23/03/2026
EN below 🇬🇧:
Most hard techno DJs will never succeed because they don’t understand what a good soup is.
Music always follows the same pattern. What was once shocking or “too much” becomes normal over time. Rock, metal, techno - all of it went through the same cycle. Today, hard techno is simply in its growth phase. And when something grows, it attracts crowds.
People learn by copying. That’s natural. Beginners watch their idols and repeat what they see. The problem is - many never move past that stage.
It’s like cooking from a recipe without understanding the ingredients. You can recreate something, but you won’t create anything of your own.
Most DJs stay at the level of “what works.” They play popular tracks, proven formulas, safe choices. And for a moment, it works. But if everyone plays the same thing, no one stands out.
That’s how copy-paste DJing becomes the norm.
But identity is more than genre. It’s selection, energy, timing, presence. And that can’t be copied.
Now think about soup.
If it’s just salt, pepper, and garlic… it’s overwhelming. At first interesting, then exhausting. That’s what a set full of only bangers feels like.
A good set is balance:
* base (groove)
* melody (color)
* transitions (structure)
* highlights (impact)
* and space — the “broth”
Without space, everything becomes heavy and tiring.
That’s why people say: “something felt off.”
Because there was no contrast.
Most DJs fail not because of the genre, but because of their approach. They chase fast results, quick reactions, instant recognition.
But real growth is slow. Repetitive. Often unrewarded.
That’s why most quit after a year.
So the real question is: who are you as an artist?
Not what works. Not what’s trending. But what’s yours.
Because trends pass.
Authenticity stays.
And in the end, only those who build something real remain.
.