New research from the Pete Tong DJ Academy sheds light on the pressures of breaking into an industry where visibility often outweighs musical ability.
New research from the Pete Tong DJ Academy sheds light on the pressures of breaking into an industry where visibility often outweighs musical ability.
A striking survey presented at this year's International Music Summit in Ibiza indicated that 61% of emerging DJs believe social media numbers carry more weight than actual musical skill when it comes to career success.
The data comes from a 15,000-person survey conducted by the Pete Tong DJ Academy, per Mixmag. It illuminates growing concerns of a music industry so saturated and insular that breaking through often depends less on artistry and more on whether or not you can strike fool's gold with gimmicky viral moments.
62% of respondents feel the music industry operates like a "closed club," according to the report, leaving little room for those without established connections or marketing muscle. Many pointed to a growing reliance on metrics like follower counts and engagement rates as gatekeeping tools for bookings, label signings and playlist placements.
While 35% of respondents remain hopeful that persistence pays off, the numbers paint a picture of an ecosystem increasingly shaped by optics over originality, leading hopeful producers to believe that long-term sustainability hinges as much on algorithms as it does on the decks.
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Elsewhere in the survey, over half reported experiencing burnout or anxiety. "Every post feels like a test," one 24-year-old French DJ lamented. "If it flops, I feel like a failure."
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