Los amo ❤️□ Comment by Escapade Catahoulaįeel the frequenzy Comment by DJ Bitch With An M Goose bumps when this edit comes on during Astra Club BM set Comment by MarceOcean Where can I download? Comment by Jordan Philip Donoghue For me, you're missing the point of Flume's brilliance. We need this guys hope its available for download again, amazing! Comment by Kata MohosĪll that build up. Great - is there a chance to get a download link? Comment by Eleisha Doherty □□ Comment by klangmeister | Ben Strauch When can we download it? Comment by indra ✨ I want the intro and outro on repeat Comment by moment you check tomorrows DJ. It makes us very happy to finally share our rework of this already amazing song with you, and hope for many more inspiring moments between You and Us. As we were jamming in the studio one late night, we got so hooked on this song, but we would have never expected the feedback we were given. Originally, we were working on this rework to create a special moment for our shows. You can check out the remix below and decide for yourself whether Flume’s version of the song truly lives up to the legacy that is “Blue (Da Ba Dee).We are excited to finally share with you our rework of Disclosure and Flume's You & Me. The intro is nearly identical to the original, barring a sharpness in the notes, which is further accentuated in the buildup and culminates in a more characteristic EDM drop, though one still unmistakably of the same species as “Blue (Da Ba Dee).” In his remix, Flume delicately respects the source material while embellishing the track with loops and effects more befitting a modern EDM song. Eiffel 65’s original version is simple and ridiculously catchy, qualities which have allowed the track to maintain relevancy for the past twenty years while propelling it to a meme status parallel even to Crazy Frog. Truly, it was a remix few could have foreseen and none really wanted, but somehow, someway… the song actually kind of slaps. Chalk it up to quarantined delirium, a marketing grab, or even the 20-Year Rule of cultural cycles, but whatever you do, just don’t bother interpreting any deeper meaning from the track. Why did Flume remix “Blue (Da Ba Dee)” in 2020? Frankly, the producer himself probably couldn’t elaborate on that one. The post, from the caption to the dead expression on Streten’s blue face, reeks of 21st-century irony and quarantine cabin fever. “Roses r red my face is blue here is a song I made it for u,” captioned Flume on his Instagram post. This last tactic was the one chosen by Harley Streten, the Australian producer known as Flume, when he teased a remix of “Blue (Da Ba Dee),” the infamous Eurodance song by Eiffel 65. Some exercised regularly, some honed their cooking, some took up painting, and some of us embraced the void and growing attitude of global nihilism. Some of us rekindled old hobbies or took up new ones. Some of us caught up on reading or finished that show they’d been meaning to watch. We all coped with these lockdown blues a little differently, desperately grasping for a lifeline to sanity. Already, symptoms of delirium and the madness of isolation were seeping into the social consciousness. “Blue – Flume Remix” cover art, courtesy of .Ībout a little guy that lives in a blue world.”
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