Evening Standard

I’ve never thought this life is too crazy for me

Music At 21 he’s the number one DJ in the world, earning more than £12 million and chilling out with Justin Bieber — but Martin Garrix has got it all under control, he tells David Smyth

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WITH most DJs, as with newsreader­s, you can’t see their legs. At Martin Garrix’s latest shows, his are as much a part of the spectacle as the fire, steam and hyperactiv­e video screens that are obligatory in the frenzied world of electronic dance music.

Visible through a space beneath his equipment, splayed and bouncing, it may be unclear what he’s actually doing up there with all those buttons while his music swoops and crashes, but he’s never still for a second.

In person he’s just as hyper, lying on a sofa one minute, hunched on the edge of it the next, racing to the end of every sentence he utters.

It’s a good job he has all this energy. Having just turned 21, the Dutchman is currently the number one DJ in the world according to DJ magazine’s influentia­l fan poll, and accordingl­y in huge demand.

In the t wo days preceding our meeting at a headline show in Belfast he has performed in Las Vegas, New York and Milan. Across two days this weekend he’ll be in France, Denmark and Macedonia. “The last couple of years have been the craziest of my life,” he says. No kidding.

The kids l ove h i m. Short and handsome, with a flicked up sidepartin­g, he’d be the cute one if he was in a boy band, which he looks like he could be. The crowd in Belfast looks so young that I’m worried all this dancing and whooping is distractin­g them from their SATs.

Maybe they think he’s just like them — in 2013, aged 17, h e scored a worldwide hit and a UK number one with his aggressive instrument­al track Animals. He attended Belgium’s Tomorrowla­nd music festival as a fan and was delighted to find it was the most-played song of the weekend. “I was in the crowd, going crazy with my friends. Nearly every DJ started playing it, this song I made in my parents’ house — all my idols,” he tells me. “Then a year later I was booked to play there. It’s weird, it’s very crazy.”

His world today couldn’t be further from that of the raving masses. On the most recent list of “Electronic Cash Kings” in Forbes magazine, they reckoned he pulled in £12.6 million last year thanks to endless touring and a deal to advertise Tag Heuer w a t c h e s . You can ge t a G a r r i xendorsed Connected smartwatch, with a face designed by him, for £1,200-plus. He’s not wearing one today though: “I lost it.”

Then there are the celebrity connec tions. Thi s week he was snapped in the tabloids planting a smacker on Dua Lipa, who sings his recent hit single, Scared to be Lonely. Other collaborat­ors on his tracks include R&B superstar Usher, Dutch DJ legend Tiësto, New York pop star Bebe Rexha and, on his surprising­ly restrained latest, There For You, YouTuber-turned-singer Troye Sivan.

When he’s not playing headline shows he’s been supporting his pal Justin Bieber on tour, as he will again when he’s second on the bill at Bieber’s massive Hyde Park concert next month. “I’m good friends with Justin. We hung out all night last night,” he says. What were they doing? “Just chilling. Good talks. It was nice. Then we ended up in a club.”

Of course Bieber too became famous at a young age, albeit on a different scale. “Obviously his life is 50 times crazier, but he can give advice. We can relate on a lot of things,” says Garrix. I ask if he’d like to be as well-known as his friend and there’s a long pause. “He’s a legend. He will go in the history books for what he has done. But it’s too much. We were in Sweden once, just chilling at this house, and suddenly there was a paparazzi drone flying over.”

Garrix shares a manager, Scooter Braun, with Bieber and Ariana Grande. Just after Animals came out Braun phoned Garrix to convince him that he was the man to break the song in America. He was only put through to the hotel room of the holidaying teenager because he lied to the front desk, saying he was from Garrix’s school and it was an emergency.

“I was signed to Spinnin’ Records, this big Dutch electronic label, and Scooter has the biggest pop acts, so it was the best of both worlds,” says Garrix. “Our vision was to keep making club songs and radio crossover singles at the same time.”

So even though he doesn’t sing, he’s got powerful people behind him who are capable of turning him into a proper pop star.

The DJ born Martin Garritsen in the suburbs of Amsterdam sounds like he’ll cope better than Bieber did in his wayward years. I lose count of the number of times he praises his team

‘Obviously Justin’s life is 50 times crazier, but he can give advice. We can relate on a lot of things’

for keeping him on the straight and narrow.

His support act on his own tour is DJ Justin Mylo, a childhood friend. “It’s very important that you surround yourself with the right people. I’ve never thought: ‘This is too crazy for me, I can’t handle it’, because of my

 ??  ?? Spin wizard: Dutch DJ Martin Garrix
Spin wizard: Dutch DJ Martin Garrix

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