DAISY P
Giving Energy, Growing Scenes
Pamela aka Daisy P carries the energy of a flower breaking through concrete. Her spirit is contagious, a blend of softness and strength ,and you feel it the moment she steps behind the decks. Music didn’t just find her she sought it out. From the age of 14, electronic music pulled her into its world’s orbit. By the time she hit her second festival EDC 2009 at the Coliseum she wasn’t just attending, she was awakening. “It felt like a whole new world,” she says. “The music, the lights, the people it just clicked. I fell in love with it all.” Her journey into DJing wasn’t rushed. It unfolded naturally through experience, community, and a growing sense of purpose.
Early on, she worked for Insomniac, one of the largest live music production companies in the world not behind the decks, but behind the scenes in HR. That position gave her an unexpected perspective: a view into the gears of the music world. And when she did, the support showed up. Women like Sarah and Kaylee coworkers who saw something in her helped guide her first steps. She was booked for a Christmas party at Academy LA before she really even knew how to DJ she ‘ had to learn fast , like in a week but I did. And I’ve been growing ever since.’
That mix of fearlessness and humility shows up in every one of her sets. At first, she thought Djing was all about technical skill and music selection. But something shifted. “I realized it’s not about me,” she says. “It’s about them. The people on the dancefloor. It’s about giving them something. Feeling their energy and building that journey together.
Her connection to movement runs deep. Before music, it was dance that gave her expression and direction. “In high school, I was kind of lost,” she admits. She found her highschool’s dance program where she took classes everyday like hip hop, modern, and jazz. As Daisy grew more confident in her artistry, her role in the scene naturally expanded not just as a DJ, but as a quiet force helping shape the spaces she once only danced in. What began as playing sets and showing up for friends evolved into something deeper: offering guidance, support, and insight behind the curtain. Jackson Tree wasn’t just a party she played it became a community she helped nurture. “It started with Louis and a group of friends turning an abandoned RV into a party,” she recalls. Daisy doesn’t just play music. She listens, she shares, she feels. Her energy on stage is generous a reflection of someone who’s learned that true connection comes not from performing at people, but from dancing with them.