Twin Cities-based DJ and music mixer Julian White, who entertained millions over a decades-long career that included mixing songs and spinning records for Prince, has died.
Known to the world as Brother Jules, White also worked as a radio engineer and on-air personality at KMOJ radio, where he last hosted "The Twilight Zone" show late on Fridays and Saturdays.
He died Dec. 4 at Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park of complications from a stroke, according to Ray Seville, a veteran Twin Cities DJ and honorary father to Brother Jules. White was 50, and had long suffered from kidney disease.
"This news is just devastating," said Sharon Smith-Akinsanya, who ran marketing for Prince and his Glam Slam nightclubs in Minneapolis, Miami and Los Angeles. She hired White, at Prince's direction, in the early 1990s.
"Prince thought Jules was amazing because he loved and understood music, and that's why he and Prince got along so well. It was all about the music," she said.
"Brother Jules could rock a crowd like no other," Seville added. "He had a deep understanding of how to mix music and to mix sounds that you might not think would be good together but sounded great together."
Seville was perhaps the first professional DJ White met, and he made his passion for music evident immediately.
"I was DJing a party and here comes this 9-year-old kid wanting me to mix a Prince song so he could see how it was done," Seville recalled. "He was hungry. Next thing I know, he's 15 and DJing professionally at different events around town."