DJing & Work: Should I Give Up Before I Even Begin?
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- This topic has 5 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 6 months ago by
Alex Moschopoulos.
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September 24, 2015 at 8:24 pm #2260131
Alex Moschopoulos
ParticipantWhen I bought my first decks in 1991, my father and mother were adamant that I get my college degree and have a “backup plan” in mind. At the time I was working as a cashier in a grocery store, which helped to buy gear on layaway and buy vinyl.
Over the years, I did try to “make it” as a DJ in the club scene, more often than not hitting failure versus success. At the same time I was working on my Bachelors. I even at one point quit the grocery store due to them slamming me with 39.5 hours a week…which made it difficult to go to school full time. I had a weekend DJ residency and thought it would suffice “for now”.
Go figure a few months later the club fell apart and I was out of work.
I told you all that to illustrate how fleeting the DJ life can be. I never really found success as a DJ, but did find my career in web design/development through the DJ thing.
In your case, it’s clear you want to be a producer…even more than a DJ. So focus on that. Many of the top producers mainly do that. They put most of their effort into producing, because it’s what brought many success (and the big DJ gigs).
I’ve known producers who have day jobs, and they handle it fine. They work, go home, and spend a few hours a night producing. They’ll spend weekend time producing. They’ll also post and promote their work. When someone does want them to DJ, they find a way. Lord knows we have computers, sync, etc.
Many creatives didn’t live in wealthy households where they can spend all day working on their art. A lot of them live in normal working lives, moonlighting as their creative forms. I know you want full nights of sleep, and you can have it. You just need balance, and to remember it doesn’t have to be “full time” right now. You make it “full time” when it suddenly pays you enough that you don’t need the day job.
September 24, 2015 at 9:30 pm #2260141Axel Dark-Key
ParticipantI love producing. It’s like candy to me seriously. I’m working on a 70 track project right now. I post my work to YouTube, Facebook, Bandcamp, ReverbNation, and Twitter where I already have over 1000 followers. I want to try DJing, but I may not get expensive gear right now. Because of time management, the Mixtrack Edge sounds like a good choice even though others have said no because I can find it at Guitar Center for only 79 bucks. So if I don’t have that much time to practise, it won’t be a waste and as I get more money I can invest in a better one. Also it’s totally affordable for my mom to get me for Christmas.
September 24, 2015 at 9:35 pm #2260151Alex Moschopoulos
ParticipantGo simple with DJing…see if it floats your boat. I noticed many colleagues who are DJs and Producers tend to find themselves less interested in DJing than producing…meaning they spend less time making mixsets and such versus making tracks.
September 26, 2015 at 9:02 am #2260871ScottoRobotto
ParticipantAre you prepared to be an entrepreneur? Most people aren’t cut out for it. When you own your own business everything is your responsibility and you have to deal with a lot of crap that most people don’t want to. I don’t know you but based on your probable age you’re probably not ready, let alone a field as notoriously hard as being a musician or any sort of artist.
Why not get a job and DJ/Produce as a hobby? Work part-time and give DJing/Producing a go for a year or so. After this time if you have enough saving and you still think DJing might be financially viable then you can give it a shot. If not then you can keep doing it as a hobby. Eventually you may need to settle down and get a full-time job and possibly give up a few hobbies like DJing but you can cross that bridge later.
September 26, 2015 at 3:17 pm #2260941Alex Moschopoulos
ParticipantI’m with ScottoRobotto. Better to find a solid footing so you can produce by your own rules. Plus if your success is slow (or never peaks very high), you have a fallback.
While im nothing “famous”, I honestly love that I can DJ or even produce without worry of making a living from it. I feel it allows me to be creative.
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