A wedding at Tim McLoone’s Supper Club in Asbury Park, NJ gives couples a setting that feels both polished and lively, and Tyler and Alex’s Friday celebration showed exactly how well this venue can flow when the timeline is handled with intention and the DJ keeps the room moving.
With 100 to 150 guests and a 5:30 start time, this Tim McLoone’s Supper Club wedding was structured from the start. Vendors began setup at 4:30, guests were seated by 5:30, and the ceremony began at 6:00 pm. Dow Oak Events DJ Mateo Molinaro handled both ceremony music and microphone coverage, which mattered here because the ceremony had very specific musical timing. The processional used “One Summer Day” by Joe Hisaishi, while the recessional required a cue from “Outro” by M83 to begin at exactly 2:11 when the officiant reached the pronouncement. That kind of precise timing is where an experienced wedding DJ makes a real difference.
The ceremony music also gave this wedding at Tim McLoone’s Supper Club a distinct personality. The family and wedding party entered to “Great Fairy’s Fountain” from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, performed by L’Orchestra Cinematique and Alala. It felt personal, a little unexpected, and clearly chosen with care. When the ceremony ended at 6:30, guests moved right into an indoor cocktail hour at Tim McLoone’s Supper Club, with an extra speaker helping carry the music through the space so the transition never felt flat.
That smooth pacing continued into the reception. Cocktail hour wrapped around 7:30 to 7:45, and then the DJ shifted the room into introductions and formal dances from 7:45 to 8:30. The bridal party entered to “Dance the Night” by Dua Lipa, and Tyler and Alex were introduced simply as “the newlyweds, Tyler and Alex” to “WUSYANAME” by Tyler the Creator. It was a fun choice, modern without feeling forced, and it gave the room a strong reset from cocktail hour into the main reception.
At this Tim McLoone’s Supper Club wedding, the first dance happened immediately after introductions, followed right away by parent dances. That stacked timeline can either feel seamless or rushed depending on how the DJ manages it. Here, the DJ kept each moment connected so guests stayed engaged. Alex and Tyler danced to a blend of “Oh, What a World” and “Real Love Baby,” then Alex shared a parent dance with Tony to a Louis Armstrong and Frank Sinatra mix, and Tyler danced with Adrienne to “Child of Mine” by Carole King. The DJ also had a clear instruction to invite guests onto the dance floor during “The Way” by Ariana Grande featuring Mac Miller, which helped open the floor naturally instead of making it feel like a hard switch.
Dinner orders were taken at 8:30, with seated dinner at 9:00 and a blessing from Tony right before dinner began. Even during the quieter part of the evening, the DJ’s role stayed central. A wedding DJ is not just there for dancing. At a venue like Tim McLoone’s Supper Club, your DJ helps pace announcements, keep formalities on time, and make sure the night never loses shape.
Later, the cake cutting took place at 9:45 in the center of the room, not privately, which made it part of the shared guest experience. Photography wrapped by 10:00, and at 10:15 the anniversary dance brought all couples to the floor, not just married couples. That detail fit the crowd well and gave the room a more inclusive, relaxed energy. By the time the last song played at 11:30, the entire evening had been guided with a steady hand.
What stands out most about Tim McLoone’s Supper Club in Asbury Park, NJ is how well it supports a wedding with clear movement from ceremony to cocktails to dinner to dancing. With Rachel capturing the day in photos, Corey filming, and a DJ who knew how to handle timing, cues, and momentum, Tyler and Alex’s Tim McLoone’s Supper Club wedding felt organized, personal, and easy for guests to enjoy. For couples planning a wedding at Tim McLoone’s Supper Club, that kind of flow is what makes the whole night work.



