

“Even to this day the older I get and the more I do this, the more fun I have on stage.” “I’m writing music back when I started”įlume says being in lockdown has been a “blessing in disguise”, allowing him to focus on writing new music. “The second I get to a festival I’m riddled with anxiety,” he says. He still gets social anxiety but it’s manageable now. He wasn’t happy.”įlume no longer drinks before shows, tours in shorter bursts, and started taking anti-depressants and meditating to help. And he died because he was medicating himself just like I was, with alcohol, drugs, whatever. “I think people like Avicii are literally the same as me. He also brings up Avicii, comparing himself to the 28yo EDM icon who died in 2018. I’m not cut out for this’.” What to do if you're drinking too much in isolation

I’m not having fun doing this, I think I want to quit.” I went to a therapist and was like ‘I hate my job’… feel like a bad person for saying that, but it’s true. “I got to a point where I was like ‘I don’t want to do this anymore.
#FLUME NET WORTH PROFESSIONAL#
He “pushed through” his anxiety and alcohol dependence for nearly five years but reached a crisis point when he felt like quitting music, and sought professional help. “I’m just not a performer and I’ve definitely used alcohol to feel comfortable on stage in front of a bunch of people… It was a pattern and it was getting pretty bad.” “When performing, I would drink to calm nerves – to make it bearable,” he revealed. Despite having his “dream job”, he relied on alcohol to cope with his anxiety of playing live. Loading “I went to a therapist and said I hate my job.”Ī self-described hermit whose “worst nightmare” is public speaking, Flume says the success and attention was difficult to manage. It was fun and the crowd went f**king wild. Though he was concerned about the reactions, at first, because “some business things fell through” due to how the footage was spun negatively in the tabloids, but admits it “really did my help my career.” Referencing an unprecedented spike in Google searches, he says “it was 10 times amount of attention id ever gotten in the history of the project. The couple discuss the viral moment from their perspective (“It spread like the coronavirus!”) due to Flume’s “squeaky clean image,” calling himself “the Michael Cera of electronic music.” That’s how Flume describes how his career changed after footage of him nuzzling his face into Elkington’s arse on-stage at Burning Man blew up online. It’s definitely worth diving into the whole 35-min episode here on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, if you’ve got the time, or read on for the biggest reveals from the podcast. She took the opportunity to interview Streten for her podcast, My Friend Podcast, and really got the decade-defining producer to go deep and open up.įlume candidly talks about considering quitting music, abusing alcohol to deal with his anxiety around performing, his conservative background, and the impact of the whole ‘Flume eats ass’ Burning Man bit had on his career. home with his girlfriend Paige Elkington. Harley Streten, aka Flume, is currently self-isolating in his L.A.
