Kent Sandvik, post: 32054, member: 3967 wrote: I would not be surprise if we see a split between commercial DJs who just do it for a living (top-40) and innovative DJs/producers who love music and take less lucrative gigs just because that’s what they want to do.
Again…it always happens.
You see some guys who make the career out of DJing. They play the bars, mainstream clubs, weddings, etc. They may or may not like the mainstream music…but they see it all as a paycheck.
And the rest? Many end up falling into a hobby mode or just plain quitting in some way, shape, or form. They grow so disgruntled that the “dream” of playing the “cool music” to a large, receptive crowd never happened. Some quit completely and sell it all, others find the love again in other areas.
A few stick with it…push, produce, network, promote, build a brand…and they find success in some way.
My point to this and to all the DJs is to find what you LOVE about DJing…and stay with it. If what you love won’t make you money, then find a normal career to pay the bills and stay with what you love…or fight/push to make it lucrative.