
Wedding DJ · Marrakech
paymentsPricing
groupLanguages
Arabic · French
eventVerified
Feb 2026
checkStatus
Under review
the profile
DJ Reda, who performs as Red Supa and sometimes REDASUPASTAR, is the most well-traveled name on this list, and that shapes both what he offers and what you should check before booking. He was born in Casablanca and started mixing in the mid 90s, cutting his teeth in Marrakech before moving to Madrid, where he built a reputation as an MC deejay, the kind of DJ who works a microphone and the turntables at the same time, with real cutting and scratching skills rather than a pre-planned playlist. He reached the finals of a DJ competition in 2004, and from around 2009 he became a headliner across Latin club circuits, holding a residency at Diamond by the Fun group on Wednesdays and weekends and a weekend residency at New Garamond. In short, this is a working club DJ with international miles on him, not a hobbyist. His range is wide by design. He lists 80s and 90s, Afro beats, commercial, covers, deep house, hip-hop, nu disco, oldies, reggae, and reggaeton, and his sharpest identity sits in the urban, hip-hop and reggaeton corner, which is exactly the sound a younger, party-driven crowd asks for. He speaks Arabic, Spanish and English, which is a genuine asset at a mixed Moroccan and European wedding where the host needs to hype the room in more than one language and actually be understood. He covers a long list of event types, weddings, festivals, corporate events, hotel and restaurant nights, cruise ships and private parties, so a wedding is well within his normal work. The MC side of his act is worth understanding, because it changes the room. A DJ who is confident on the microphone can run announcements, hype a grand entrance, and hold the crowd between tracks, which is a real advantage if you want a high-energy, hosted party rather than a purely musical background. The flip side is that this energy has to be matched to a wedding, not a club, so agree clearly how much microphone work you want and when. His trilingual hosting, in Arabic, Spanish and English, is genuinely useful for a guest list that spans Morocco, Europe and beyond, and it is one of the more distinctive things he brings to the table. He is represented through the Soul Artists agency and also appears on the Cueup booking platform, and you can find him on Facebook as Red Supa and on Instagram at redsupa. His fee for an event runs from roughly 900 to 2,000 euros depending on the date, the format and travel. Here is my honest caveat, and it is the important part. Red Supa is effectively an international, Madrid-based DJ, so the first question is not talent, it is logistics. Confirm his availability for your Marrakech date early, and get travel and any accommodation costs written into the quote so they do not appear later as a surprise. His public footprint is club and agency led, and his Cueup profile does not carry wedding reviews yet, so ask him directly for recent wedding references and a short video from a real reception, not just a club set, because a wedding floor with grandparents and children needs different pacing than a Friday night at a Latin club. If your wedding skews young, loud and international, and you want an MC energy on the mic as much as a DJ behind the decks, he is a strong and unusual choice. If you want a quiet, mostly Moroccan traditional evening, he is not the natural fit, and that is fine. Match the DJ to the party you actually want, tell him plainly what that is on the first call, and let the answer guide you.