Flume has given away some long-wanted tracks to fans as free downloads.
Flume recently took to Discord to hold an ‘Ask Me Anything’ session where he was quizzed about one old track in particular – titled ‘Greenpeace’.
In the middle of the voice chat session, the musician shared a download link for the much sought after track.
It was originally made for part of a campaign with Greenpeace Australia Pacific back in 2017 although that only featured just 90 seconds of audio (as per DJ Mag).
After the session, Flume shared the full track and it’s eight-and-a-half minutes in length.
You can listen to the full version below. Another track Flume shared called ‘GET U STEP’ can be downloaded here.
Speaking toĀ NMEĀ recently backstage at Mad Cool Festival 2022, Flume revealed thatĀ heās created a āfull albumās worthā of house music.
The Australian producer ā real name Harley Streten ā discussed various projects that heās been working on. His third album āPalacesā, released back in May, played host to a range of ideas which he hoped to later return to.
āI mean Iāve got a full albumās worth of house music thatās just sitting there that I just need to finish off,ā said Streten. āIāve got loads of demos, some of them have got strong parts for sure. Some of them are trash, most of them are trash, but thereās definitely some bits in there.ā
The artist also explained that after Mad Cool Festival, heād be heading to the studio in the UK. āIām about to go to London to do two weeks of sessions, thatās kind of the first stuff [Iāve worked on since āPalacesā], so weāll see.ā
Asked if he could share who the sessions would be with, Streten replied: āI think Iām doing one with Fred Again.. who Iām a big fan of ā but I think thatās the first thing that weāve locked in. I just decided to take the trip last week, but I made a little list of people I wanted to [work with].ā
In a four-star review of Flume’s āPalacesā, NME said the record seeās Streten ācouple his floor-shaking, hit-making style with quieter moments of introspection, reaching new heights in the processā.
The post Flume gives away long-wanted tracks as free downloads appeared first on NME.