Night People is deliberately “the Mark Ronson book nobody asked for”. It is not about the super‑producer, winning Grammys, but about the working DJ who spent years “lugging crates into bars and nightclubs,” reading rooms and igniting the dance floor.
Throughout, Ronson is candid about drugs and nightlife excess. He provides accounts of mixing substances at Tunnel, accidentally taking heroin, watching people slip into K‑holes, and showing how thrilling and grim that world could be at the same time. He claims that it was anxiety and panic attacks that seemingly saved him from addiction.
The book is equally honest about the world of access and privilege he grew up in. From the rock‑star stepfather, Mick Jones, who was the lead guitarist in Foreigner, with crates of funk and soul he can quietly “borrow,” the mother who bought him Technics on condition he got into college, a trust‑fund safety net set up by his grandfather, and the general proximity to fame. With all this, Ronson is often modest about DJing and the side‑doors that this privilege seemingly opened, such as getting straight into Peter Gatien’s Club USA while others grind for years.
For most DJs, getting into Gatien’s clubs meant years of playing tiny bars and dimly lit backrooms before earning a spot at Club USA. I should have needed that long—building connections, making my way up gradually. Instead, I stumbled right into it. I already had advantages that most others didn’t. My mother bought me the gear. I was raised by a musician with a home studio. But this was an absurdly lucky break, even for me. The thought of playing Club USA was surreal. I felt way too green for such a big stage. But no way was I turning it down.
Source: Night People by Mark Ronson
What I found interesting about the book was how Ronson took us behind the decks of a seemingly lost art. He recounts the experience of buying his first decks at Rock and Soul, figuring out how it all works, learning to read different rooms and audiences, building sets by BPM on sticky labels, bombing, biting, improving, and slowly earning respect. I was particular interested in his experience phoning an older classmates, Manny Ames, for scratching lessons.
“You got any stickers?”
I scrambled for some Maxell cassette labels. He peeled them off casually and showed me how to mark up two copies of the same record by attaching the sticker from the center hole outward, like the needle on a compass.
“This way you’ll always know where you are visually while you’re running two records back and forth,” he said, sharing something both straightforward and mind-blowing.
The stickers allowed him to spin the record back to precise spots—2 o’clock, 7 o’clock, etc.—by tracking each revolution of the disc. Each position on the clock face corresponded to a specific sound: the kick drum might be at 3 o’clock, the snare hit at 9 o’clock, making it possible to consistently find and repeat any part of the beat.
Source: Night People by Mark Ronson
With this insight, Ronson demonstrates that success is hours, not magic.[1] This included eight gigs a week, carrying endless demo tapes in his pocket, playing Tuesday nights in tiny rooms. Ronson calls out the place of effort and practice after watching DJ AM re-order lyrics using two records.
“Dude. How’d you learn that shit??!!” I asked, still trying to process.
“Man… just been in the crib watching old DMC battles and teaching myself the routines. Crazy what you can do when you quit smoking crack.” He gave a gallows chuckle and took a drag of his cigarette.
Looking at the scattered VHS tapes and overflowing ashtrays, I said, “I guess it helps you haven’t left this room in a year,” half joking, half in awe.
Source: Night People by Mark Ronson
With this recognition of effort, Ronson rues this lost world, an era where endless hours would be spent crate‑digging and obsessing over pressings and B‑sides. He contrasts this with his modern setup of a laptop running Serato. Although this change affords new creative possibilities and relief for his own aging body, but there is also something lost in working within the constraints of physical, story‑filled crates and mildew‑stained sleeves.
I haven’t DJed with records in years. Instead, I use Serato, software that lets me manipulate songs on my laptop via turntables and CD players. Instead of crates, I have a MacBook. My back thanks me, but the truth is, I’m not the DJ I used to be. Back then, limited by crate space, I’d sit on my apartment floor crafting my entire set beforehand, agonizing over every choice. Should I pack the hefty double-disc Classic Funk Mastercuts or the equally bulky Classic Jazz-Funk Mastercuts? Asking myself, will the crowd be funky or jazz-funky? Do I bring the Isley Brothers’ Go for Your Guns, with the all-time slow jam “Footsteps in the Dark (Parts 1 & 2),” or their album The Heat Is On, which has “Fight the Power” and “For the Love of You”? Now, with Serato, I rock up to the club with the entire history of music under my arm. But the sheer number of choices is paralyzing. With seconds left on Drake and Wizkid’s “One Dance,” I frantically scroll through thousands of tracks and land on “Ring of Fire” by Johnny Cash purely because the computer says they’re both 104 BPM. Meanwhile, these songs have as much in common as a goldfish and a lampshade.
Source: Night People by Mark Ronson
Along with insight into DJing, Ronson takes us into a pre‑gentrified New York, with grimy clubs, record stores, basements and lofts, club‑kid Times Square, and a nightlife ecosystem (promoters, doormen, record‑company promo guys, bouncers) that feels both hyper‑specific and now mostly gone.[2] With this there is a lot of name dropping. However, it feels different in tone to say Moby’s memoir Porcelain as I would argue that Ronson is placing himself in other people’s orbit, not vice versa.
On side note, Ronson’s acknowledgments at the end of the book spell out his writing process in a way that could be seen to mirror his crate‑digging. Inspired by the realisation that memories and people were starting to fade, he interviewed hundreds of DJs, promoters, dancers, doormen, bouncers to reconstruct a vanished. However, more importantly, in calling out this process he recognises that the number of people and choices involved in any creative art. Something that it is easy to forget at times.
Overall, Night People provides an insight into not only Mark Ronson, but a world now seemingly lost. For me it sits alongside Damian Cowell’s podcast associated with the album Only the Shit You Love and Jarvis Cocker’s Good Pop, Bad Pop. Each have a penchant for the small incidental stories, always wary about getting too Glenn A Baker. Although he has discussed this world in the past (see his Crate Diggers interview for Fuse), the book goes into more detail. It was also made even better having it read by Ronson himself, which I found via Libby.
- This reminds me of a comment from Tom Morello and the willingness to practice: “I’m disgusted by the fact that a lot of young people these days aren’t willing to sit down and practise the electric guitar for eight hours a day. They are all looking for an easier route to becoming famous. Look at the Top 50 songs on the radio in the US – there are no guitar solos in them.” ↩
- It is interesting to contrast Ronson’s New York with Phillip Glass’ New York as detailed in his autobiography Words Without Music in which he lived in a loft on 22nd Street. I guess the reality is places never stay the same? ↩









