8-Year-Old DJ Raises $1K for Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance - 27 East

8-Year-Old DJ Raises $1K for Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance

icon 10 Photos
DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.

DJ Vivy spinning in her basement at home in Hampton Bays.

DJ Vivy spinning in her basement at home in Hampton Bays. COURTESY ERIKA KLEIN

DJ Vivy spinning in her basement at home in Hampton Bays.

DJ Vivy spinning in her basement at home in Hampton Bays. COURTESY ERIKA KLEIN

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco. COURTESY ERIKA KLEIN

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco. COURTESY ERIKA KLEIN

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco. COURTESY ERIKA KLEIN

DJ Vivy with members of the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance on Wednesday, May 6.  DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy with members of the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance on Wednesday, May 6. DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy with members of the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance on Wednesday, May 6.  DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy with members of the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance on Wednesday, May 6. DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco.  DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy raised over $1,000 for the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance with a virtual donation disco. DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy get a tour of an ambulance.  DANA SHAW

DJ Vivy get a tour of an ambulance. DANA SHAW

authorMichelle Trauring on May 12, 2020

When DJ Vivy is in the zone, her audience can feel it.

She’s focused, yet all smiles, with her headphones on and her small body rocking from side to side. If her hands aren’t flowing across her Numark Mixtrack Pro 3, they’re up in the air as she dances to her beats at home in Hampton Bays.

With a résumé that includes gigs at South Street Seaport and Times Square, the disc jockey has made a name for herself in her burgeoning four-year career. And while that may sound short, it actually comprises half of Vivy’s life — considering she’s only 8 years old.

“She’s really come into her own,” her mother, Erika Klein, said during a telephone interview last week. “She’s dancing and smiling and adorable — and not just because she’s my kid. She’s really so cute when she performs. She’s so good.”

Nearly 40 other fans agreed on May 1, when they joined her on her weekly Zoom disco party in partnership with The Wonder, a clubhouse that focuses on adventure, exploration and imagination in Manhattan, where the Kleins split their time.

Except this particular bash had a twist.

Leading up to what they called “Donation Disco Friday,” Vivy and her parents pledged to give $5 for every participant who logged onto the Zoom call, followed up by a “double dog dare” to match their donation from the young DJ herself.

Together, they raised a whopping $1,055 — a donation the family decided to give to the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance, much to Chief Steven Tringali’s surprise.

“It’s all kind of crazy and it’s outstanding,” the department chief said. “One, we were very surprised that she found us and she selected us, and chose to honor us and donate to us. And two, I was extremely surprised that it was coming from an 8-year-old.

“Once they were telling me the back story with her, it’s amazing everything that she’s doing at such a young age,” he continued. “I started telling everyone at the department, and they’re like, ‘Wait, how old is she?’”

Sporting a denim jacket with neon fringe, Vivy visited the ambulance department on May 5 to deliver the presentation check, which was nearly the size of her, to seven volunteers who figuratively “welcomed her with open arms,” her mother said. “She literally felt like a celebrity. Her smile was ear to ear.”

“I thought that it was really fun because I got to support the ambulance, and when I went, I got to see how they help others,” Vivy said. “I like that they help other people, so I’m gonna help them back.”

Her innate caring and kindness dates back to her youngest years, her mother recalled, from watching Vivy pull money out of her pocket to help the homeless, to being the first by a crying classmate’s side.

Her love for music was intrinsic, as well.

“I’ll probably never forget this,” Vivy said, reflecting on a memory from when she was 4. “It was my cousin’s birthday party and I was dancing up a storm, and there was a DJ there and she asked me if I wanted to be a DJ and take lessons. I said yes, and I’ve been taking DJ lessons ever since.”

Since the COVID-19 outbreak, in-person lessons at the family’s apartment in New York have shifted to virtual sessions inside Vivy’s “sequined disco” in Hampton Bays. The space matches the young firecracker’s vibrant personality, as does her taste in music, which ranges from dance and party music to hip-hop and the Billboard Top 100 charts, mixed in with the occasional throwback.

“We did Biggie and ‘I Wanna Dance With Somebody,’” Vivy said.

“Whitney Houston,” her mom chimed in. “You have some Madonna. I’m trying to teach her some ’90s music and some music that I like.”

“My Dad’s obsessed with the Grateful Dead,” Vivy said. “It never makes its way in there. It’s too slow.”

Sheltering in place on the East End, Vivy is finding herself in the studio much more often these days, practicing on her newest mixer — an upgrade from her smaller starter mixer.

“I got this big one and I got all confused because there’s so many buttons and handles and everything, but I figured it out,” she said. “I wanted to be a DJ because I like how music sounds and I like how they sound together sometimes, but sometimes they don’t sound good. So you have to use effects and stuff. I like that I’m learning new things and making people happy — and dancing.”

Through her efforts, the $1,055 donation to the Hampton Bays Volunteer Ambulance will be used to show appreciation for the skeleton crew currently responding to calls during the COVID-19 crisis, Mr. Tringali said, perhaps by purchasing prepared meals or small gift baskets.

“We went down from a staff of about 35 to about 12 right now,” he said. “We’re trying to honor and recognize the volunteers that are coming in as much as we can. We’re thinking about possibly putting the donation toward something nice for them.”

You May Also Like:

The Future of Farming, with Amanda Merrow of Amber Waves | 27Speaks Podcast

In the spring of 2008, Amanda Merrow and Katie Baldwin met for the first time ... 8 May 2025 by 27Speaks

After Southampton Traffic Experiment Victory Lap, Talk Turns to Long-Term Possibilities

The traffic experiment conducted over the last two weeks by Southampton Town and Suffolk County ... 7 May 2025 by Michael Wright

With Mayor Casting Lone Dissenting Vote, Westhampton Beach Village Board Votes Down Proposal To Add Memorial to Military Park

In a 3-1 vote, with only Mayor Ralph Urban dissenting, the Westhampton Beach Village Board ... by Cailin Riley

'Launch' Program Is Helping Neurodivergent Adults Find Work in Their Communities

A sense of accomplishment, and a sense of purpose. That’s what Scott Beinecke says he ... 2 May 2025 by Cailin Riley

The Villa at Westhampton Sold at Auction for $20.7 Million; Nothing Will Change New Owners Say

The Villa at Westhampton, an assisted living facility with some 100 residents, was sold at ... 30 Apr 2025 by Michael Wright

Southampton Traffic Experiment Showed Big Improvements in Commute Times During First Week; New Changes Tried This Week

By the end of the first week of Southampton Town’s experiment in bypassing the traffic ... 27 Apr 2025 by Michael Wright

Saving Species for the Health of the Planet | 27Speaks Podcast

On Saturday, April 26, the South Fork Natural History Museum (SOFO) and its Young Environmentalist ... 24 Apr 2025 by 27Speaks

Southampton Town Still Hiring for Lifeguard and Beach Attendant Positions at Eastern Town Beaches

The Town of Southampton is still actively seeking employees to staff its many beaches, particularly the bays and oceans in the eastern portion of the town, and is offering new locations for lifeguard training courses to help make the process run more smoothly and, hopefully, attract new candidates. Positions for beach manager, assistant beach manager, and beach attendants are still open at Foster Memorial Long Beach in Sag Harbor, and at the town’s ocean beaches east of the Shinnecock Canal, including Sagg Main, Mecox, Scott Cameron and Flying Point. In past years, the lifeguard certification courses — a necessary prerequisite ... 23 Apr 2025 by Cailin Riley

Brockport Artist Helen Hastings Has Ties to William Merritt Chase's Summer Colony

This story begins with a trunk. For decades, it sat untouched in the attic of ... 22 Apr 2025 by Michelle Trauring

Westhampton Beach Movie Theater Reopens After Three-Year Renovation as Sunset Theater

In early 2022, Inge Debyser came across an article by Taylor K. Vecsey in Behind ... by Cailin Riley