Tiesto leads Forbes highest-paid DJs list with $22 million
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Electronic dance music DJ Tiesto was named the
world's highest paid DJ on Thursday, in a year when EDM has became a
staple sound in mainstream pop music.
Dutch DJ
Tiesto, 43, real name Tijs Verwest, earned $22 million in the past year,
fueled by headlining sets at this year's Coachella music festival and
an exclusive residency at the Wynn Las Vegas, according to Forbes.com,
which compiled the ranking.
Tiesto, 43, has earned a global fan base with his brand of electro house
music, and he teamed his 2009 album "Kaleidoscope" with a 15-month, 175
date tour, with many shows sold out.
Los Angeles
DJ Skrillex, 24, came second in the ranking with earnings of $15
million. The DJ, real name Sonny Moore, made waves by winning three
Grammy awards this year with his debut album "Scary Monsters and Nice
Sprites," a blend of dubstep, house and electronica.
While the music industry has been suffering from lower sales, EDM has
been steadily growing in the past year, with DJs performing more than
100 shows at lower overhead costs than bands or artists on tour.
"What's fueling the DJ craze is that a lot of artists
across all different genres realized they needed to put more effort into
live music as it's so much harder to make money off recorded music,"
Forbes staff writer Zack O'Malley Greenburg told Reuters.
"Electronic music is ideally suited for the Internet age, (the
DJs) never really charged anything for their music, their model was to
give away music for free and make money from live shows, and with
Twitter and Facebook, it's so easy for them to spread their music around
for free."
Forbes.com pulled their earnings
estimates from a combination of live shows, music sales, endorsements
and merchandise sales figures. The ten highest-paid DJs collectively
earned $125 million, more than the entire Los Angeles Lakers basketball
team.
"EDM, for corporate America, is safer than
hip hop, it's not controversial, it's ready to project onto whatever you
want, and I think that's why we're seeing sponsors flock to it much
more quickly than they did with rock and hip hop," said O'Malley
Greenburg.
Swedish House Mafia, the DJ collective
formed by Steve Angello, Sebastian Ingrosso and Axwell, came in third
with $14 million, French DJ David Guetta, 44, notched fourth place with
$13.5 million and Southern California DJ Steve Aoki, 34, earned $12
million to round out the top five.
DJ Pauly D, 32,
one of the stars of MTV's "Jersey Shore," was a surprising entry at No. 7
on the list, earning $11 million in the past year.
Pauly D, real name Paul DelVecchio, used his rising reality star status
to propel his music career, opening for Britney Spears at select dates
on her 2011 Femme Fatale tour, earning a MTV spin-off show, "The Pauly D
Project" this year and establishing a residency at the Hard Rock Hotel
in Las Vegas.
The full list of the world's top ten
highest-paid DJs can be viewed at
http://www.forbes.com/sites/zackomalleygreenburg/2012/08/02/the-worlds-highest-paid-djs/
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