How old is too old? (DJ related)
pcmr
5,591 Posts
A lot of my cities top earners are approaching their 40s
HipHop House,
Obviously there are a bunch of young johnny come latelies and we all know about Keb Darge and MrScruff or Dimitri being older
Even teh one Day has some grey hairs and is one of my favorite DJs
I get that if this is your livelyhood you are not going anywhere but are you really loading HipHop crates at 52? Spin at your own 60th?
What are your thoughts and I am sure some of you are 40+ DJs
HipHop House,
Obviously there are a bunch of young johnny come latelies and we all know about Keb Darge and MrScruff or Dimitri being older
Even teh one Day has some grey hairs and is one of my favorite DJs
I get that if this is your livelyhood you are not going anywhere but are you really loading HipHop crates at 52? Spin at your own 60th?
What are your thoughts and I am sure some of you are 40+ DJs
TAGGED:
Comments
This is maybe an unwise comparison, but seeing an older DJ performing is somewhat akin to seeing an old fart rocker shredding away on an axe.
Z-trip is older, but he is respected, and people still pay to see him wreck shit.
*edit: apparently Z is only 43. I thought he was older. He's a super nice and talented dude.
From the "how long do I really want to be doing this?" standpoint...that's entirely up to you. If you can still deal with all the necessary bullshit at age 40, 50, whatever, then go with it.
EDM, Rap and clubs are a young cats game. I don't want to be playing the latest iggy azelia song to a bunch of bettys
However If you are playing rare groove in bars, then I say your age and experience (deep crates) is a bonus.
I would pay to see Afrika Bambaataa at 70....
I cherry pick the fun events, gigs that my music buddies offer to me (a few a year)...but, long gone are the days of me trying to appease a bunch of drunk, annoying, fuck-heads at some super vapid see-and-be-seen event.
I know some folks who genuinely enjoy that shit and manage to retain their dignity and technical ability the entire time...I respect it.
Ultimately, I'm too happy making beats and nerding out on mixes/routines with other friends.
I stopped DJing becuase I became too old to stay up that late. Brunch DJing? I'm all about it, but it's pretty low demand. I also became old enough to realize that I'd rather play what I want to hear and not what everyone else wants to hear. There's not much demand for Jazz DJs. The only place I occasionally play records any more is for a jazz brunch or dinner hour at my friend's restaurant that specializes in playing jazz vinyl.
I think as DJs get older their taste changes, but the people you are playing music for stay the same age, so it's hard as one becomes more disconnected. At least that's me. I'm sure if you're in the thick of it, you stay on top of it.