And i know that there is not so much djs that playing that kind of music in my country
The bigger question is: Are there “normal people” in your country who would be into the kind of music you’re into?
Niche music areas are tough, mainly due to how much a given market is into mainstream hits, but not underground specialties. Believe me, I’d try to push deep house and be asked to play Top 40. I’d push trance and be asked to play popular rap and/or eurodance. It became quite frustrating in that I could not break into the niches within Chicago for those sounds, nor could get “average people” going into what I liked.
If you find the articles (“How to succeed at DJing”), keep to heart the advice that much of this is a big popularity contest. There’s a reason why the David Guettas and Calvin Harrises of this world pack festivals while talented savant DJs end up playing to small rooms, or big noted underground DJs are pulled from booths to please high rollers.
My suggestion is you have to build a following beyond your country. One big way is to produce. Maybe your country won’t appreciate you, but then you might get a large fan base in another country. I’d also look into podcasting or some kind of regular content creation. Educate the masses and gain fans. Perhaps even try to learn to review that subgenre you’re into and submit music reviews to blogs and publications. That will get you noticed…or at least score you free promos.
Like Vintage said, if you want to make a living, then you’ll have to play to the masses…or starve for a while on the hope you’ll blow up at some point.