Surf Mesa កំពុងជិះខ្ពស់។

Creativity is a gift. It’s easy to recognize. There is just an ease in which the essence of an artist is revealed by the way they act, talk or display their talent. Surf Mesa is a DJ who is rapidly rising in popularity. His music is dance based and given the 3.5 billion streams he has had so far it is catching on quickly and broadly.

Surf Mesa is also thoughtful and articulate. This makes him atypical of the usual perception of a DJ. Most think of a DJ as an extension of music, someone who can match beats and adjust moods by manipulation of sound levels, and mash ups of different pieces of music which work when played against each other or interlocked. The usual conversation about “sick beats” rarely extends to whether or not the performer behind the board is intrinsically articulate. Surf Mesa is a project which stands for “sounds with good feels”. It is also the impression he leaves.

The path to a career as a DJ comes from building good songs, plus getting attention. Surf’s break came just as he left high school, TikTok took ily (i love you, baby) featuring Emilee to broad distribution. Surf saw over 300 million streams in a matter of months. The song has since received platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and been embedded into 7.6 million videos seen collectively five billion times on TikTok. Listen to how the song catches and holds you:

Like many who are gifted, Surf spent his time learning the craft rather than paying attention to academics. He barely graduated from high school because his efforts all went toward mastering song production. Surf has four older siblings who were able to hand down the technology tools which allowed him to build songs and distribute them with little more than a computer and an internet connection.

Surf began making music when he was eleven years old, and mixing songs when he was twelve. He’s a digital native who has become proficient in using software tools to mix the sounds produced by musicians. The job of making house music is to arrange audio and export sound. Surf’s view of music is that it’s positive energy and good vibe.

Surf began to make house music collaborations with pop artists. He’s worked with Gus Dapperton, Madison Beer, Bipolar Sunshine, along with doing remixes with Marshmello & Halsey, Shawn Mendes and Becky G.

His newest release, ក្រុមតន្រ្តីខែមីនា has a darker grove edge and is more complex than what he has done previously. Coming next is a hybrid. The idea is a top line with a danceable groove which Surf is excited to share. His target is environments where people are youthful and feel included.

Surf will be playing festivals for the rest of this year, including appearing at Outside Lands plus traveling for some of the foreign Lollapalooza shows. His songs are a reflection of what he has been hearing. Surf is just trying to get people to dance more.

It was making music he likes which led Surf into his label deal. In early 2020, Surf was living in Venice Beach, CA. ily was blowing up on TikTok. He got a “DM” from Natalie Dodge, Vice President of A&R (artists and repertoire) at Astralwerks. The DM worked. Her approach led to a business relationship which currently benefits both Surf and his label.

For artists, there is freedom in developing a deep relationship with their label. The label’s team are helping build his brand and putting out what is inspiring to him. He shows them his current obsessions. They are along for the ride. Meanwhile, in one of the greatest turns of phrase ever, Surf is working at building his catalogue. He’s “trying to Michelangelo this David.”

As a D.J., Surf travels light, usually alone, although sometimes with a tour manager. Arriving at the show it’s him and a USB drive plus 3 backup drives just in case. The show he is about to perform was created in anticipation of the event and saved on the drives.

Surf’s struggle is to balance his desire to create new music against the rigors of traveling and performing. And, in this new world where you must exist continually on social media, “be a video content guru” is the advice he hears repeatedly.

I really enjoyed talking with Surf Mesa. He’s both passionate about his work and articulate in the way he describes the process. Below is our conversation in both audio and video podcast format:

It always makes sense why someone ends up where they are. Surf knows that if he was always partying in high school, then and went to college and entered that social scene he would never have mastered his craft.

Instead, he skipped out on a lot of school and didn’t go out with the popular kids. Surf barely graduated. He even had to take 2 extra online classes just so he could complete high school. But if it happened any other way it wouldn’t have happened at all. It was Surf’s complete focus on music which led him here. Everybody ends up with what their foundation supports and over the long haul reward follows effort. Surf Mesa has all the tools to rapidly scale the ladder to major festival slots. Just watch, or better yet, listen.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/ericfuller/2022/06/02/surf-mesa-is-riding-high/