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	<title><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></title>
	<link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/</link>
	<language>en-EN</language>
	<copyright><![CDATA[]]></copyright>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Podcast of William Almeida]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
	<googleplay:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></googleplay:author>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></itunes:summary>
	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
	<description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
	<itunes:owner>
	<itunes:name><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:name>
	<itunes:email>contact@hearthis.at</itunes:email>
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    <googleplay:owner>contact@hearthis.at</googleplay:owner>
	<image>
      <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/</link>
      <title>William Almeida</title>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Naina - Crew (Tropical Dance Mix )]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/naina-crew-dj-willy-remix-preview-final-master/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[ARRANGED BY ROHIT RAO>>>]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[ARRANGED BY ROHIT RAO>>>]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[ARRANGED BY ROHIT RAO>>>]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:05:51 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2025-07-15T21:05:51+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:09</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[SAR KIYE YEH PAHAR - STRINGS ( NO STRINGS / 2025 NU DISCO REMIX ) SNIPPET]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/sar-kiya-yeh-pahar-string-dj-willy-remix-123-bpm-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[ARRANGED & PRODUCED BY : ROHIT RAO>>>>]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[ARRANGED & PRODUCED BY : ROHIT RAO>>>>]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[ARRANGED & PRODUCED BY : ROHIT RAO>>>>]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/2/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/12094046/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_m1752606149----cropped_1752606145226.jpg?m=1752606149" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 05 May 2025 21:12:41 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2025-05-05T21:12:41+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:20</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Mitwa - Willy ( Full Intention Club Mix 2024 )]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/mitwa-kank-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/1/9/9/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/11478046/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1730745116991.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 04 Nov 2024 19:30:38 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-11-04T19:30:38+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:27</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[9.45 - Prabh Singh]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/945-prabh-singh-dj-willy-remix-preview-final/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Wed, 21 Aug 2024 18:34:29 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-08-21T18:34:29+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>0:57</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Akhiyaan Gulaab - Mitraz ( Summertime - Club Mix )]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/akhiyaan-gulaab-tbud-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 30 May 2024 17:34:26 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-05-30T17:34:26+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:45</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[WITH YOU - AP DHILLON]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/with-you-ap-dhillon-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/5/6/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/11017450/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1712079026065.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 2024 19:26:00 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-04-02T19:26:00+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:51</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Chaleya - Jawan (Dancehall Mix)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/chaaleya-jawaan-dj-willy-remix-1-min/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/5/4/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/10924711/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1709581749458.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 04 Mar 2024 20:48:24 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-03-04T20:48:24+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:07</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Dil Nu x Last Christmas (2024)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/dil-nu-x-last-christmas-dj-willy-mashup-final-31st-dec/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/0/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/10575686/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1704984730008.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 11 Jan 2024 15:51:51 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2024-01-11T15:51:51+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:24</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Maan Meri Jaan (PREVIEW)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/maan-meri-jaan-dj-willy-remix-130-min/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/2/7/8/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/8752065/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1681690679872.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 17 Apr 2023 02:14:09 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2023-04-17T02:14:09+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:32</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Summer High - A P Dhillon - (Preview) Club Mix]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/summer-high-a-p-dhillon-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/9/0/6/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/7961972/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1674842838609.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Fri, 27 Jan 2023 19:07:24 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2023-01-27T19:07:24+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:16</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[BIBA- PREVIEW]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/audio-2022-09-10-16-58-39/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/7/1/8/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/7076098/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1663239845817.jpg" />
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            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2022 13:02:24 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2022-09-15T13:02:24+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:31</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Criminal - Tu Mile Dil Khile ( Progressive Dub Mix ) Feat. Sage]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/tum-mile-progressive-harshad-mix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[IT WAS GREAT TO USE A LIVE INSTRUMENT (ELECTRIC GUITAR)THIS TIME AND HAVE A SOLO IN MOST PARTS OF THE TRACK>>><br />
<br />
LEAD GUITARIST: Sage Shakyammuni<br />
<br />
CONCEPT: WILLY<br />
<br />
ARRANGEMENT & PROGRAMMING: AKSHAY PATIL]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[IT WAS GREAT TO USE A LIVE INSTRUMENT (ELECTRIC GUITAR)THIS TIME AND HAVE A SOLO IN MOST PARTS OF THE TRACK>>><br />
<br />
LEAD GUITARIST: Sage Shakyammuni<br />
<br />
CONCEPT: WILLY<br />
<br />
ARRANGEMENT & PROGRAMMING: AKSHAY PATIL]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[IT WAS GREAT TO USE A LIVE INSTRUMENT (ELECTRIC GUITAR)THIS TIME AND HAVE A SOLO IN MOST PARTS OF THE TRACK>>>

LEAD GUITARIST: Sage Shakyammuni

CONCEPT: WILLY

ARRANGEMENT & PROGRAMMING: AKSHAY PATIL]]></itunes:summary>
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            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
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                <pubDate>Sat, 17 Apr 2021 15:56:39 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2021-04-17T15:56:39+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:34</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[NAACH MERI RAANI -Guru Randhawa (Dancehall Mix) Preview]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/naach-meri-raani-guru-randhawa-dj-willy-remix-club-version-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Original Credits:<br />
<br />
Song: Naach Meri Rani<br />
Singer: Guru Randhawa & Nikhita Gandhi<br />
Featuring: Guru Randhawa & Nora Fatehi<br />
Composer & Lyrics: Tanishk Bagchi<br />
Additional Programming: Ganesh Waghela<br />
Mixed & Mastered: Eric Pillai<br />
Creators Retrophiles<br />
Team Choreographer: Bosco<br />
Music Label: T-Series]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Original Credits:<br />
<br />
Song: Naach Meri Rani<br />
Singer: Guru Randhawa & Nikhita Gandhi<br />
Featuring: Guru Randhawa & Nora Fatehi<br />
Composer & Lyrics: Tanishk Bagchi<br />
Additional Programming: Ganesh Waghela<br />
Mixed & Mastered: Eric Pillai<br />
Creators Retrophiles<br />
Team Choreographer: Bosco<br />
Music Label: T-Series]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Original Credits:

Song: Naach Meri Rani
Singer: Guru Randhawa & Nikhita Gandhi
Featuring: Guru Randhawa & Nora Fatehi
Composer & Lyrics: Tanishk Bagchi
Additional Programming: Ganesh Waghela
Mixed & Mastered: Eric Pillai
Creators Retrophiles
Team Choreographer: Bosco
Music Label: T-Series]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/4/9/1/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/5500135/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1610287605194.jpg" />
            <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/naach-meri-raani-guru-randhawa-dj-willy-remix-club-version-preview/listen.mp3?s=mpl" length="3456521" />
            <guid isPermaLink="false">5500135</guid>
            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
            <googleplay:explicit>no</googleplay:explicit>
            <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
            
            
            
                <pubDate>Sun, 10 Jan 2021 15:21:02 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2021-01-10T15:21:02+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:26</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Lehanga - (Disco Funk Remix)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/lahenga-dj-willy-disco-funk-remix-with-second-sound-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/2/1/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/5044864/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1597674116712.jpg" />
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            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
            <googleplay:explicit>no</googleplay:explicit>
            <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
            
            
            
                <pubDate>Mon, 17 Aug 2020 16:23:07 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2020-08-17T16:23:07+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:45</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Muqabla - Humse Hai Muqabla (Progressive Dub 2020) ( Preview)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/muqabla-humse-hai-muqabla-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/1/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/4481137/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1584542223716.jpg" />
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            <guid isPermaLink="false">4481137</guid>
            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
            <googleplay:explicit>no</googleplay:explicit>
            <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
            
            
            
                <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2020 15:36:40 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2020-03-18T15:36:40+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:55</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[GHUNGROO (SAX IN THE GROOVE MIX) WAR]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/war-g-rmx-new-promo/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/3/6/5/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/3990073/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1656847872563.jpg" />
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            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
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                <pubDate>Sun, 10 Nov 2019 13:19:09 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2019-11-10T13:19:09+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:39</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Right Here Right Now (funkymix)- Bluffmaster (snippet)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/right-here-right-now-funkymix-bluffmaster-snippet/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/0/9/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/3060126/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1556806877908.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 02 May 2019 16:21:19 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2019-05-02T16:21:19+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:31</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[ Lamberghini | The Doorbeen Feat Ragini (Disco-Funk Remix) SNIPPET]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/lambotghini-130-min/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/4/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2832800/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1550656495046.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2019 10:58:00 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2019-02-20T10:58:00+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:34</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[AKH LAD JAAVE (SNIPPET)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/akh-lad-jaave-snippet/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/4/6/5/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2772389/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1548326073564.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 24 Jan 2019 11:34:34 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2019-01-24T11:34:34+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:26</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[TERA GHATA (DANCE MIX) FULL VERSION]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/tg-practice-6-edit-2-new/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/2/1/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2772376/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1548325206128.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 24 Jan 2019 11:17:00 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2019-01-24T11:17:00+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:29</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Swag Se Swagat( Club Mix)Tiger Zinda Hai]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/swag-se-swagat-club-mixtiger-zinda-hai/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/0/3/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2452274/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1539597943230.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 15 Oct 2018 12:05:44 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2018-10-15T12:05:44+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>3:46</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Aahista Aahista (Dj Willy 2018 Club Mix)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/aahista-aahista-dj-willy-2018-club-mix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/4/0/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2410559/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1537733952004.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Sun, 23 Sep 2018 22:19:14 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2018-09-23T22:19:14+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:41</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Dil Diyan Gallan -Tiger Zinda Hai ( Dj Willy Club Mix )full version]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/dil-diyan-gallan-tiger-zinda-hai-dj-willy-club-mix-full-version/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Enjoy this!!!]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Enjoy this!!!]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Enjoy this!!!]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/0/5/6/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/2141977/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1530789924650.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 05 Jul 2018 13:25:27 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2018-07-05T13:25:27+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:30</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[MEHER HAI RAB DI (DANCEHALL REMIX) WELCOME TO NEW YORK]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/meher-hai-rab-di-dancehall-remixwelcome-to-newyork/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Thu, 12 Apr 2018 17:19:20 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2018-04-12T17:19:20+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>3:37</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[You Are My Sonia - KKKG (Moombahton remix)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/you-are-my-sonia-kkkg-moombahton-remix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/2/0/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1737050/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1516897939702.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 25 Jan 2018 17:32:26 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2018-01-25T17:32:26+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>3:20</itunes:duration>
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            <title><![CDATA[Pehla Nasha  / Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar- Dj Willy Remix (preview )]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/pehla-nasha-jo-jeeta-wohi-sikandar-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/1/5/8/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1547195/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1505563851.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Sat, 16 Sep 2017 14:10:54 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-09-16T14:10:54+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:46</itunes:duration>
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        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Hawayein ( Club Mix)- Jab Harry Meet Sejal]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/hawayein-club-mix-jab-harry-meet-sejal/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/2/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1513303/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1503315228.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 21 Aug 2017 13:33:51 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-08-21T13:33:51+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:30</itunes:duration>
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            <title><![CDATA[Aaj Ki Raat - Don (Dj Willy Remix) (Preview)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/aaj-ki-raat-don-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/2/9/8/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1442302/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1500560892.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 20 Jul 2017 16:28:19 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-07-20T16:28:19+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>2:05</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Jaane Ja  ( Nu -Disco Revival Mix ) Full version]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/jaane-ja-nu-disco-revival-mix-full-version/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[TRIBUTE TO OUR VERY OWN BOLLYWOOD LEGEND HELEN>>> VOCALS FROM THE ALBUM 'DANCE MASTI FOREVER' BY INSTANT KARMA>>>]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[TRIBUTE TO OUR VERY OWN BOLLYWOOD LEGEND HELEN>>> VOCALS FROM THE ALBUM 'DANCE MASTI FOREVER' BY INSTANT KARMA>>>]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[TRIBUTE TO OUR VERY OWN BOLLYWOOD LEGEND HELEN>>> VOCALS FROM THE ALBUM 'DANCE MASTI FOREVER' BY INSTANT KARMA>>>]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/8/7/8/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1376288/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1498751878.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 29 Jun 2017 17:58:02 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-06-29T17:58:02+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:15</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Aa Jaane Jaan -Snippet  ]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/aa-jaane-jaan-snippet-final/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/7/8/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1334238/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1495713787.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Thu, 25 May 2017 14:01:34 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-05-25T14:01:34+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:47</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Do You Know - Diljit Dosanjh - Reggaeton Mix]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/do-you-know-diljit-dosanjh-dj-willy-remix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/4/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1293480/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1492525246.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 18 Apr 2017 16:18:15 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-04-18T16:18:15+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:31</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Sooraj Dooba Hai - Roy (Club mix)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/sooraj-dooba-hai-roy-dj-willy-remix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/0/7/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1293470/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1492525270.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 18 Apr 2017 16:07:14 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-04-18T16:07:14+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:37</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Bulleya - ADHM - Dj Willy Remix (Preview)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/bulleya-adhm-dj-willy-remix-preview/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/1/2/6/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1239979/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1488904621.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 07 Mar 2017 17:37:03 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-03-07T17:37:03+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:26</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[The Humma Song – OK Jaanu (Glitch-hop edit)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/the-humma-song-ok-jaanu-glitch-hop-edit/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/4/4/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1188364/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1485097744.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Sun, 22 Jan 2017 16:08:24 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-01-22T16:08:24+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:41</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[BREAK UP SONG -CLUB MIX]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/break-up-song-club-mix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/4/5/9/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1161812/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1483445954.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 03 Jan 2017 13:19:42 +0100</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-01-03T13:19:42+01:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:30</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Main Hoon Hero Tera - HERO]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/main-hoon-hero-tera-hero/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/9/7/9/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1082157/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1477395979.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 25 Oct 2016 12:31:05 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-10-25T12:31:05+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>3:27</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[SAU AASMAAN - (CLUB MIX FULL VERSION) BAAR BAAR DEKHO]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/sau-aasmaan-club-mix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/o/7/2/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/1063667/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_a56fe55a2d0ecd72921ba9109b43bfc51448906510153955076466094306262127o.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2016 17:03:03 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-10-12T17:03:03+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>3:56</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[ABCD 2 - Sun Saatiya ( ELECTRO HOUSE REMIX)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/abcd-2-sun-saatiya-electro-house-remix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/2/0/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/988358/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_01d290dc7ca5e756308e4042f5628635_1471002002.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2016 23:10:08 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-08-02T23:10:08+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:48</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[KAR GAYI CHULL ( ELECTRO HOUSE REMIX)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/kar-gayi-chull/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[PLAY THIS LOUD OK>>>>ENJOY>>>]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[PLAY THIS LOUD OK>>>>ENJOY>>>]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[PLAY THIS LOUD OK>>>>ENJOY>>>]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/n/6/7/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/940829/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_df5a593725473eea26af3643760ee47b1298051110153564550816094862793676n.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2016 17:30:18 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-06-29T17:30:18+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>4:37</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[RAAT BAAKI (2016 PROGRESSIVE MIX)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/raat-baaki-2016-progressive-mix/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/1/0/_/uploads/3613649/image_track/988362/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_468d4717b80d90bd00ca266297310e10_1471002016.jpg" />
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                <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2016 12:59:57 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-06-06T12:59:57+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>2:24</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[WAKRA SWAG - CLUBBED AT ROYALTY REMIX (SNIPPET)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/wakra-swag-clubbed-at-royalty-remix-snippet/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Wed, 18 May 2016 19:31:45 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-05-18T19:31:45+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>2:10</itunes:duration>
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            <title><![CDATA[ROCK THA PARTY - GROOVE ON REMIX(SNIPPET)]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/djwillymumbai/rock-tha-party-groove-on-remixsnippet/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[William Almeida]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Club Royalty’s resident spin maestro, DJ Willy makes it his personal mission to lure the crowds on to the dance floor every evening and keep them there all night!
A Bandra boy bred up on a staple diet of the Bee Gees, Bill Haley & His Comets, and Michael Jackson, DJ Willy drew inspiration from a neighbourhood full of musicians and embarked on his career fresh out of school at the age of 16. “I was never much of a book guy,” he says with a grin.
He has amazing memories of the early scene. “The 90’s was the decade people really knew how to party. They didn’t come out to be seen, they were thirsty for the music.”
The nascent years of struggle and playing R&B sets at small Bandra clubs (remember Illusions?) gave way to a break that changed his life. “DJ Ryan Beck introduced me to DJ Aqeel, the king of Bollywood mixes. From then on, things just went higher and higher for me.”
What followed were stints at Enigma at The Marriot and a residency at Poison, one of the most famous clubs in the city at that time, and finally Club Royalty, where he still wows crowds today.
DJ Willy’s strength lies in his versatility; his ability to kill it with any genre thrown at him. With 20 years of DJing under his belt, he’s played at every conceivable venue in the nation. From College fests and Afternoon Socials to Clubs across the country, Sunburn, VH1 Supersonic Goa, parties at the Khan’s (“Salman is a Retro freak!”), you name it and he’s been there.
He infuses his sets with live acts like singers, percussionists, saxophonists, always experimenting to bring something new to the turntable.
Now in his fourth year with Club Royalty, where does Willy see the scene headed? “Music is always cyclical. But I think perhaps EDM has run aground,” he says. Trap (a genre of music that uses multi-layered synthesizers, grimy and rhythmic snares; and heavy sub-bass lines) is the new thing, he feels.
But he staunchly believes that although we enjoy flirtations with other genres, every Mumbaikar will always be drawn back to his roots.
“At the end of the day, it will always be Bollywood”.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Sun, 15 May 2016 22:43:05 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-05-15T22:43:05+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>1:20</itunes:duration>
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