The first entertainment company (in the world) to invent the term, "Mobile Discotheque" was based in the United Kingdom and it was launched by a young man called Roger Squire. The word "discotheque" is a modification of the French word "bibliotheque" which means (in French), library of books. A club in Paris in the 1950s with twin turntables playing only records modified this word converting it to "discotheque" (then meaning library of records). It was not until the mid 1960s that one or two London based clubs discovered and borrowed the term "discotheque" to describe their music format. By early 1966, Roger Squire saw a big marketing opportunity to add the word "mobile" before the word "discotheque" in order to launch a new style DJ based mobile entertainment service. He was the first person in the world to launch such a service using the banner Roger Squire's Mobile Discotheques. His new service was launched in London in June 1966 and it quickly became hugely successful. Within two years, Squire had fifteen mobile discothèques performing approximately sixty functions every week. He performed at events attended by celebrities and royalty, at countless college dances, wedding receptions, and all kinds of social events. Over the next few years, many copycat "Mobile Discos" started to emulate his successful formula. During this period, London got it Swinging London reputation. Squire later set up a disco equipment supply service called Squire Light & Sound that sold disco sound and lighting systems to budding DJs, both in the United Kingdom and abroad. The Squire's Company became the biggest name in UK DJ entertainment in the 60s, 70s and 80s before Roger retired from the business 1988. Roger later took up writing DJ advice articles in DJ magazines and the magazine Pro Mobile, later awarded Roger Squire a Lifetime Achievement Award in March 2015. In the 1980s and 1990s, mobile DJs began to form associations and create professional business networks that evolved into annual trade shows and internet discussion forums. The early 1990s saw the emergence of organized professional trade shows such as the "Mobile Beat Show" in
Las Vegas, Nevada, and the "DJ Times Expo" in
Atlantic City, New Jersey. Seminars by numerous respected DJs such as John Rozz, Ray "Ray Mar" Martinez, Stacy Zemon, Mark Ferrell,
Peter Merry, Randy Bartlett, and Steve Moody have helped DJs to better understand their profession, how to be more professional and to treat being a DJ as a business operation. 1991 saw the publication of
Mobile Beat, a magazine geared specifically toward mobile DJs. In 1992, the
Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG), released The MPEG-1 file standard, designed to produce reasonable sound from a digital file using minimal storage. The lossy compression scheme MPEG-1 Layer-3, popularly known as
MP3, later revolutionized the digital music domain. In 1998,
Final Scratch debuted at the BE Developer Conference, marking the first digital DJ system to give DJs control of MP3 files through special time-coded vinyl records or CDs. While it would take some time for this novel concept to catch on with the "die hard" vinyl-oriented DJs, it was the first step in the new digital DJ revolution. Manufacturers joined with computer DJ pioneers to offer professional endorsements, the first being "Professor Jam", also known as William P. Rader, who went on to develop the industry's first dedicated computer DJ convention and learning program, the "Computerized Performance System" (CPS) known as "DJ Summit", which helped spread the word about the advantages of this emerging technology. The American Disc Jockey Awards Show was established, and its first edition was held in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1998. Since then, thirteen mobile DJs have been elected to the American Disc Jockey Hall of Fame. The thirteen members include John Rozz, Al Lampkin, Joe Martin, Robert A. Lindquist, Jon Michaels, Mike Buonaccorso, Sid Vanderpool, Bobby Morganstein, John Roberts, Ken Knotts, Ray "Ray Mar" Martinez, Cesar Cosio, and Bernie Howard-Fryman. The American Disc Jockey Awards Show annually recognized and honored individuals who had given of themselves to benefit their community or a charitable cause in the name of the ADJA or the DJ Trade as a whole.It is currently in hiatus since 2013. 1998 – Mark “Peace” Thomas 1999 – Ray Martinez 2000 – Professor Jam (aka William P. Rader) 2003 – Patrick McDonald 2006 – Larry Williams 2007 – Jeremy Miller 2007 – Roy Dueitt 2007 – Bill Dunsing 2008 - Louie Castellanos 2009 - Ed Frank 2011 - Eric Horne 2012 – Geoffrey Sandler 2013 – Mitch Taylor --> The "DJ of the Year" winners at the DJ Times Expo include three-time winner Marcello Pedalino, Roxanne Greene, K.C. KoKoruz, Shawn "Big Daddy" McKee, Marz Lawhorn, Gerry Siracusa, Adam Weitz, Steve Moody and Pascal Levesque who, in 2013, was the first Canadian to take part in the competition. Pascal Levesque from Québec, Canada, was named "DJ of the Year Runner-Up" and won the "Best Dance" award. On May 10, 2020, John Walter, The Chief Tabulator of votes for The DJ of The Year Award died from complications with COVID-19. ==Developments==