Italian-born DJ Gigi D'Agostino aspired to be a big-name artist in the world of disco music from his childhood, yet he didn't step with both feet into the music world until the mid-1980s. Years after making it into nightclubs and stereo systems worldwide, however, D'Agostino is still pumping out boisterous trance music the world can (and does) start dance parties to.D'Agostino grew up near Torino, Italy and worked first as a mason and then a fitter until sparking his musical career as a DJ organizing parties in clubs. It turns out the nightclub scene was his calling, and D'Agostino's DJ debut was at the club Woodstock near Torino. He was also a resident DJ at the Italian disco Ultimo Impero from 1993 to 1998, and during this time he released his first double-A sided record "Noise Maker Theme," which launched the Noisemaker label he would continue to work with for years. "Bla Bla Bla," a house song written about people who talk without saying anything, was D'Agostino's first European hit in 1999, followed by a Nik Kershaw remix "Riddle." The electronica mastermind came out with arguably his most famous piece "I'll Fly With You (L'Amour Toujours)" in 2001, and has since been accredited for helping establish Mediterranean progressive house music."Gigi Dag," as the artist sometimes calls himself in club productions, eventually teamed up with Gianfranco Bortolotti, the general manager of Media Records, and has been unstoppable ever since. The duo's 24-track release Il Grande Viaggio Di Gigi D'Agostino debuted in 2002 and may be his greatest album of the 12-plus records he has produced through the years. Apart from recording techno music under his new label Noisemaker Hard, D'Agostino has also been seen mixing beats at well-known European clubs in Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland and England.