
Wedding DJ · Marrakech
paymentsPricing
groupLanguages
French · English
eventVerified
Jul 2026
checkStatus
Under review
the profile
DJ Jerem is a French professional DJ based in Marrakech, and he has been a visible name on the local party scene for years, working both as a freelancer and through event agencies around the city. His style is open format and built for a party, high energy and crowd-first rather than tied to one narrow genre, which is the right instinct for a Marrakech wedding where the floor is usually a mix of French, Moroccan and other international guests who all want to recognize something. The clearest way to judge him before you book is his own footage. His Facebook page, djjerem.kech, is full of real clips from weddings and private parties across Marrakech, so you can watch how he actually reads a room and where he takes the energy rather than relying on a written promise. He also keeps an active Instagram at dj_jerem_marrakech, a LinkedIn page, a profile on X as deej_jerem, and a listing on the local marrakechwedding.net directory, so he is easy to find and easy to message. What he covers is broad. Beyond weddings he plays gala evenings, VIP parties, birthdays, fashion shows, private parties, beach parties and brunches, and he has done fill-in and replacement sets for nightclubs, which is a useful signal, because a club-tested DJ knows how to hold a floor for hours and recover a room that has gone flat. For a wedding that experience translates into pacing, the sense of when to lift the room, when to let it breathe during dinner, and when to push the late night set. There is also a practical reason a French DJ helps at a bilingual wedding. He can read a French crowd's cues, catch the songs a Paris or Lyon guest list will sing back word for word, and still pivot into the Moroccan chaabi and international pop that fill the rest of the room, which is the balancing act that decides a mixed floor. Ask him how he plans the arc of the evening, the ceremony background, the dinner volume, the first dance, and the peak, because a DJ who can describe that arc in detail is usually the one who delivers it. Marrakech venues add their own practical questions. A riad in the medina may have a strict noise curfew, a villa or an Agafay desert camp often runs on a generator that has to be sized for the sound and light load, and every outdoor site needs the gear protected from dust and evening cold, so confirm he has worked your specific type of venue before. Agree a deposit, a written contract, his arrival and soundcheck time, and whether he needs a meal and a covered booth, since these small details are exactly what goes wrong when they are left unspoken. His fee runs from roughly 600 to 1,400 euros depending on hours, guest count and format, which places him in the accessible middle of the Marrakech DJ market, a sensible number for couples who want a professional, high-energy party without reaching for the premium tier. Here is my honest caveat, and it is a practical one. At the time of writing his own website, dj-jerem.com, would not load for me, so do not rely on it, go straight to his Facebook and Instagram or message him directly to book. Because his public presence is social first, get the essentials in writing before the day, the hours, the overtime rate, and above all whether the quote is for the DJ only or includes his own sound and lighting, since that varies a lot between a hotel with house sound and a bare villa or beach setup. Ask him directly how many years he has been working in Marrakech and for a couple of recent wedding references, since the concrete detail on his own pages is thinner than his experience suggests. With those points confirmed, he is a solid, well-connected choice for a lively, open-format wedding, and the fact that agencies keep using him is its own quiet endorsement.