

I mean DROELOE is a pretty good example of how much things have improved quality-wise too and where we are at right now in terms of amazing production quality alone in future bass tracks and electronic music tracks in general. Just go listen to 'We Rise' by San Holo and try to tell me that EDM songs age at the same pace as other genres of music ) It's still a catchy song but the production is outdated and simpler than a lot of the future bass tracks that have come out since then. Naming a few I'd consider to have some pretty timeless tracks compared to most others: Flume, Skrillex, KOAN Sound, Noisia, Aphex Twin, Space Laces (every track he makes is years ahead of his time, I'd still play out his songs from 6 years ago and they'd still go off and could be released today even), and more but those are names you might know (except space laces but I can't leave him out when talking about timeless production) There are only a certain (small) amount of artists who's production, songwriting, and technical skill outlive the trend changes and advances in production technique - and in my opinion those producers GOATs in terms of their skill.

I've found that it really only takes around 2 years for certain styles (and therefore many, many tracks) to sound outdated just from gradual yet defining shifts in production techniques, style choices, trends, and even quality in many cases within genres and subgenres. Tastes, styles, and techniques change very quickly except with a few songs which are relative "classics" or timeless tracks. Tove Lo)" was released alongside the B-side "Wall Fuck".ĭiamond Shock 5y AOK In electronic music it does.

He returned with the track "Some Minds" which features vocals and lyrics from Miike Snow’s Andrew Wyatt in May 2015, followed by "Never Be like You" featuring Kai and "Smoke & Retribution" alongside Vince Staples and Kučka as an advance of second album "Skin". In February 2013, it was announced exclusively on triple j that Flume would tour nationally around Australia for his first headlining tour, the "Infinity Prism Tour", in April and May 2013. It debuted on the ARIA Albums Chart at number 2, behind One Direction's Take Me Home. The album reached number one on the Australian iTunes charts. The album's production saw Flume collaborating with vocal artists George Maple, Moon Holiday, Jezzabell Doran, Chet Faker, and New York rapper T.Shirt. Nathan McLay, an employee of Future Classic and now Flume's manager, assisted with the release of his first EP titled Sleepless, which contained the three original tracks.įlume's self-titled debut album was released on Novemto exceptional critical acclaim. Streten was discovered and signed by Future Classic in 2011, after submitting the tracks "Sleepless", "Over You" and "Paper Thin" in an original artists competition managed by the Australian record company.
CRAZY DANCE TO TENNIS COURT FLUME REMIX FULL
With a style that's more Madlib than Skrillex, let's take a look in to Flume's 10 essential tracks.Flume is an electronic music project, created by Harley Streten from Sydney, Aus… Read Full Bio ↴ Flume is an electronic music project, created by Harley Streten from Sydney, Australia. I agree completely but I don’t know what else the record label/ Harley would expect to happen, i don’t know the exact reasoning behind the removal of the remix but imagine how many more streams would come of these songs if they were uploaded to Spotify. Released about a year ago, those songs are still hot and worthy of a revisit. Inviting the likes of Ghostface Killah, Freddie Gibbs, MOP, Stalley and more was a surefire way to get the hip-hop community to listen to his beats. Kinjaz Klassics: Tennis Courts (Flume Remix) Choreography by Vinh Nguyen. Hi This Is Flume Hi, this is Flume And you're. FRIENDS Pressure on me Put that on me, you did Build up slowly Explo. flume Hi, this is Flume And you're listening to my new single Tap. Drop the Game I've been seeing all, I've been seeing your soul Give me. The segue in to the hip-hop world was the deluxe version of his self-titled LP. Bring You Down Hush now, you're standing on a land mine Tread lightly, get. This type of musicianship has gained him respect in the world's of indie, EDM, pop and also hip-hop. His style can range from 2-minute, J Dilla worship to a 10-minute Arcade Fire remix epic. He is loved in America, but even more-so in Australia, where he has won a variety of awards and opened the floodgates for Chet Faker, What So Not, Ta-Ku and more to explode in a strangely-Australian-dominated year of electronic music. Real name Harley Streten, Flume is only 23 this month, but has already worked with the likes of Lorde and Disclosure to bring his unique sound to the masses.
