Dj Vk Remix Vol 18
In a recent interview with Mix Magazine India, DJ VK teased that Vol 18 is the last of the “numbered volumes.” He plans to pivot to an album of original productions under a new alias. “The remix series taught me production,” he said. “Now I want to be sampled, not sampling.”
He also announced a Vol 18 Tour – 12 cities across India, UAE, UK, and Canada, with live percussionists playing over his remixes. Tickets for the Mumbai show (April 12 at AntiSOCIAL) sold out in 11 minutes.
Let’s address the elephant in the room. DJ VK Remix Vol 18 contains uncleared samples from major film studios (T-Series, Zee Music, Sony India). No, it is not legally licensed. Yes, it will eventually be scrubbed from major platforms. dj vk remix vol 18
Yet this is precisely why bootleg culture thrives. Record labels rarely release high-energy DJ mixes of current hits. Fans want the "club edit" or the "bass boosted car version." DJ VK fills that void. Historically, artists like DJ Snake and Nucleya started in similar bootleg scenes before going legit.
For now, enjoy Vol 18 as what it is: a love letter to the streets, made by someone who understands that a great remix doesn’t need permission—it needs power. In a recent interview with Mix Magazine India
In the ever-evolving landscape of electronic and hip-hop fusion, few names command as much underground respect as DJ VK. Known for his seamless transitions, high-energy drops, and an uncanny ability to predict which Bhojpuri, Punjabi, and mainstream English tracks will dominate the club scene, DJ VK has done it again. His latest release, DJ VK Remix Vol 18, is not just another mixtape—it is a cultural timestamp. Whether you are a mobile DJ looking for the next heater, a fitness enthusiast needing a high-BPM playlist, or a club owner aiming to keep the floor packed, this volume promises to be your go-to weapon.
Let’s dive deep into everything you need to know about DJ VK Remix Vol 18: its tracklist, production quality, standout remixes, and why it is already topping informal charts from Delhi to Dubai. Tickets for the Mumbai show (April 12 at
An exclusive VIP edit of Emiway Bantai’s unreleased verse. How DJ VK obtained this acapella is a mystery. But the result is a party-starter that transitions from trap to Indian folk percussion in one bar.
Every volume has its anthem. For Vol 12, it was The Punja edit. For Vol 15, the G.O.A.T. mashup. For Vol 18, early indicators point to three tracks:
DJ VK Remix Vol. 18 is a high-energy compilation aimed at club DJs and electronic music fans who enjoy mashups, Bollywood-dance crossovers, and Bollywood-to-EDM reinterpretations. Below I analyze the release across production, track selection, arrangement, mixing, energy flow, audience fit, and room for improvement, and conclude with a recommendation for different listener types.