dj top 100… what a joke..
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D-Jam.
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November 7, 2012 at 10:41 am #31513
Dominic Souza-Larimore
ParticipantMaximlee, post: 31634, member: 2165 wrote: in summary worst top 100 i have witnessed
worse than last year when David Guetta was #1?
Anyway… who cares? These polls are about as useful as a screen door on a submarine. And your tears are not going to help the situation.
its all up for debate and everybody has their opinion, doesn’t mean anybody’s particular opinion holds more weight than the next. all it means is that the general public prefers to vote for the dj’s in the know, because what the heck do they know about dj’ing? all they know is that “so and so” made this song and i love it, or i like him because everybody else likes him, therefor i will make him the top dj.
its the way of the world bro, deal with it and please stop kicking a dead horse.
November 7, 2012 at 5:36 pm #31521J-Zed
ParticipantBigChipsHI, post: 31669, member: 853 wrote: deal with it and please stop kicking a dead horse.
BigChipsHI, post: 31669, member: 853 wrote: deal with it and please stop kicking a dead horse.
BigChipsHI, post: 31669, member: 853 wrote: deal with it and please stop kicking a dead horse.
When will people get that these things aren’t important in any way what so ever?
November 7, 2012 at 11:36 pm #31534shr3dder
MemberCommercial DJ’s win popularity contest….. It’s really no surprise, this polls been the same for years.
November 8, 2012 at 12:58 am #31539Anonymous
InactiveFor a couple of years this contest was even rigged….
November 8, 2012 at 5:33 pm #31569D-Jam
ParticipantI wrote this August of 2011…it’s still relevant now…
http://d-jam.com/twr6yLlOhmygawd, it’s time for the DJ Mag Top 100 again?

I first saw it mentioned on Facebook, then Twitter, then an email in my inbox, now on message boards. It’s that time of the year again. DJ Magazine is polling and gathering votes for their annual Top 100 DJs list, and I can already foresee the drama.
This entry today is a bit of a rant, a rant not on the list or the results that usually occur, but of the rampant childish stupidity I see every year when it comes to this list. Let’s have a look at what’s been happening year after year.
- The polls start. Emails and social media postings go all over the place pushing everyone to vote for their favorite DJs. Some of the guys who usually make the Top 100 send out emails asking for support.
- Some “smaller names” that are popular in their local areas all start on heavy pushes in an attempt to just to make the Top 100. They put out loads of promotion still not “getting it” that just because they can pack a club in their town and played a few out-of-town gigs, they’re not up at the level of the guys who usually make the Top 100.
- We’re all annoyed to death with the constant annoyance of “vote for me!” from both big and small names. Like somehow we’re all just going to readily give out our email and personal information.
- The Top 100 comes out…and by no surprise it’s practically the same as it’s been for the last ten years. The same ten names all find their way into the top fifteen.
- Suddenly, the internet is awash in angst from loads of music nerds and snobs who endlessly complain for a week straight on how the list is so biased and always ends up with popular guys and trance DJs in most of the top twenty.
- Resident Advisor then comes up with their own Top DJ list comprised of many underground names most people (except for them) have never heard of. Even then, people still complain how their favorite guy didn’t make any list, but soooooo deserves to.
Every year this happens. At what point are DJs and music enthusiasts going to write off all these “Top DJ Charts” as total bollocks? Remember TheDJList.com? Remember how many DJs were feverously working to get into the top 10 there? They posted banners, spammed people, annoyed others, played the system, etc. Did that get them gigs? Did they suddenly get booked to play Global Gathering, Ibiza, or the Ultra Music Fest? Did anyone in the industry really care?
I don’t want to be the guy who crushes the dreams of local DJs who hope one day to be a big headliner like Armin Van Buuren, Carl Cox, Deadmau5, or Paul Van Dyk. However, I think one really needs to look at all the guys in the Top 100 and really ask themselves if they are truly “up there” with those men and women before they try to push to somehow get into the list. I mean, those guys are constantly traveling and playing in front of thousands. They are repeatedly booked for the biggest events and clubs on the planet. They run labels and release music all over the world. Some have regular shows on Satellite Radio.
So how does some local who maybe plays in a club that holds 500-2000 people honestly believe he/she can compete with that? There are guys who travel and play to smaller numbers as well as release loads music who can’t even get into that list.
Taking a step back
Let’s step away from the idea of local guys trying to get into this list and more address why it seems the same people get into the list year after year, especially the big trance headliners. The reality is while many DJs can name a dozen guys they think are talented that never get into the Top 100, most of the people voting (in my opinion) are NOT DJs.
They are clubbers and average people who perhaps aren’t as passionate about all this the way DJs and enthusiasts are. They might be the ones regularly hitting up the bottle service glam clubs and can’t remember who was playing, or they buy tickets to the big show when it’s packed with the popular headliners, because it’s guaranteed to be a wild party.
They are not the types who know of some small-name hipster coming up with brilliant sounds in his bedroom and worshipped on the underground music boards. This is the harsh reality many have to accept before they get all steamed about the DJ Magazine Top 100. This is the same logic as to why I barely know any of the names that end up on Resident Advisor’s list. Only that niche mainly knows those names, and the DJ Magazine list is known by the larger numbers of folks who simply go out for those names.
Why you should dismiss it all
So the usual anger I see all over the internet (and will see soon on the internet again) is how the “truly talented guys” never get into the list while the Top 100 are just the “popular guys”. Um, yeah…that’s kind of what this list is all about. This isn’t about if Deadmau5 is possibly “more talented” than DJ Mazi or if David Guetta is possibly a “better DJ” than Kid Capri. This is about who’s popular. Who packs stadiums as opposed to clubs. Who gets written up in magazines and even gets mentions outside of the DJ world.
To me, judge talent as you see it. If you really believe in someone, then post their name on social media and tell others to check this person out. Take your friends to their shows and see if they get into it. In the past that’s how this was done. The word was spread.
Who cares if your favorite DJ didn’t get into a big popularity contest? Will he/she suddenly stop producing or DJing? Will they quit, go to their home, and cry?
BIGGER QUESTION: Would you still love this person if they did get into the Top 100? Or the Top Ten?
Look how many people immediately dismiss talented acts as “sellouts” the minute they see the office receptionist switch from Justin Bieber to the DJ you liked.
So spare me, spare the scene, and spare everyone. You all know how the DJ Magazine Top 100 is going to turn out. Don’t act surprised and offended. Move on and stop thinking somehow these lists mean anything, or one day you’ll see a list made up only of people you like.
Even “talent” is subjective. You can’t measure it. You simply like something or you don’t. Praise and support the people you like, and stop thinking they have to make the list in order to “be someone”.
November 9, 2012 at 12:26 am #31604Maximlee
BlockedD-Jam, post: 31725, member: 3 wrote: I wrote this August of 2011…it’s still relevant now…
http://d-jam.com/twr6yLlOhmygawd, it’s time for the DJ Mag Top 100 again?

I first saw it mentioned on Facebook, then Twitter, then an email in my inbox, now on message boards. It’s that time of the year again. DJ Magazine is polling and gathering votes for their annual Top 100 DJs list, and I can already foresee the drama.
This entry today is a bit of a rant, a rant not on the list or the results that usually occur, but of the rampant childish stupidity I see every year when it comes to this list. Let’s have a look at what’s been happening year after year.
- The polls start. Emails and social media postings go all over the place pushing everyone to vote for their favorite DJs. Some of the guys who usually make the Top 100 send out emails asking for support.
- Some “smaller names” that are popular in their local areas all start on heavy pushes in an attempt to just to make the Top 100. They put out loads of promotion still not “getting it” that just because they can pack a club in their town and played a few out-of-town gigs, they’re not up at the level of the guys who usually make the Top 100.
- We’re all annoyed to death with the constant annoyance of “vote for me!” from both big and small names. Like somehow we’re all just going to readily give out our email and personal information.
- The Top 100 comes out…and by no surprise it’s practically the same as it’s been for the last ten years. The same ten names all find their way into the top fifteen.
- Suddenly, the internet is awash in angst from loads of music nerds and snobs who endlessly complain for a week straight on how the list is so biased and always ends up with popular guys and trance DJs in most of the top twenty.
- Resident Advisor then comes up with their own Top DJ list comprised of many underground names most people (except for them) have never heard of. Even then, people still complain how their favorite guy didn’t make any list, but soooooo deserves to.
Every year this happens. At what point are DJs and music enthusiasts going to write off all these “Top DJ Charts” as total bollocks? Remember TheDJList.com? Remember how many DJs were feverously working to get into the top 10 there? They posted banners, spammed people, annoyed others, played the system, etc. Did that get them gigs? Did they suddenly get booked to play Global Gathering, Ibiza, or the Ultra Music Fest? Did anyone in the industry really care?
I don’t want to be the guy who crushes the dreams of local DJs who hope one day to be a big headliner like Armin Van Buuren, Carl Cox, Deadmau5, or Paul Van Dyk. However, I think one really needs to look at all the guys in the Top 100 and really ask themselves if they are truly “up there” with those men and women before they try to push to somehow get into the list. I mean, those guys are constantly traveling and playing in front of thousands. They are repeatedly booked for the biggest events and clubs on the planet. They run labels and release music all over the world. Some have regular shows on Satellite Radio.
So how does some local who maybe plays in a club that holds 500-2000 people honestly believe he/she can compete with that? There are guys who travel and play to smaller numbers as well as release loads music who can’t even get into that list.
Taking a step back
Let’s step away from the idea of local guys trying to get into this list and more address why it seems the same people get into the list year after year, especially the big trance headliners. The reality is while many DJs can name a dozen guys they think are talented that never get into the Top 100, most of the people voting (in my opinion) are NOT DJs.
They are clubbers and average people who perhaps aren’t as passionate about all this the way DJs and enthusiasts are. They might be the ones regularly hitting up the bottle service glam clubs and can’t remember who was playing, or they buy tickets to the big show when it’s packed with the popular headliners, because it’s guaranteed to be a wild party.
They are not the types who know of some small-name hipster coming up with brilliant sounds in his bedroom and worshipped on the underground music boards. This is the harsh reality many have to accept before they get all steamed about the DJ Magazine Top 100. This is the same logic as to why I barely know any of the names that end up on Resident Advisor’s list. Only that niche mainly knows those names, and the DJ Magazine list is known by the larger numbers of folks who simply go out for those names.
Why you should dismiss it all
So the usual anger I see all over the internet (and will see soon on the internet again) is how the “truly talented guys” never get into the list while the Top 100 are just the “popular guys”. Um, yeah…that’s kind of what this list is all about. This isn’t about if Deadmau5 is possibly “more talented” than DJ Mazi or if David Guetta is possibly a “better DJ” than Kid Capri. This is about who’s popular. Who packs stadiums as opposed to clubs. Who gets written up in magazines and even gets mentions outside of the DJ world.
To me, judge talent as you see it. If you really believe in someone, then post their name on social media and tell others to check this person out. Take your friends to their shows and see if they get into it. In the past that’s how this was done. The word was spread.
Who cares if your favorite DJ didn’t get into a big popularity contest? Will he/she suddenly stop producing or DJing? Will they quit, go to their home, and cry?
BIGGER QUESTION: Would you still love this person if they did get into the Top 100? Or the Top Ten?
Look how many people immediately dismiss talented acts as “sellouts” the minute they see the office receptionist switch from Justin Bieber to the DJ you liked.
So spare me, spare the scene, and spare everyone. You all know how the DJ Magazine Top 100 is going to turn out. Don’t act surprised and offended. Move on and stop thinking somehow these lists mean anything, or one day you’ll see a list made up only of people you like.
Even “talent” is subjective. You can’t measure it. You simply like something or you don’t. Praise and support the people you like, and stop thinking they have to make the list in order to “be someone”.
Ok youve hit it on the head… all the djs i like are underground… and in a way i like it like that…cau when i walk into a club were chris leibing is playing there is not going to be too many people, if any that dont know who he is….and if they dont they will probably walk out…. cau chris is at times scary….lol
Since you say big up djs you like then the top four for me are Richie Hawtin, John digweed Sasha and Chris leibing…. seen seth troxler for the first time his year… well impressed.
Idont think there will ever be djs like sasha and john digweed again….. they hold mixes for sooo long you start to question whether the elements you are listening to are from the last track or new one…. its simply breathtaking. Correct me if im wrong but there are not to many djs that have the love for the art of mixing like they do anymore???
November 9, 2012 at 3:42 pm #31635aaron altar
ParticipantMaximlee, post: 31760, member: 2165 wrote: Ok youve hit it on the head… all the djs i like are underground… and in a way i like it like that…cau when i walk into a club were chris leibing is playing there is not going to be too many people, if any that dont know who he is….and if they dont they will probably walk out…. cau chris is at times scary….lol
Since you say big up djs you like then the top four for me are Richie Hawtin, John digweed Sasha and Chris leibing…. seen seth troxler for the first time his year… well impressed.
Idont think there will ever be djs like sasha and john digweed again….. they hold mixes for sooo long you start to question whether the elements you are listening to are from the last track or new one…. its simply breathtaking. Correct me if im wrong but there are not to many djs that have the love for the art of mixing like they do anymore???
Good post D-Jam. See this is where the difference comes in. To me Hawtin, Sasha and Digs, and Leibing are not underground. They’re not Guetta I guess but not really underground either. Nice to see Neelix get some love this year though (at least in my opinion). Great producer, decent dj. At the end of the day though, none of it matters to me. I know who I like.
November 9, 2012 at 5:18 pm #31636D-Jam
ParticipantMy basic point is you can see how the DJ Mag list is generally pushed by people who just go to clubs, while the RA list is pushed by music nerds and DJs. What lead to my rant on my blog is I grew tired of underground enthusiasts complaining how the DJ Mag list never covers their tastes…but I tend to look at the DJ Mag list as Billboard while RA is more SPIN Magazine.
Frankly, I think as long as those underground gods get support, they’ll be fine. Maybe we won’t see some long dark tech/prog set at TomorrowLand or Ultra, but who cares? Those are events aimed at the more mainstream folk.
AND…I think we’ll see some pop up again like S&D with long fluid sets. If I have seen one thing since I started DJing in 1992…it’s that things go in cycles. Long blends used to be big in the acid house times and such when people intertwined more underground music…then later short blends and short edits for the ADD folk came in…then things went back to long blends with the rise of tech house, trance, and prog…then back with electro house and dubstep.
Why does this happen? New generations do not want to embrace the past. They want their own thing that defines them. Believe me, it’s funny how many kids who pump stuff like Guetta and Calvin Harris think that the epic trance of the late 1990s/early 2000s isn’t for them and they can’t get into it. Likewise, I remember DJs in the late 90s not connecting well with old school house of the late 80s/early 90s.
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