

This is a hold you cell phone light to the sky moment. This is a put your hand on your heart and sway kind of sing-along. It was only a promo single, not even given it’s own official single release, but it’s certainly one of the artist’s most magical. It went double-platinum in his home country, and still strikes a deep chord in the hearts of fans whenever its stark and solemn intro rings through the air. It grabbed a lot of ears and saw the young producer nominated for the Australian Recording Industry’s Song of the Year. This seminal track comes from Flume’s debut self-titled LP, released in November 2012. The beat underneath somehow remains the star amid all that powerful identity. Flume wisely paired the California rapper’s rough and instantly recognizable rap with the charming softness of fellow Aussie Ku?ka. Vince Staples does not mess with a beat unless it’s dark, different, and damn cool. Flume is educating and enlightening the American masses, one tripped-out and abrasive song at a time.Ĩ.
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It’s all of those things paired with the fact that it managed to crack the top 30 on the Hot Dance/Electronic charts. It’s not that it has a cuss-word in the title, or that it stands out as unique in Flume’s song catalogue. The best part about “Wall Fuck” is not how weird and challenging it it. If you’ve got a weird friend who’s still never heard Flume before, this would be a perfect way to introduce said sub-rock dweller. It’s got that signature lazy rhythm, that chunky hand-clap beat, those wonky synths. “Sleepless” was the winning submission, and it was subsequently released as his official debut. Flume – “Sleepless” feat. Jezzabelle Doranįlume was signed to his Future Classics when he won an original production competition. Click here to register for the presale.Flume Debuts 'Heater' in Promo Clip for Australian 'Lockout Law' Protestġ0. Tickets for this milestone show will go on sale Monday, February 13th at 10 a.m. Chet Faker and KUČKA are currently announced as support, but expect to see other special guests to be announced at some point. The whole process has been quite cathartic,” stated Flume’s Instagram postĪlongside the mixtape album release, the producer/DJ also announced a special 10 Years of Flume anniversary event at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, California on Friday, May 5th where he’s set to play many of his well-known (and well-loved) future bass hitters that helped the genre gain traction. After seeing the reaction to Slugger 1.4 and how much love it got, I figured it would be fun to release more of these forgotten ideas I from my old laptops. “It’s been ten years since my first record came out, since then I’ve wrote a lot a lot music and not all of it has seen the light of day. The time capsule features experimental, hip-hop and cinematic gems, as well as special collaborations such as 2021’s ‘ One Step Closer’ with Panda Bear, 2018’s ‘Rhinestone’ with Isabella Manfred and 2018’s ‘Counting Sheep’ with Injury Reserve.

Each of the 10 tracks, all of which are labeled with a year between 20, have been revived back from the Australian artist’s archive, giving fans a special opportunity to explore Flume’s creation process of his three previous records. Flume celebrates a decade since his breakthrough debut album by dropping ‘Things Don’t Always Go The Way You Plan,’ a mixtape consisting of 10 years worth of unreleased music.įuture bass artist Flume’s ‘Things Don’t Always Go The Way You Plan’ mixtape album is exactly just that, consisting of tracks that never made it into his ‘ Flume,’ ‘ Skin’ and ‘Palaces’ albums.
