David Guetta
David Guetta is the French DJ who turned electronic dance music into a global mainstream juggernaut, and he's still the genre's most commercially bankable name two decades in.
David Guetta: The Man Who Mainstreamed EDM
David Guetta is a French DJ, record producer, and songwriter born on November 7, 1967, in Paris. He broke through the underground club scene in France during the 1990s and exploded into global superstardom in the late 2000s with his landmark album One Love (2009), which spawned crossover anthems featuring the likes of Black Eyed Peas, Kelly Rowland, and Akon.
His formula, pairing French house DNA with American pop and hip-hop vocals, cracked open EDM to audiences who had never set foot in a rave. Tracks like “Sexy Bitch,” “When Love Takes Over,” and “Titanium” (with Sia) didn’t just chart; they redefined what a DJ-produced record could look like commercially. He has won two Grammy Awards and holds records for the most-streamed French artist on Spotify.
Guetta occupies a rare dual position: the underground purists respect his craft and his roots in the Paris club scene, while mainstream audiences know him from festival headlining slots and radio play. He regularly headlines Ultra, Tomorrowland, and Coachella, and his residencies in Ibiza are considered essential summer events.
He is also remarkably prolific as a collaborator, his fingerprints are on records with Nicki Minaj, Justin Bieber, Rihanna, Bebe Rexha, Coldplay, and dozens more. More recently, he has leaned into his Future Rave alias (with Morten) to reconnect with harder electronic sounds, proving he’s not content to coast on legacy.
People search for Guetta constantly because he sits at the intersection of DJ culture, pop music, celebrity gossip (his high-profile divorce from Cathy Guetta was widely covered), and festival season planning, making him one of the most Googled names in dance music.