- Dep / Depping
- A ‘dep’ is a deputy musician who covers for a regular member of a band who can’t make a gig. Common in UK function, theatre and residency gigs. Depping is a significant income stream for jobbing session players and requires the ability to learn a setlist fast.
- Deposit
- An upfront payment made by the booker to secure the booking, typically 20–50% of the total fee. The deposit confirms the date and is usually non-refundable inside the cancellation window. On GigXchange, deposits are held in escrow via Stripe and released with the balance on completion.
- DI Box
- Direct Injection box, a small device that converts a high-impedance instrument signal (e.g. bass, acoustic guitar pickup, keyboard) into a balanced mic-level signal the sound engineer can plug into the mixing desk. Most UK venues have DIs available; high-end riders often specify preferred brands (Radial, BSS).
- Discover Carousel
- A featured-artist carousel on the GigXchange dashboard surfaced to venues, agents, and promoters. Featured artists rotate based on activity, profile completeness, and verification status, giving complete profiles extra exposure beyond search.
- DJ Set
- A performance by a DJ mixing recorded tracks, typically 1–4 hours. UK DJ bookings range from wedding receptions and corporate parties to club residencies and festival slots. Fees vary from £150 for a local wedding DJ to £10,000+ for a club headliner.
- Doors
- The time the venue opens to ticket-holders or general public. Doors is distinct from stage time, a 7:30pm doors / 9pm stage means attendees have 90 minutes of the venue’s bar trade before the act goes on. Doors time is a key line on any gig poster.
- Door Split
- An arrangement where ticket revenue is divided between artist and venue/promoter. UK grassroots variants include 70/30 in the artist’s favour, 80/20 after the venue’s hire costs are recouped, and sliding scales triggered by headcount. On deposit-based bookings door split is rare; on ticketed club shows it is standard.
- Dry Hire
- A venue rental without in-house sound, lighting, staffing or promotion, the booker brings everything. Dry hire is common for one-off promoter gigs in converted warehouses, church halls, and multi-use spaces. Cheaper per-night than a wet hire but the booker carries all production risk.
- Duo
- A two-piece act, typically vocal and guitar, vocal and piano, or two vocalists with backing. Pub, wedding and restaurant bookings often specify duo over full band for space, volume or budget reasons. Duo fees in the UK typically sit at 60–70% of a 4-piece covers band rate.