mingle with other people.
So I can see, like, there was an art to it, and I just wanna be a part of that.
- [Micah] DJ Minx and DJ Holographic share their coming out journeys as artists as well.
In 2021, Minx came out publicly on Instagram, saying in the post, "So here I am.
Minx, DJ, producer, Momma, partner, lesbian, friend.
- I've got friends that thought it was a bad idea for me to come out.
I've had a husband, I have daughters, and it looked like the, I guess, homebody that people wanted to see out there DJing.
But just constantly hearing that it wasn't a good idea to let people know that, you know, I lived the way I lived.
So, I had to get over that.
Finally, we just let it go.
When I actually did come out, the phone calls that I got, like, at that moment, like, the posts went up, I'd sat and my managers were all like, "We're gonna be up."
But people that read the post were calling me, "Holy smokes, I cannot believe it.
I love you so much.
Thank you for doing this."
One person said, "You know, you just helped me.
I just came out" Or "You let it be known that it can be done."
And, like, an entire world opened up.
- Even with my family, like, I came out in a weird way of being bi.
And people also, even in our community, are not the nicest of bis.
But it was still that moment of when I told my family this.
This is where it got kind of weird 'cause I expressed it to my mother.
It was a whole nother topic that we were having, and then it came up slightly to this topic of being, "Okay, this is when I'm gonna be vulnerable with you.
We're talking about something else where I'm gonna be vulnerable with you and honest here about me liking this girl at school."
But I don't know she fully understood or, like, was willing to make the next move 'cause I don't know...
It was a book on the conversation but she was listening, and then, of course, she told her mom, which is grandmother.
And my grandmother just said, which is really made me very happy that she said like, "As long as you meet someone that respects you."
And that was really nice 'cause that means I got, like, reinforcement there.
I played, in majority, only queer places in my first five years of DJing, so there was not a conversation of, like, coming out.
I'm like, "I'm here."
"Look, I'm here."
"I'm here and I'm queer."
- But it was always naturally there.
- What's next for the two of you?
Any future collaborations?
- Yeah, we've got something brewing.
Very, very Detroit.
I am currently planning my 2025 Movement stage.
I have a few remixes coming out soon.
- I don't even wanna think about five minutes ahead.
But in truth, it's gonna be music, it's gonna be art, and it's gonna be Detroit.
Always.
My biggest thing right now is the Zodiac thing is a big project for mine and just like really just working on my music, honestly.
Like, I love digging and working on music.
I have a lot of stuff.
The funny part is, like, I'm an ambitious person so I don't think I'm doing a lot.
- Probably doing a whole lot.
- I'm doing too much.
- Yeah.
- I'm doing the most part.
- Exactly.
And this (indistinct) is doing the most.
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