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DJ Topgun Breaks the Rules

“The whole reason I started doing electronic music and house music was to try to bring a new culture and something different to house music,” Topgun says. “It’s been really cool because I brought two features to electronic music that have never been done.”

 

Since City of the Freaks released last month, Topgun knew there was no turning back. Many of his songs on previous projects such as Ravestar have little to no lyrics – just beats. Now that he’s collaborated with lyrical musicians, he says he wants to maintain the lyricism on his beats for future projects. Topgun gets into a different zone when creating music. He’s able to tap into his emotions and lived experiences to produce sounds you wouldn’t expect.

 

“I just lock in for a month or so,” he says. “I get in these zones and moods every few months and I’ll say it’s go-time. For a week straight, I’ll just work on music all day, every day and that’s how a project will come to life. I like working on music in the morning. I’ll walk, get coffee, smoke some cigs and get tweaked out. I’m a mellow person, so it gets hard to get in a mindset to make hard, dance party music.”

 

Although Topgun’s music dates back to 2020 on streaming services, he got his start in 2015 dropping exclusive songs in the underground SoundCloud scene. During that time, he’s done events with and collaborated with artists such as UnoTheActivist, Tyla Yaweh and CHXPO.

 

His grind hasn’t stopped since. Despite releasing City of the Freaks only a month ago, he’s already working on his next project – a dark techno house with elements similar to A24’s Midsommar as it’s anticipated to drop mid-summer. He says he will include more features on the album, one being Sam Austins.

But there’s more: He and his band, Alex Sucks, are releasing their debut album Situations on June 9 and headlining The Roxy on June 10. How he balances DJing and playing bass… we salute him.

 

“To be honest, I love it,” Topgun says. “I love going back and forth because I grew up skating and listening to punk music and shit. I can really be my true self with that. And I really turned DJ Topgun into a real character. I use it as an art form and show people my creativity.” He admits playing live bass is a lot more intimidating than DJing, but he likes to get loose no matter what and you can expect that no matter what he’s playing.

 

The future's looking bright for DJ Topgun. He’s remaining booked and busy in multiple cities. He plans on coming back to NYC as he loves Le Bain, a Paris Fashion Week event with Steven Victor, a mini-tour with Alex Sucks, an afterparty for Detroit’s Movement Festival and much more.

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