SALT LAKE CITY: It’s five hours until tipoff time, and Jeremy Castro and Meikle LaHue look out over the seats in Vivint Arena. On Saturday night, the arena was decked out in orange and red to match the Utah Jazz’s special City Edition jerseys and court. On Monday afternoon, though, it’s a whiteout: Every seat in the arena has a white Jazz shirt draped over it for tonight’s game.
“I’ve been to a lot of games,” Castro said. “Saturday night was as fun of an environment as I have ever witnessed. It was unbelievable. And to see the fans get so excited, it was so rewarding.”
The Jazz muscled out a victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder Saturday night, putting them up 2-1 in their first-round playoff series. Castro and LaHue oversee the music that gets played at Jazz games — Castro is the senior vice president of content and entertainment, LaHue is vice president of game experience.
For the fans, music plays a big part in any Jazz home game, especially during the playoffs.
“We live in a community where they go back to when we were in the playoffs 20 years in a row, and Utah and BYU football were at the top of their game,” Castro said. “So they kind of expect every year for us to have the best product possible.”
Though Castro has worked for the Jazz for 11 years, this is his first season helming the team’s in-game playlist. For Castro, LaHue and the Jazz, in-game music has to strike a balance between what the fans, players and owners want. During pregame and halftime warmups, the music is culled from a list of requests from the Jazz’s players. As it gets closer to game time, the music becomes more about fan expectations.
“It’s tricky, because you want to play the right thing at the right time. What’s going on down there reflects what we’re playing, too,” LaHue said, pointing toward the court. “So if everyone’s excited, you’re never going to know if it’s the song or is it just the play?”
During the games, LaHue is near the court, fielding a flood of text messages from various Jazz staff members. Castro tends to sit among the crowd, and helps the audio team make various adjustments on the fly.
The music at Jazz games tends to change over time, in step with what’s happening on Top 40 radio. Some songs, though, are Utah Jazz mainstays. Take Jerry Lee Lewis’ “Great Balls of Fire.” The Jazz stopped playing it for a short time, but fans and sponsors insisted they bring it back.
“I mean, I covered the team in the ’90s, and ‘Great Balls of Fire’ was always part of it,” Castro recalled. “That’s one of those traditional songs that I think will be with us for as long as we can play it.
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