David Guetta wants you to get the vaccine for a better 2021
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Superstar DJ David Guetta has been brought back to Earth by the coronavirus pandemic and says his music has benefitted as a result.
Back in his native Paris to record a New Year’s Eve show, the composer of ear-worm dance hits said he has produced “tons of new music” while hunkering down during the pandemic.
The French DJ says he spent much of 2020 in Miami. By bringing the nightclubbing industry to a halt, the virus has been bad for his business of globe-trotting from party to party.
But Guetta says being stuck at home got creative juices flowing.
“I realized how my lifestyle is not healthy, the fact that I am constantly on a plane, being jet-lagged and all of this, you know? Just to be able to wake every day at the same time, in the same bed, and go make music after my breakfast, that was kind of crazy. I haven’t done this for 20 years,” Guetta told The Associated Press before recording his show at Paris’ Louvre Museum on Tuesday night.
“I am one of the lucky ones. I have money on the side, I didn’t need to stress about how am I going to eat next week or next month,” he said. “But I have to say, as an artist, it was incredibly creative.”
“I’m going to do the vaccine, and I hope people are going to do it too because I don’t see any other way to go out of this situation,” Guetta told Reuters ahead of recording the gig.
France, with 2,57 million cases and more than 64,000 dead, is one of the hardest-hit countries in Europe and in the world by the pandemic. But the French are among the most sceptical about vaccines in the world, with opinion polls showing less than half the population intends to get a COVID shot.
France launched its COVID-19 vaccine roll-out on Sunday, along with other European Union nations.
With lights and lasers slicing through the darkness of Paris, but with no crowds because of a virus curfew, Guetta recorded his hour-long show in front of the futuristic glass pyramid that covers the main entrance to the Louvre, home to the “Mona Lisa” and the world’s most-visited museum before virus lockdowns closed its doors this year.
Guetta’s show will be streamed on multiple platforms, part of pandemic-altered New Year’s festivities this year.
Like night owls everywhere, Guetta is hoping 2021 will be better, with a victory over the virus that would allow for the reopening of dance venues and “the craziest party ever.”
“I told my kids already, I’m like: ‘Listen, guys, enjoy while I am here because when they open, I’m gone.’ I’m going to play every single day,” he said. “People are going to party like they have never partied before.”
Guetta said he hoped for an end to the pandemic in 2021 and one big, mad party.
“I want to tell them (my fans) that we are about to witness the craziest party year of our lifetime because the minute it’s going to be open, you know, it’s going to be amazing”, he said.
The Paris gig is part of the ‘United at Home’ charity initiative the DJ launched earlier this year.
Guetta has already performed two charity concerts in 2020, raising $1.5 million.
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