Wedding DJ
Above 3,000 feet, the air is different and the stakes are higher. High Country weddings deserve music with the same altitude.
The NC High Country is about 95 miles from Asheville and worth every mile. Couples who choose Boone, Blowing Rock, Banner Elk, or Valle Crucis are making a statement about what they value — and the music needs to honor that. I've performed across this region and know the difference between a barn on Beech Mountain in October fog and a resort ballroom in Blowing Rock on a clear summer evening. The approach changes. The commitment doesn't.
Watauga and Avery Counties sit along the Blue Ridge Parkway with some of the highest elevations on the East Coast. The wedding culture here skews toward long weekends, destination guests, and venues that feel like escapes. Couples want their reception to feel earned — like the music belongs to this place and this night.
Custom-curated for your Boone wedding — not a template. Every song choice earns its place on your night.
I learn your crowd before the night starts. The family that loves Sinatra. The college friends who need something they can feel. I adjust in real time.
Every transition is a decision. The silence between songs, the build into a first dance, the drop that brings the floor back — all intentional.
Every room has different acoustics, different energy, different flow. I know how to work with the space, not against it.
Beech Mountain, NC
A renovated barn at high elevation with panoramic ridgeline views — the room has excellent natural warmth and a dance floor that fills fast once the energy builds.
Banner Elk, NC
A 6,400 sq ft modern mountain venue with multiple ceremony sites — clean lines and high ceilings that allow for tight, even sound coverage across the room.
Valle Crucis, NC
A historic inn on 20 acres with intimate event spaces — small crowds in enclosed rooms where music volume is critical; I keep it conversational until the dance floor opens.
Blowing Rock, NC
A 75-acre lakeside resort with both ballroom and outdoor ceremony options — the ballroom has professional acoustics and a setup that rewards a full speaker rig.
Jefferson, NC
A 400-acre private sanctuary with European architecture — intimate, exclusive, and built for ceremonies where every note of the processional needs to sit perfectly in the space.
Banner Elk, NC
A downtown Banner Elk estate venue with a refined indoor reception space — mid-sized room that projects well without needing a heavy rig.
Boone, NC
A boutique hotel rooftop with mountain views over downtown Boone — outdoor open-air setting that requires careful speaker positioning to maintain clarity.
Boone, NC
Thirty-four acres of open meadow near Boone — outdoor-primary venue where I bring additional subwoofer coverage so the bass doesn't get lost in open air.
Boone, NC
A fifth-generation family farm four miles from downtown Boone with a beautifully restored barn — authentic Appalachian character and a dance floor that holds energy well.
Sugar Mountain, NC
A secluded high-elevation property at the top of Sugar Mountain with on-site cabins and room for up to 200 guests — built for full weekend celebrations with open mountain air sound considerations.
Peak season Saturdays book 12+ months in advance. Lock in your date before someone else does.
Check Your DateYes. The High Country is about 95 miles from my base in Asheville. Travel fees apply beyond 60 miles and are itemized clearly in your quote — no surprises.
Fall foliage weekends in mid-October book 14–18 months out. Summer Saturdays at the most popular venues go nearly as fast. Reach out as soon as your date is set.
Yes. Open-air sound at elevation has its own challenges — wind, natural reverb across ridgelines, distance from guests to speakers. I plan for all of it during advance prep and bring redundant equipment for remote venues.
Also serving
Blowing Rock · Banner Elk · Valle Crucis · Sugar Mountain · Beech Mountain · Jefferson · Newland · Linville