DJ Bio Examples: How to Write One That Gets You Booked
Your bio is the most-read section of your press kit. It's also the section DJs struggle with most. Too long, too vague, too much backstory, not enough substance. A good bio takes five minutes to write once you know the formula.
Common Mistakes
Before the formula, here's what to avoid:
- The autobiography. "Born in London in 1995, I first discovered electronic music when my older brother took me to a warehouse party at age 16..." Nobody needs your origin story. Save it for the documentary.
- The genre list. "Playing everything from deep house to techno to drum and bass to garage to ambient to..." If you play everything, you stand for nothing. Pick 2–3 genres max.
- First person. "I play deep house and I've been DJing for 8 years." Press kits use third person. It's an industry convention and it makes your bio usable by publications and promoters without editing.
- Vague adjectives. "An eclectic and passionate DJ with a unique sound." This describes every DJ who has ever lived. Be specific.
The Formula
A good DJ bio answers four questions in under 150 words:
- Who are you? Name, location, what you do.
- What do you play? Genres, style, vibe — be specific.
- Where have you played? Venues, festivals, residencies, brands.
- What makes you different? Your angle, your niche, your reputation.
That's it. Four sentences if you're concise, a short paragraph if you need more room. The point is density — every word should earn its place.
Example 1: The Established Selector
Maya Chen is a Berlin-based DJ and producer specialising in deep house and minimal techno. A resident at About Blank since 2023, she has played Dekmantel, Sónar Off, and Fabric's Room One. Her sets are known for meticulous track selection and seamless transitions between dub techno, deep house, and breakbeat. She hosts the monthly "Deep Focus" series on Rinse FM.
Why this works: specific genres, real venues, a residency, a radio show. A promoter knows exactly what they're getting.
Example 2: The Rising Local
Manchester-based DJ Kilo started making waves in the city's underground scene in 2023 with his high-energy blend of UKG and jungle. A resident at Soup Kitchen's "Bass Therapy" night, he has supported Interplanetary Criminal, Sherelle, and Conducta. When he's not behind the decks, he runs the "Rinse Out" mix series on SoundCloud, which has racked up over 200K plays.
Why this works: doesn't pretend to be bigger than he is. Local residency, support slots with recognisable names, a concrete metric (200K plays). Honest and credible.
Example 3: The Specialist
Priya Sharma is one of London's leading selectors in the Afro house and amapiano space. Since 2022, she has held residencies at Phonox and XOYO, and her "Amapiano Brunch" events regularly sell out 500-capacity venues. She has been featured in DJ Mag, Mixmag, and Resident Advisor, and her Boiler Room set has over 1.5M views.
Why this works: clear niche (Afro house and amapiano), strong social proof (publications, Boiler Room), concrete numbers (500-capacity, 1.5M views).
Write Yours in 10 Minutes
Open a blank document. Answer the four questions. Write it in third person. Cut it to 150 words or fewer. Read it out loud — if it sounds like a press release, you're on the right track. If it sounds like a dating profile, start over.
Your bio doesn't need to be clever or poetic. It needs to be clear, specific, and useful. A promoter should be able to read it in 30 seconds and know whether you're the right fit for their event.
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