Lady Tazz – “I Genuinely Believe In The Greater Collective”

Lady Tazz channels a cross-continental journey spanning Montreal, Bangladesh and Toronto into her uncompromising sound and Mind Medizin platform. She’s a pilot, label boss, business owner and high-level tennis player. So there’s a lot going on outside of being a techno DJ. We caught up with her to learn more about the experiences shaping her life beyond the booth.

All-time Favourite Scary Movie 

Evil Dead (1982)

As a horror fan, Evil Dead is one of those undeniable classics that still feels dangerous, even today. It’s the kind of film that reminds me why I fell in love with horror in the first place – it doesn’t hold your hand, it doesn’t ease you in… it just throws you straight into the darkness and leaves you there.

Best Supernatural TV Series 

HBO: True Blood (2008) 

True Blood has always been my favorite TV series, and I first fell in love with Charlaine Harris’s books. The mix of supernatural intrigue, dark romance, and bold, sensual storytelling completely drew me in. The show brings that world to life, blending vampires, werewolves, fairies, mystery, and passion in a way that’s both thrilling and addictive. Honestly, if I could live in any perfect world, this would be the one.

Favourite documentary 

Queen of the Sky – Concorde 

The Concorde is one of those iconic milestones in aviation that still feels almost unreal to think about. As a supersonic passenger aircraft, it could fly faster than the speed of sound, cutting travel time between cities like London and New York down to just around three hours. That alone completely redefined what was possible in commercial flight.

What really stands out to me is the level of innovation and ambition behind it. For its time, the Concorde wasn’t just advanced – it was revolutionary. The engineering, the design, the precision required to operate at those speeds… it represents a moment in aviation where boundaries weren’t just pushed, they were completely reimagined.

I have a deep appreciation for what the Concorde symbolizes. It’s more than just an aircraft – it’s proof of what human ingenuity can achieve when limits are challenged. It set a standard and left a legacy that continues to inspire aviation today.

My favourite Philosopher and Psychologist 

Carl Jung 

As a Psychology student, I’ve always been deeply drawn to Carl Jung’s idea of the collective unconscious – the belief that beneath our individual minds, we all share a deeper, universal layer of awareness. It’s this concept that we’re not entirely separate from one another, but connected through something ancient, something inherited, something we can feel even if we can’t fully explain.

I genuinely believe in that greater collective. There are moments in life – through dreams, intuition, or even certain shared human experiences – where it feels like we’re all tapping into the same source. Like there’s a pattern beneath everything, quietly linking us together.

It softens the illusion of separation and replaces it with a sense of connection, almost like we’re all different expressions of the same deeper consciousness. It’s not just a theory I find interesting – it’s something I feel is real. 

Airline Investigation 

What Happened to the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Flight ?

Another documentary series I really enjoy is Air Crash Investigation on the National Geographic Channel. The show looks at real aviation accidents and explains how investigators piece together what happened. Since I’m a pilot myself, I find it especially interesting because it explores the technical side of flying, cockpit decision-making, and how investigators analyze evidence to understand an accident.

One case that especially captured my attention is the mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappearance. The story of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 shows how complex aviation investigations can be and how difficult it can be to determine what happened when so many factors are unknown. As a pilot, learning about cases like this reminds me how important safety, communication, and technology are in aviation.

Favourite Music Video 

Marilyn Manson – This Is The New Shit

Since I was a little girl, Marilyn Manson’s “This Is the New Shit” has remained one of my all-time favorite music videos. At the time, it felt unapologetically rebellious – a bold collision of sound, fashion, and attitude that challenged everything we were told we were supposed to be. It wasn’t just music; it was a statement.

What captivated me most was its raw commitment to individuality. The aesthetic, the energy, the refusal to conform – it all embodied a kind of fearless self-expression that felt both provocative and liberating. It created space for identities that didn’t fit neatly into expectations, turning what was once considered “too much” into something powerful.

To me, that video represents more than a moment in music culture – it captures a mindset. One that celebrates difference, questions norms, and ultimately redefines what it means to belong.

Favourite Book 

The Nag Hammadi Scriptures: A Study of Gnostic Scriptures and Early Christian Thought

One of the most fascinating texts I’ve come across has to be the Nag Hammadi writings. There’s something about them that feels hidden, almost like you’re uncovering pieces of knowledge that were never meant to be widely understood.

What draws me in the most is the depth of perspective – they don’t just tell stories, they challenge the way you see reality, consciousness, and even the nature of existence itself. There’s this strong sense that truth isn’t something external, but something you awaken to within yourself.

Reading these texts feels less like learning and more like remembering. They carry this quiet intensity, as if they’re pointing toward something deeper that words can’t fully capture. For me, they’re not just ancient writings – they’re a doorway into questioning everything and seeing beyond the surface of what we’re taught to believe.

Favourite prehistoric creature   

Titanoboa – the Prehistoric creatures that should never have returned 

Since I was a little girl, I have been fascinated by the Titanoboa. There is something incredible about a creature that once existed on Earth that feels almost impossible to imagine today.

Titanoboa lived about 60 million years ago (after the dinosaurs) in what is now Colombia. The climate was much hotter, which helped cold-blooded reptiles grow to insane sizes like 50 feet 

It makes me wonder – if the Earth became that hot again, could animals grow that large once more?

Favourite Shark Movie 

Deep Blue Ыea (1999) 

Deep Blue Sea is a classic for me. It takes away that feeling that humans are in control and drops me into a world that’s falling apart in real time – where intelligence itself becomes the danger. The sharks don’t feel like just animals; they feel precise, almost inevitable – silent, smart, and unforgiving. Watching it, especially in those flooded, tight spaces, leaves me with a deeper thought: when we push nature too far, it doesn’t break… it adapts. It evolves. And it remembers how to hunt. It’s a reminder that we were never meant to play god with living creatures.

Find Lady Tazz on Instagram. Buy DJ Slugo and Lady Tazz “The Demo” on Beatport.

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