The School of Greatness - Zedd Opens Up: Why He's A Better DJ Sober & How Music Became His Therapy
Episode Date: December 30, 2024In this enlightening conversation, Grammy-winning artist Zedd (Anton Zaslavski) opens up about his creative process, relationship with success, and personal growth journey. From discussing the challen...ges of staying authentic in an algorithm-driven music industry to sharing his path toward sobriety and healthier living, Zedd reveals how he's maintained artistic integrity while achieving massive commercial success. He explains his approach to performing live shows, the importance of building a trustworthy team, and how he's learned to navigate fame while staying grounded in who he is beyond the spotlight.Get Zedd’s new album TelosIn this episode you will learn:Why creating art for yourself rather than an audience leads to more authentic and impactful workHow to maintain artistic integrity in an algorithm-driven entertainment industryThe importance of surrounding yourself with people who genuinely care about your wellbeingWhy checking in on friends and fellow artists is crucial for mental healthHow Zedd discovered he could perform better sober and transformed his relationship with alcoholFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1713For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Hozier – greatness.lnk.to/1596SCJeezy – greatness.lnk.to/1480SCRachel Platten – greatness.lnk.to/1663SC Get more from Lewis! Pre-order my new book Make Money EasyGet The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My friend, thank you so much for being here back on the School of Greatness. I am blessed and
grateful every single day that I wake up. I get to wake up in a beautiful city. I get to wake up in
a dream home. I get to wake up with a beautiful woman next to me that brings me peace and love
and joy every single day. And I just feel blessed. I feel so grateful. And even though there can be challenges, even though there's might
be stresses at time, and I know there's adversities that I get to face
over and over in my life in different areas.
I try to focus on the blessings and the gratitude as often as I can,
because I can easily go into frustration or lack or not enoughness.
And I just want to remind you today of how grateful I am for you for being here and how blessed your life truly is.
Even if you're going through something challenging right now,
you have a beautiful opportunity to transform that challenge into a lesson,
into a new way of being, into learning something that you didn't know before and being
wiser than before. So I hope you are feeling good today. But if you're not know that there's an
opportunity for you to transform and I'm excited for you on this journey of transformation together. We've got a big episode today with Zed.
His name is Anton.
He is one of the biggest music producers in the world.
Massive hits, billions of streams with his songs,
some of the biggest songs of the last decade.
And I just had a great conversation with him.
And I cannot wait for you to meet this individual.
He has a very unique lifestyle.
He works all night, multiple nights a week and sleeps during the day.
He is constantly working with the biggest artists in the world.
He's an artist.
He's a musician and producer.
He's extremely talented, but getting to connect with him on a human
level and learn about his heart.
We talk about how you can use your art, use your music, use your service to heal others.
And it was interesting to hear his response when I talked about how he is bringing healing energy
to the world every time he performs and makes his music. It was really fascinating to hear what Anton
said about that. We talked about
so many different things about how to stay relevant, how he sees other people in the industry
trying to chase relevancy and what they do that might be hurting their art. There's so many cool
things in this episode. I really hope you enjoy this. Please share it with a friend that you think
would be inspired by this episode as well. You can copy and paste the link.
If you're on Apple or Spotify, just copy and paste the link to this episode.
Text it to a friend or two.
And if this is your first time here, please click the follow button on Spotify or Apple
and leave us a review and share what your biggest takeaway was from this episode.
And without further ado, let me introduce you to the one,
the only Zedd. Welcome back everyone to the School of Greatness. I'm very excited about
our guests. We have the inspiring Grammy award winning, incredible individual Zedd in the
house. My man, good to see you. Good to see you. Thanks for having me. You go by Zedd,
but your name's Anton, so we'll flip back and forth today. But a lot of people have
listened to your music for the last decade plus,
and it's been their theme song for a lot of people.
Your music has been their life.
They play it on repeat, they dance to it,
they get into relationships to it,
they go through breakups with your music.
It's like, helped people throughout their entire lives
for the last decade plus.
And you have, I was telling you off camera
that you, even though you're not aware of it,
you bring healing light to the world.
And you were like, huh, I don't really think about it
that way, but your music, when people are dancing,
they're at one of the highest frequencies of energy
they can be at.
So when you have anxiety, stress, depression,
thoughts of suicide or whatever it might be
that are holding you back, and you move your body,
you dance to something that feels electric,
that feels spiritual, you release all of the stress,
the pain, the worry that you're having in your life.
Now if you're doing it on drugs and you know,
medicating yourself, maybe you're diminishing
a little bit of like that spiritual high, but the energy you bring to people heals.
So I want to acknowledge you first for being a creative source of healing energy for the
world.
And I know you said that's not the way you think about it, because you don't make art
for others.
What did you say to me off camera?
Yeah, it really feels really awesome to hear that,
to hear you say that,
because it's not really how I think about my own music
and my art and my craft.
I'm not a doctor.
I'm not here to heal others or to help others.
I'm genuinely still doing the same thing
I did when I was four years old.
I sit piano to piano and I just play.
And the difference is that now I record and release.
And back then I recorded and played it for my parents.
Now to hear that my music has some sort of healing aspect to people or
like you said, people find each other, meet each other, get married,
maybe have their, you know, dance or whatever to my music is really awesome
because I never think about it this way.
I've also never thought about myself
as somebody who's famous and I don't think I ever will.
And it sometimes feels really nice to hear that
and to hear people tell me their personal stories
which happens all the time where I meet somebody
and they will
just tell me what my music means to them.
It feels really awesome.
It feels healing to me to hear that because it's never been my intention to make something,
to achieve something or anything other than kind of make music as therapy for myself. I set myself goals, sometimes really hard to reach ones,
especially with this album that I just released, Tell Us.
And my goal is just to fulfill whatever, you know,
I want to achieve with this project.
Then to hear that it's really healing to people
or that they were able to dance or meet somebody is really awesome.
It's a bonus. It's definitely not why I do it.
So what would you say is the purpose
of you creating music today?
Because you've been so successful,
you've won a Grammy, you're up for another Grammy,
you've won every other award under the sun,
you've got billions of streams,
why keep making music today?
What's the purpose?
The purpose for me to make music
is just like the purpose of any hobby that anybody has.
I've made music since I was a little kid and it's been my way of communicating emotion.
So, you know, I'm not the one singing the words, so I'm not the one expressing something in words.
The way I express my feelings is through notes and chords and melodies and
song structures and sound design. So it's a little bit of a more subtle way to
express feelings, but a lot of the times it just comes out of natural
I will sit behind a piano and I will just play without a plan. There's no
I'm gonna write a song like this or I'm gonna write a song that does that.
It's just mindless, you shut.
You know when you look at something and you zone off
and you kind of see everything blurry?
That's how my brain functions when I write music.
I don't think at all.
My hands just move themselves and all of a sudden
you kind of like wake up from having played
something really awesome.
Now you don't know what you played necessarily
because your fingers just move along.
It's kind of like, think about it mathematically,
it's kind of like motions, movements,
and your fingers move, and all of a sudden you're like,
whoa, that was cool, and then you kind of go back
and try to find what you just played
because you don't really know what you just played.
Because you're not recording it at this time.
You're not like recording the sound.
Sometimes I do hit record and I just zone out and play
and then it's easy to go back.
But most of the times if I'm in my room
and I have a piano in my room,
I kind of zone out and just play
and then you kind of wake up from having played something
that catches your attention.
So something that was good enough
or different enough to catch your attention,
then you go back and try to figure out
what was this that I just played.
And then if it's interesting, I will record it and I'll send it to my manager and I just
he stores everything.
Because one day I might want to go back and revisit it.
And I just send him, you know, little video clips of me playing the piano.
So that's how most songs start.
And then they can go into very many different directions.
They could become just a song on my album,
like a lot of the songs on my album currently
have started in 20, one started in 2015.
Wow.
And it took nearly a decade to finish.
One could become something for a TV show.
One could become a single.
One could become a song for somebody else,
like we briefly spoke.
I made a song with Max Martin or a couple.
They started that way.
They just started as, I'll do something and then I feel like, this doesn't fit the direction
I'm going.
Max, do you like this song?
Maybe somebody else can use it.
But the purpose of creating music is just to create for the sake of creating.
It's so interesting you say that because I had Rick Rubin on.
I don't know if you know producer Rick Rubin.
And that's what he talked about a lot is like,
don't create your music or your art for an audience.
Creating it for yourself is the best way
that you can put art out.
And in a world where I'm not a musician or an artist
in that form, I feel like I create my own art
in a different way, but I'm not a traditional artist.
But in the last five years, it feels like everything has changed for a lot of musicians, let's say,
because of either TikTok or social media,
where they feel like you have to chase a trend
and make it for a platform to take off.
Instead of what am I truly feeling?
What is my life about right now?
What do I want to express myself through the tonality,
the expression, the musicality, the harmonies,
the sound design?
And it seems like most people are chasing trends
or platform acceptance versus how am I truly feeling?
And I'm making this for me.
And it sounds like that's what you've done
over the last nine years is stay true to what
is my expression, whether anyone listens to this or not.
But how do you go about thinking, I need it to do somewhat well so that I make some money
from this or it's commercially acceptable because I'm a commercial artist versus I'm
making art for me and it doesn't matter if anyone listens to it?
It's a really difficult question to answer because I understand everybody's perspectives.
I think it's easy for me to say
that I make music for myself
because I've achieved most things
that I wanted to achieve.
And I get the benefit of having a dedicated fan base
that is open enough to listen to something new or different.
And a good example is my album Tellos
because like I mentioned to you, I make music for myself.
So the features might be bizarre
for people who know me from the middle.
Some of the artists are dead.
Some of them are unknown.
Like most people will not have heard of the Olin,
which is an Irish whistle pipe band that I love and I was obsessed with throughout
the pandemic. Honestly, my most listened to artists over the last two years and they make
very different music but they inspired me and they kind of pulled me through the pandemic and
really kind of showed me, wow, music can be so much deeper than I thought it was at the time
and the pandemic was kind of a dark time,
and I was not inspired to make music whatsoever.
And then I heard the Olin,
and it kind of sparked all these things.
So it was important for me to make a song with the Olin
because they kind of pulled me through a dark time.
So I didn't go to the artists that are the biggest,
that would give me the most exposure.
I went to the artists that mean something to me personally.
They gave you the most heart. They gave me the most heart, or like to the artist that means something to me personally. That gave you the most heart?
That gave me the most heart, or like,
I've always wanted to make a song with Muse, for example.
A band that I grew up with,
my very first concert with my band when I was younger
was a cover of Muse.
That was the very first song we performed on stage.
What was the song?
Plugin Baby.
Okay.
So for me, to make a song with Muse is kind of like a full circle moment
of being able to work with the artists that brought me here. Like I wouldn't be sitting
in that studio writing that song if it wasn't for Muse. So that whole album for me is it's
easy to make music for yourself when, and I'm speaking from my point of view, when you've
had success in the past. When I started making music, the algorithm didn't exist
the way it does today.
So when somebody, and I know a lot of amazing musicians that
spend their day recording TikToks.
Really?
And personally, it feels depressing to see because I feel like
they're so much better than chasing an algorithm. I know that because they're talented musicians but I also understand that
that's what you need to do in order to make money to be able to stay relevant
or something or or become relevant even you know it's a really difficult we're
living in a really difficult social media controlled world
where art becomes the backseat to something else.
Interesting.
And to me that's really a difficult pill to swallow
because I don't want music to more and more
go to the direction of is the background to the video,
but how much attention does the average listener
even have to listen to a whole album?
Like...
Very few people can do that, right?
Most people don't even know the full song of the clip that they know inside out.
It's like 10 seconds.
That's pretty sad.
Like, and I know a lot of songs from clips and I've never heard the whole song.
And I don't even know who the artist is.
It's just, I know the clip that I've seen, right?
So I kind of know the video.
You know the sound of the 10 seconds or whatever.
And then there's something behind that.
But you don't know the beginning, the middle, the end.
That could be the beginning, that could be the end,
that could be the middle.
I wouldn't even know.
And the reason is that platforms, you know,
I also understand the platforms.
They're there to make money and make the shareholders happy.
But it is inherently doing something to the world of music that I don't like.
It makes it forces artists to really spend their day creating TikToks and not spend their
day trying to be creative and make music, because that's what's going to make their
music.
That's what's going to make their music, that's what's going to get their music heard.
So if the artist can't afford living from just making the art, can you really blame
them for filming TikToks?
Right.
It's tricky.
It's a really tricky situation and I really don't like that we live in this world and
I'm really, really lucky that I can make art for the sake of art because I've built my platform at a time when the algorithms didn't really fully control it.
A lot more things were editorial, a lot more things were, you follow a person so you see
what they post.
And I feel like what is even the purpose of following anybody?
That's interesting.
We're subscribing because you see what the algorithm shows you anyway. And I feel like, what is even the purpose of following anybody?
That's interesting.
Or subscribing, because you see what the algorithm shows you anyway.
Exactly.
It's a tricky thing.
So I definitely understand artists who feel the need to sort of, yeah, I don't know the
right words to say it, but that feel the need to play the game.
Yeah. To, tricky.
To get exposure, but...
The tricky balance.
I mean, have you ever felt like,
because you've been on the scene for like almost 15 years
where you've kind of taken, you know,
you blew up around 15 years ago, roughly.
Yeah, something like that.
You were in the early 20s, you know?
And you had just a rocket to success with your music
and relevancy, right, as an artist. Like, you became very relevant in your early 20s.
Did you ever feel like, oh, I'm not as relevant and I need to be playing the game of social
media or doing these specific collabs that maybe I don't really care about, but that's
a big upcoming artist, so I need to be on the train of the collab game.
Have you ever thought about that, or is that...
I have.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, I have.
I'll be honest.
I remember sort of seeing your go-to social media numbers, right?
For the listener or viewer who, like,
doesn't know how social media was 10 years ago,
let's just say a post, anything you post gets 100,000 likes.
For an example, on XYZ platform.
I remember specifically,
it was like the same issue number.
If it's a new song, it's a little bit more.
If it's just a random photo, it's a little less.
All of a sudden, it dipped by half.
Really?
Just the next day.
I was so confused. I was like,
did I say something wrong?
Is that song not interesting?
And all of a sudden, all your numbers go down. But that also translates to ticket sales,
because less people see you post it. And they're, when they see you played a show in their
city, they're like, why didn't you? Like, I didn't even know you were playing a show
here. But I'm sitting there like, but I just posted the same thing. And I saw the numbers
just kind of trickling down. Now you can always say, well, maybe you're just less relevant
than you were before.
But it's always weird when that happens overnight.
And to me, that's usually a sign that there's
some change in an algorithm and that it prefers something else.
And I think it's way more extreme now
than it was 10 years ago.
I mean, those changes, the sort of reach that you had back then was astronomically higher
than the one you have today according to the followers you have.
So if you have 10 million followers, I remember times when like, I don't know, even 10% of
your followers would see a post. I feel like in today's world, that's probably amazing.
Yeah, anomaly now.
It's like 1% of the lucky.
It's mostly like other people that see your posts,
not your followers.
It's all so algorithmic.
And the issue with things being algorithmic in my mind
is that what's being rewarded is repetition,
because something goes viral,
everybody wants to go viral,
so everybody will do the same thing that went viral.
It almost wants you to copy,
and everybody will do the same thing.
So a lot of people complain about AI doing bad, you know, doing bad to the world.
And I'm not here to argue one way or another, but we're kind of doing the same thing by just forcing ourselves to do the same trend over and over.
And somebody does something creative, everybody copies it.
That's such a non-creative way of art in general.
And, you know, your art doesn't have to be music. Your art could be just creating content, being funny,
but if you have to kind of play that game,
at some point everybody kind of has to be like,
okay, we can't do this,
otherwise we're all gonna suffer from that.
Yeah, it's a really difficult,
I don't know how that affects you and what you do,
or if it does at all.
100%.
If you're seeing other,
if I'm seeing other people in my industry
interview someone maybe or talk about a certain topic
that's taking off, I feel like,
oh, do I need to do the same thing
or do I need to interview the same person
and ask them similar things, but is that original
or am I just kind of going with the trend?
So I'm always trying to, it's a both and.
I'm like, okay, that is an interesting person.
Let me have them on,
even though maybe they've been everywhere already.
But what's the new thing I can gain from them?
So I try to really say,
what is a perspective that they haven't shared?
One of the questions I asked you
before we started rolling was,
what's something that people don't ask you
they wish they asked you?
What's on your heart and mind lately
that you haven't talked about?
I'm trying to get just a little bit of information to say, what's really interesting you,
besides just saying the same things every time about,
tell me about this song, tell me about this person you work with.
Like, you've said these things a million times probably.
And so my goal is to connect to you emotionally
and as a human being to see what speaks to your heart.
Because I truly, yeah, you're welcome.
And I truly believe whether people who are watching me
who have no clue who you are, that's what they truly believe whether people who are watching me
who have no clue who you are, that's what they want.
And people who are your fans or followers,
that's what they want as well.
They've heard you maybe say all these other things
with the music shows.
Tell me how you produced this song.
Okay, cool.
But what's interesting to me is like
you had so much success at a early age
I know the weight that that carries for someone in their early 20s to have fame money and attention
and
And you just said when something is consistent say a hundred thousand likes every post or whatever and then it goes in half
You start to have this level of doubt or insecurity that you said, did I say something wrong?
Did I do something wrong?
Do they not like me anymore?
Am I less relevant?
Is there a younger person coming up
who's more talented than me?
What are they doing that I'm not doing?
You start to question.
So my question for you would be then,
how did you learn to navigate the self-doubt
while being on the top in the industry,
but maybe things going in half
or less people showing up to show us
for a season of time in your career?
How did you navigate the emotional doubt?
Yeah, and to answer this question,
I kind of didn't really finish where I was going with this.
Sure, go ahead.
But essentially, you see numbers go ahead, but but essentially
You see numbers go down you start doubting yourself. You think you maybe did something wrong or
Everything you said there might be something who somebody was more relevant
so a fun way to kind of
Close that question is that I just played a tour. I just came off tour and
we're on the, you can call it the lowest point
of engagement possible.
Right now you are.
Right now. Really?
And I think every day I wake up,
it will always be the lowest point of engagement
because except for the things that go viral,
it's just not the natural way social media,
it's not the way social media works anymore.
The platforms have changed, yeah.
The platforms have changed, so it's kind of normal.
The irony is that we had the most successful tour we've ever played.
Really?
With the most tickets sold, and we underbooked venues because we didn't...
That's great, man.
No, it really is.
And it kind of reminded me that all those numbers, they just don't represent the real world,
and they don't represent how people feel.
It's a lot of echo chambers. And you start doubting yourself, and you kind of
have to let go of what those numbers say,
because they don't really represent life.
So we take those numbers and kind of do our best
to gauge how much interest there is in each city.
And then we realize there's a lot more interest,
and people aren't liking
and people aren't commenting but they're there.
They're showing up.
They're showing up and they might even find their own ways to know that you're playing
a tour.
So that was kind of a moment for me recently or the most recent when I was like, oh, those
social media numbers don't really represent life.
So you had your biggest tour ever?
Ever and by the engagement, I was like,
I sometimes ask myself,
how do people find out that I play shows?
If you don't see it, I don't know.
I really don't.
But there's probably other ways,
and I remember thinking this way back.
Word of mouth, people just talking to Florence.
Word of mouth, and people follow their venues,
or people follow their own channels.
And this is a really interesting thing about social media
or the internet in general.
I feel like the greatest thing about the internet
compared to not having the internet
was that we felt internationally connected.
You can have friends anywhere in the world, right?
If you can't afford to travel,
you can still be connected to anybody, anywhere.
Yet I feel like we internet is different per person.
Your internet, your view of the world is so different from mine
because everybody gets shown something else.
And I think a moment I realized this was this previous election
because I have my feed and I've noticed that everybody gets shown something else.
And I think that moment I realized this was this previous election,
because I have my feed and I've noticed that everything I see in
my Twitter feed has nothing to do with any of my interests.
That's so funny. Why do they push
it another agenda that you don't care about?
And I feel like at some point Twitter did ask about your interests,
to better cater it to you.
But yet everything I see is like the opposite of what I want to see.
So my view of the world and who's going to become president was one way.
And somebody on my team was like, no, it's the exact opposite way.
But I'm like, are we seeing the same things?
And I think the answer is no, we're not.
Everybody sees their own things.
So while we're so connected and we use the same platforms,
we all live in our own little microcosm of what we see,
of what the platform, you know, can make the most ad revenue off.
We don't really see the same world.
That's why there's so much division too,
is because everybody sees their own version of reality.
And how often do you see like, just like, it's so obvious, like you just believe all
the lies and everybody says that about each other.
It's like, well, maybe it's not that easy.
Maybe it's pretty damn hard to figure out what's real and what's not because we all
see different things.
100%.
One of the things that I appreciate about my father, who's no longer here, when I was
a kid growing up, he would always turn the commercials off.
When we were watching sports or TV together, would always turn the commercials off when we were watching sports or TV together.
He would turn the commercials off
because he didn't want us to be targeted with messaging
that he didn't believe our brains needed
as like seven-year-old kids.
Specifically around medications, drugs.
He didn't want us to be programmed like
so many people are sick in the world
and you're gonna get sick too.
So you need this medication.
He didn't want us to think that way.
And so still today I don't watch commercials.
And this is an American TV thing?
It was my dad.
You know, it's just my dad.
I don't know many people that did this.
It was my dad just didn't like the American commercials.
Because there's a lot of medication commercials?
Probably.
I don't know.
I don't know what the stats are, but I would say at least a third of commercials.
Really? 100%. At least a third. I've never watched American television, so I'm't know. I don't know if the stats are but I would say at least a third of commercials really a hundred percent
I've never watched American television. So I'm very unaware
That's I mean turn off the commercials if you do because at least a third are either food like fast food
Which is making you need the medication right eat it all the time, right?
You're eating it all the time have fast food once a while. Sure
But if it's course every day fast food fast food, it's gonna make you sick.
And then you need the medication
to take care of the sickness.
That's their solution.
And so we just wanna watch it.
And I curate my social media like that.
I only have programming of positive content,
positive messages, positive people that I respect
that are like saying something as a reminder
could positively influence me.
That's awesome.
Otherwise, I will not watch it.
Yeah.
Like if it's anything about,
unless there's one random thing here and there,
but it's like I program my feeds.
That's awesome.
Or I delete something that I don't like,
or I'll remove it, or I'll just whatever,
swipe away or whatever it is.
Yeah.
And I think we need to take power back,
responsibility back on what we're consuming.
That's true.
And how we're programming ourselves,
are allowing platforms to program us,
and create some type of barriers and boundaries around it.
Turn it off, unfollow, whatever it is.
Even if they feed you other things you don't want,
you can probably say remove
this type of content over and over,
and hopefully they won't share it.
Right. But it's not even that easy though.
I love what you're doing.
I love the suggestion a lot.
I love being said more positive and inspiring content
instead of dividing and sad and brutal content
with of course the exception that we all wanna know
what's going on in the world.
Be informed but not entertained
Right interesting because when I give me a newsletter that's telling me
5,000 people died today in this country
cool I'm sad that this happened and that's unfortunate and I'm aware now don't show me the visuals
Yeah, yeah, then I'm being entertained and then in my whole body my nervous system feels like this is happening everywhere all the time. Yeah, and it's like
It's a heightened emotion. If you see that every second
You're killing anger screaming. You're just you're in fight-or-flight constantly
Educate me inform me through the written word, but don't show me visually right? Wow all the time
I'm sure you're gonna see moments here and there,
but it's like, minimize that.
The issue is that the way platforms make their money
is by seconds spent on X platform, right?
100%.
So it's this loop we're in.
Like, how are we gonna, as a society,
how are we gonna break out of a loop
where the wrong things are being rewarded?
And then the next person benefits of your wrong,
it's basically a circle of wrong.
I mean, I don't have a solution.
Maybe we could use AI to help us figure this out.
But it does feel like a strange loop
we're finding ourselves in because,
and you know, part of the AI conversation,
I mean, AI is scary, right?
It is is because-
For you as an artist and a musician,
what is the benefit of AI versus the scary part of AI for you?
The benefit of AI is that there's a lot of tasks
that go into producing a song
that are incredibly time intensive.
And you sit there and go through 400 snare drums
until you find the one that you like.
Wow.
And you could just say, find me four snare drums like X
and you don't have to spend the time.
There's a lot of these tasks that you have to do,
clean up, remove all the silence,
I mean, you name it, right?
There's a lot of things that AI can be super helpful with.
It's been beneficial for you already on your music?
I think I just hate calling it AI,
but we've used AI.
Software, tools. Yeah, right. It's always been there.
Like I've always used AI for example an equalizer that shows me the frequencies that I need to cut. It's essentially AI.
Sure, you can name it that or not. So I've used AI my whole career and I'm and the more AI tools there are as an example.
You give me a random sound a a cowbell, your mug, right?
And I want to be able to synthesize that sound.
I would have to have extensive knowledge of how to create that sound digitally from nothing.
There's no software that lets you throw in any sound you want.
It will re-synthesize it to the point where you can change and alter anything about it.
That's something that was completely impossible my entire life.
And now I can actually play and not sample it, I'm saying, like, re-synthesize it.
This is a little bit of a nerd talk, but essentially it's really amazing.
It lets us be so creative with something.
That's a perfect example of AI being super helpful to me.
One way AI is scary is that anybody can now write,
make me a song that sounds like Zed, but make it better.
Oh no.
And it will do it.
That's crazy.
Right? So that's of course scary and every single time somebody clicks
generate, it gets better because it learns off itself.
So-
Oh my gosh.
But it's also, it's fascinating.
I mean, I have no idea how this will shape things.
I also think that the human element
and anything in civilization
is something that will never want to get lost.
Yeah, it also goes back to like,
you built a brand, right, Zed.
People think of a feeling and an emotion
when they see or hear Zed they know
There's going to be for most people. I think a spiritual whether they think it consciously or not
There's a spiritual experience inside of them when they see Zed. Mm-hmm, or they hear the sound
They're like they remember the feeling yeah
She'll think of it they remember the feeling the first time they hear it, or that night in Vegas, or when you came to their city,
and they had their girlfriend and their boyfriend,
and they had this incredible emotional, euphoric experience
for two hours, and they maybe never felt that ever
in their life again.
And so when you build a brand, Zed, with the feeling of awe,
it's hard to create something more powerful than the combination of a brand and the feeling together than just chat GPT
saying, make me a better song than Zedd.
Right, because there's probably, there's definitely better songs than the ones I make.
But what you started our conversation with is that a lot of people have met their partners
or danced or relieved stress or got over something during a show of mine or while a song of mine
was playing.
That connection to a human, I think, is so much stronger than knowing that a randomly
generated song has, you know, is technically better, sounds better,
is mixed cleaner, which I'm sure all of these things
are true, and throughout my whole career,
with the exception of one song that was out of my hands,
I have mixed every single song I've ever released.
And I'm not the best mixer.
You know, I have a lot of things to do.
I write music, I produce music, I mix music, I perform a lot of shows, I have a lot of things to do. I write music, I produce music, I mix music.
I perform a lot of shows.
I have a Vegas residency.
I program my own lighting.
Like, with my team, of course, but I do a lot of things.
I don't spend all day mixing.
So there's mixing engineers who are way better than I am
and ever will be.
But my choices, every single choice
throughout the mix process of my songs has personality.
It's because I like things this way.
It's because I like a snare to be too loud if I feel like it.
Right, right, right.
There's this Dream Brother song on my album
where the clap is unbelievably wide.
Again, a little bit of nerd talk,
but it's essentially very strange.
And I like the idea of having something so bizarre and weird.
And if you gave that to a mixing engineer,
he would immediately pan it to the center
because that's not normal.
But I like it, it has character and has this moment of like,
I was in the car listening to it
and it felt like the claps were coming
from like the side of the doors.
And I was like, that's cool, that's a unique experience.
I've never felt that, I've never heard it.
I like it, it's different.
So I think the connection to a human
and a human making a decision is much more powerful
to than the connection to something that's technically on paper better by whichever metric
you want to go by.
So is handmade furniture obsolete because we have Ikea?
No.
People still care for an Etsy as well in life.
I hope.
I love Etsy.
Yeah. Because there's people creating things by hand,
and I think there's a lot of appreciation for humans doing amazing things.
Yeah, I don't think it'll ever fully replace it,
because I think you need a story and personality behind the art.
Maybe there'll be some one-offs or some anomaly of like,
oh, AI generated whatever, and like, people really appreciate it,
because it's a unique one-off thing.
But I think when you have a personality and you're able to build a brand around emotion
and something that people love, it's hard to beat that.
I think you're right. And I think this will hopefully never get old.
And people still want to come to shows even though they can put VR solutions on
and technically experience it anywhere, anytime.
They still want to be at a show and I've actually witnessed this on my last tour while one of
my openers was playing and I loved watching this.
So my openers sometimes have to play pretty early because we only have so many hours we're
allowed to make sound.
So people are still trickling in and it's really fun.
Not you opening but someone else coming to open the show.
Yeah, before I go on.
And it is something that I've noticed
that I really loved seeing.
It was an empty hall.
I think it was about 7,000 people in total.
And people slowly trickle in.
And you can tell nobody knows each other.
And then slowly, one person likes a song,
turns to the left.
You can tell they don't know each other.
And I was kind of watching from side stage.
And two songs later, there's a group of like 10 people
that are clearly like now jumping together.
And like when one person jumps, everybody jumps.
And you see these little like circles build throughout a venue.
And slowly but surely they all become one.
It's like almost when you look at ants
and you see them do something super coordinated.
Like how the hell do you guys know how to do this?
That's how it feels when humans in a room
slowly start spreading, let's just call energy,
for lack of a better word.
And eventually, I feel like a good show
is when you capture all of the audience.
Oh man, that's gotta be like a spiritual experience for you.
It is.
You see the whole audience move in unison,
or sing in unison, or wave, or dance, like.
And they don't know each other, but they are all on the same wavelength.
And slowly throughout the course of the night, you can see how it spreads
and how the circles become bigger. It's pretty amazing.
I mean, humans are amazing. They're amazing.
We're incredible. We're one of a kind.
I had the singer Hozier on.
He's extremely talented, great music.
And I asked him, like, if he ever has any...
I asked him what's his most spiritual experience he's had on stage.
Because he's got the song, like, Take Me to Church and all these different things.
And I go, it's a spiritual experience for the audience, but it's also for him.
And he gave me a really honest answer.
He was kind of like, you know,
I kind of do it so often now.
Like I'm on the road all the time,
I'm always performing and it's like,
I don't necessarily take it for granted,
but it's like, it's hard to feel that feeling for him
is kind of what he was saying.
He's like, I recently did in Mexico City,
the audience was incredible. It was just like so loud and everyone was singing my songs.
And it was like, that kind of felt spiritual,
but you kind of go through the motions sometimes
and you just forget about it.
Do you feel like every show,
sometimes you go through the motions
or do you have a spiritual experience certain nights?
And when you do, is there something
that you're creating energetically
inside of you?
Are you in a good zone with your habits and rituals
and routine?
Are you in a good state emotionally when that happens?
Like, does that happen?
And what are you creating to make that happen?
I still feel surprised slash really moved
by an audience singing along to my music, even though I know they will,
I still go on stage and I'm still unsure if people know the songs. And that's why I said I never see
myself as a celebrity, I never see myself as somebody whose music is widely known, maybe
because I've made music for so much longer since I was a kid without anyone knowing anything I do
that I'm more used to it. I'm not sure but I still
When I go on stage, I mean a festival is probably the best example because festivals have
Multiple stages. There's a lots of amazing artists playing at the same time
I still am always wondering whether somebody's gonna shop at my stage. Yeah every time but you're freaking sad man
I don't know. I mean, I see the streams you get like massive hits grab me
We're in Europe. I know but it's not really internalized in that way. I still see myself as Anton and
you know, I
Meet my friends in video games just like randomly and like that
I don't see myself as the person that people see myself as no and I don't think I ever will at this point
I think that's actually beautiful.
Maybe it's a good thing.
You know, I think it's actually a really good thing.
It probably makes you a healthy human being.
Yeah.
And you don't believe all the hype of yourself.
I think that's the worst thing that people can do is like believe their own hype.
I think you can appreciate what you've created and how hard you've worked.
And like, man, you've dedicated your life to your craft.
Yeah.
And you can not diminish that. You can appreciate and have self-respect and self- you've dedicated your life to your craft yeah and you can not diminish
that you can appreciate and have self-respect and self-worth and know your value but not believe the
the crazy hype of someone who's just like oh my god you're incredible I look you know yeah
there's like a balance yeah I mean I don't experience that very much again because I
don't see myself this way but I do see other people go through that and I don't experienced that very much again because I don't see myself this way, but I do see other people go through that
and I don't love seeing that.
Maybe that's why I shy away from it too.
I think the whole nature of extreme fandoms and like.
Celebrity and stuff, yeah.
Yeah, people basically excusing any behavior of a person
because they love that person.
It's like anything that person does is amazing.
I just don't think that's healthy to any industry,
to any CEO, to any artist, to any actor,
whatever that may be.
I think always being sort of double checking,
making sure you're not doing anything stupid
is a good thing.
I don't think having an army behind you,
supporting you through any move you do is a good thing.
I don't think it's a good influence on you.
Is that a European kind of way you were raised?
Because it seems like it might be, or is that, you know?
It's definitely possible.
I mean, I'm very much a son of parents
that have raised me one way and I'm that way still.
I'm really thankful for how my parents raised me.
How did they raise you?
It may shock you, but they let me do anything I want.
Really?
Yeah. Like if I didn't want to go to school, I would tell my mom, mom, I'm not going to
go to school tomorrow. Once because I didn't study for my exam and if I fail this exam,
it's going to be bad for me. Okay, I'll call and say you're sick. Or, hey mom, I'm wasted
with my friends. We're gonna go out tonight,
I'm not gonna make it to school tomorrow.
Are you sure?
Okay, I'll call in and say it.
Whenever.
But I wouldn't really abuse it as much as you think I would.
Having that power, I learned to appreciate it
and I used it, I don't wanna sound bad saying this,
but I used it strategically to get through school
because I sucked at school.
Wow, me too man. I was not good. I I sucked at school. Wow, me too, man.
I was not good. I was good at music and I would help my whole class, but I was not good
at school. It's just not how my brain is wired and maybe I'm using that as an excuse, but
I've always been very pushed into creativity. Not by my parents, but I always wanted to
do something creative and whether that's, you know, I've always loved video games, I've always loved music, any sort of art.
I just wasn't good with numbers.
I loved ethics and, you know, psychology and that kind of stuff, but I really didn't like
most of school.
But I didn't abuse it.
I would, you know, strategically occasionally call in sick.
But I learned to juggle power, right?
Because as a kid, deciding when you want to go to school
and where not is like the most powerful thing
you can have as a kid.
Like it's not really money.
You have to go to school, but you don't?
Like that's pretty powerful as a kid.
So I think it kind of maybe taught me to be careful
with the power that I'm given and respected.
But yeah, to go back to the question you asked I'm careful with the power that I'm given and respected.
But yeah, to go back to the question you asked originally, is like I still am so overwhelmed by people singing along to my music,
especially going from city to city or country to country or continent to continent.
And it's pretty fascinating because every almost state
is a different variation of human beings.
Really?
And you can feel it and see it.
And I sometimes claimed I could hear a clip of an audience
and I could tell you which country we're in
by the pitch of them singing.
No way.
Philippines, best singing crowd in the world.
Like they're all amazing.
Japan is like a close second.
You know when you hear sing-alongs you're like, well it's going to be either there or there.
You know Europe is maybe more a little bit of the soccer chant like off pitch but sounds bigger,
louder. So each country has things that it has to do with weather. The weather affects their
mood and attitude. The language, the language affects
how direct or distant or how you express yourself.
Like, German is very distant in my opinion.
English, I remember when I came to America and I met Jimmy Iovine who signed me initially
at the beginning of my career and I want to say you, I want to say something to you.
And I realized there's no other way to say you in the English language than
you while in French or Russian or German there's multiple use.
There's a formal and an informal use.
So you would always use the formal you because you show respect to the person.
But I was sitting in front of Jimmy Ivey in this like legend.
This is how you.
Who's signing me and I was like saying, you that felt so weird to me.
So every country has something that makes them
some sort of ball of energy and you perform there
and it just, this energy feels different everywhere you go.
But anytime I hear people sing along or jump,
it's not something that gets old to me
and I'm used to it, but it still doesn't make it
any less amazing.
What's the most spiritual experience you've had
at a live show you've performed at?
Oh man, there's gonna be bad answer
because I'm unprepared for this,
but there's been so many moments in my life on stage.
Like I remember playing Madison Square Garden.
That was a really special moment
because it was my first arena tour, and I was on stage and I don't know Madison Square Garden. That was a really special moment because it was my first arena tour and I
was on stage and I don't know Madison Square Garden well. I know it from hearing and seeing it
but up top in the center of the room they have the ring and it says Madison Square Garden and I was
just on stage and I kind of looked up and I saw that Madison Square Garden. I was like wow this
is crazy I'm actually here on stage and and playing in front of all these people.
So that was an amazing moment.
Playing Red Rocks, have you heard of it in Denver?
I've never been there, but I've always wanted to go.
I remember, I was or still am a huge fan of Incubus
and they had a DVD.
I don't know if it was like a boot,
like I got somewhere if it was a real DVD
or VHS or whatever it was,
but they were playing live at Red Rocks
and it just looked so incredible.
And I was a kid and I set myself the dream one day, I'm going to be on that stage playing
Red Rocks myself.
So then when I finally was playing Red Rocks for the first time, it was another one of
these moments of like, I can't believe these dreams I set myself so high that I would never
reach them.
I end up actually reaching and it feels bizarre because I tried to set myself goals I will never reach.
And throughout my life, I've kind of surpassed my goals
and I always have to keep reaching higher
because I like having dreams and I like having goals
and I think it's important to have something
you work towards or for,
whatever that is in anybody's life,
but I like having the drive to achieve something,
whatever that may be.
Wow.
When you're playing, I mean, now that you have this information
that when you go to a different city, different state,
different country, different continent,
and you know there's different energy of an audience,
like now you know you've been everywhere,
you've played everywhere,
do you approach every show the same in terms of like,
set up the lighting, the loudness of the sound,
whatever it might be, or are you thinking,
oh, the Philippines rocks this way.
So I'm gonna change the lights to create a mood
and an environment to let them shine.
And I know in England, they're kind of like,
rowdy a bunch and they're kind of off tune or whatever,
and they're just more screaming rather than like,
on pitch, and so I'm gonna make it it like louder for them and like, you know deeper deeper bass
Just let them rumble and you don't need to sound the way I like it
But it's gonna sound the way it makes them feel most alive
Have you ever thought about that? Um, I haven't thought about what you just said specifically to kind of put the audience on stage in a sense
That's really really approach, really good thought.
What I definitely do is I change my show depending on where I play.
I played a show in Mexico a couple of weeks ago and it was and I didn't know
this until I got there, but I was the only electronic artist that day.
And it was a gigantic festival to make it just the easiest like their Coachellaella. Huge artists, I was playing at the same time as Toto,
which I would have loved to walk myself.
Toto, the band?
Toto the band.
Like Africa?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh man, I saw them play once.
Really?
I would have loved that.
I missed them because I had to be on stage.
I stayed with the opener for, oh my gosh, Journey.
Oh cool.
And so they're, yeah, it was fun.
But it was this huge festival. I stayed with the opener for, oh my gosh, Journey. Oh, cool. And so they're... Oh, awesome.
Yeah, it was fun.
But it was this huge festival.
First of all, my doubts came in, who's going to watch me
when Toto's playing?
Really?
As always, yeah.
It will never change.
It's just how I think about myself.
But I made my set that day, like in the green room,
right before I went on stage.
Because I had no idea what to expect.
I was talking to the drummer of the Mars Volta.
They were playing an hour before.
It's like, what kind of audience did you have?
It's like, oh, they really like rock.
I'm like, okay.
I have some more rock versions or remixes of rock songs.
So I added a bunch more rock leaning songs.
So I will adjust accordingly.
When I'm on my tour, a bunch more rock-leaming songs. So I will adjust accordingly.
When I'm on my tour,
Natello's tour was a work of art, a movie in a sense.
I'm not gonna change the movie
because of the theater it's playing in.
I made a movie and I'm there to present the movie
as close as possible.
And I've been adjusting the set a little bit on tour,
but it is kind of, I see it as a work of art
that I've created that I want people to see.
While in Vegas, like if another artist shows up, but it is kind of I see it as a work of art that I created that I want people to see. Yes.
While in Vegas, like if another artist shows up, I will always play a couple songs of that artist, you know.
That's cool.
I mean, there's, I don't know, there's a bunch of things that have happened where I saw people making out in the front row,
like an opening artist jumped in the crowd to make out with somebody, I know, like this is a Vegas thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I immediately switched to Careless Whisper
by George Michael because I was like,
that's a funny moment.
I know most won't get it because they don't see it,
but in Vegas, it's much more spontaneous.
There's no set list.
There's no like-
It's whatever you feel in the moment.
Whatever you feel in the moment,
and I think I told you off camera,
but in Vegas, I feel like I'm more of,
I'm there to make sure everybody
has the best night of their lives.
I'm not there to promote my album.
I'm not there to show the newest drops that I've got.
I'm there to sometimes test out new music
because I want to get information about how a song I'm working on sounds.
And I feel like Vegas will...
Sounds weird, but they will film less.
Because people are in their own... They're drinking, they're partying, they're dancing.
They're not necessarily there to film and upload it.
I don't want those things out. I just want to get information.
So I sometimes will drop a song really quickly, get the information I need and mix out.
So every concert has a different purpose.
My tour, my Telestore is a work of art that I spent with my, like a month with my team,
working on the finest details and lighting, and I still think it's one of the most incredible shows visually possible.
And I'm really, really proud of it. And I'm not really looking into adding a new hit that just went viral, because that's not the purpose of it.
Now, a viral hit in Vegas, that makes much more sense.
A festival in Japan, I will maybe play,
and you know you gotta think about things like
a relatively unknown song of mine
has been in a car commercial in Japan.
So that song is significantly more popular in Japan
than it is in other countries.
So you'll play it there.
I will play it there.
So you have to consider all these things
when you go to the different. You don't have to. Right, you do. it there. I will play it there. So you have to consider all these things when you go to the literacy grant.
You don't have to.
I do.
You do.
That's smart, because I speak a lot.
As a speaker, I'll go on stage.
I like to go early.
It kind of sounds similar to what you're doing.
And I'll either ask other speakers,
how is the audience?
But I like to go even earlier and ask people
like in the hallway hours before.
And I like to ask just like people attending,
whether they know who I am or not, I like to just say,
hey, what are you going through in your life right now?
That's amazing.
What's your biggest challenge you're going through?
What are you facing?
What's like something?
And based on what they say, I'll try to use that as information
as like this is a general collective of what a lot of people
might be feeling.
And try to speak into that.
And I'll leave a reference.
You know, I talked to Susie in the audience like a few hours ago.
Oh that's awesome.
And she mentioned that she was really struggling
with this in her life.
How many other people are feeling like they're struggling
in this part of their area of their life?
Uh huh.
And then like you kind of speak in
and try to relate to that audience more.
That's amazing.
It sounds like you do that as well with,
hey tell the other artists you opened up,
how was the vibe?
Are they with low energy?
Do I need to bring it up?
They like more rock music.
So it's really smart you do that.
I always do that at festivals with artists
who play after me.
I was like, hey, just letting you know,
they really love, because some audiences love to sing,
which tend to be the shows I do the best.
And some audiences just want to rage.
Like every festival is different.
So it's really good information if somebody shares that.
I always do with whoever's playing after me. It's like, hey, by the way, they really like XYZ type of music.
They don't seem to know XYZ. And it really helps the DJ after me to be able to cater a little bit better.
And I really appreciate when people tell me that most of the times people when I'm like, how's the crowd?
They're like, they're amazing. You're going to love it. And they're not. I wish they were just honest.
Like, I'm not going to need, like, just tell me, you know, it only helps everybody.
Like, hey, it's really rough.
They only know the sing-alongs like maybe this wasn't on the radio,
maybe they're unaware.
Like, there's many reasons, it's not a personal thing,
but I think honesty is just really good.
But to what you said, where you would go into the audience
and ask Suzy about something that's going on in her life and reference it,
which sounded crazy to me, but I realized I actually have done this. I've done four nights in San Francisco on my tour. And after I think the first night
I did an album signing a meet and greet in a record store, and people came up to me and
like told me their personal stories, which was a lengthy period of time
where I got to hear people's connection to my music,
which was really, really awesome,
which is how we started the conversation.
And one person said,
I've been supporting you since Zelda came out,
which was like, I want to say 2010,
like before I was signed.
It was the very early days.
I'm like, wow, you've been there.
I mean, I have probably had a couple thousand fans,
maybe in the world, like you were there since day one.
So it's like, I'm gonna play Zelda for you tomorrow.
And I played it just for that one person.
It was eight and a half thousand people in the room,
but it was just for that one person.
But there might have been more who were like,
I was there since day one.
But it was this human sort of connection
that maybe an AI on stage
wouldn't necessarily appreciate or do. 100%. This is fascinating. I've got a few more questions
for you, but this has been really cool, Anton. I appreciate you opening up. Likewise, yeah.
You know, there's either a stereotype or stigma or just a feeling that you see some artists die young
or just get burnt out or stressed out or overwhelmed
or they can't take the fame or money
or just don't know how to manage it all.
It seems like it can be daunting.
You know, you've seen a lot of younger artists struggle,
things like that.
How have you been able to navigate that yourself
with either burnout, the success, the fame, and also how do you
manage and navigate it when other artists that you know are struggling, whether they're
mental health, suicidal thoughts, the overwhelm of needing to be relevant and they're not
as relevant, whatever is going on, how do you manage it personally and then how do you
navigate it?
Because I know you've had friends who've, you know, taken their life.
How do you navigate that as well?
I think the most important thing in a life
where you're always out there, lack of sleep,
you're surrounded by alcohol and drugs, girls,
whatever that may be, is the people you surround yourself
with, the team you build.
It's the single most important thing.
Building a good team that's there for you
and not there for you to make money,
for them to make money.
People who care about you as a human being,
first and foremost, those are the building blocks
of a long and successful career.
Starting at the very beginning,
everybody I work with, I've worked with since 2010, before I had any success.
Really having trust in people is really, really important.
And again, building a team that cares for you
is really important.
And having a human connection to the team,
and not just having a person that works for you,
but with you.
That's number one.
Same goes for your friends.
Friends are an influence and they can sway you either direction.
I think surrounding yourself with people that keep you in check,
that give you shit sometimes, is good, no matter who you are.
Now, if you're one of these artists or if you're an actor,
if you're in the public eye and you struggle with suicidal thoughts.
I've been surrounded by people.
I'm lucky enough to have never had those thoughts.
But some of my friends in the industry have.
And I think it's really important to check in on people.
And I know people check in on me and I really appreciate it.
And I never take that as like,
why are you checking in on me?
I don't need it.
No, it's always a good thing.
Just that you don't have to do much beyond, hey,
what's been going on?
How are you feeling?
I've had friends who've had suicidal thoughts
during the pandemic who are in the industry.
I have had friends of friends that told me, man, this guy,
he drinks way too much and he cannot control it.
And I reached out to them.
And we briefly spoke about the fact that
I've recently cut down on alcohol consumption a lot.
I mean, I will drink occasionally when my parents are in town,
I'll have a glass of wine with them, that's fine.
I'm not a, you know, not black or white.
But my default used to be to drink on stage.
Really?
Always, for over 10 years, every show.
Was it like a nerves thing or was it more just-
It was a mixture of,
I think there are advantages to having alcohol in you
because you feel like you're connecting more with
the people that have alcohol in them.
It loosens you up a little bit,
it makes you less nervous because I still get nervous.
Still?
I know this because I wear a boot tracker.
Right.
It's every
single show and I don't put in when I start my show it knows exactly when my
show starts. So that tells me that... It might also just be excitement. It is. I
mean it's partially exciting right there they're kind of linked in a sense but I
do know that I still get some sort of body reaction when I go on stage.
And I thought for the longest time, first of all, probably 10 years ago, I told my touring
team if I ever drink too much, like if I become an alcoholic, you have to tell me because
I'll be the last person to know.
If you're the alcoholic and we've probably most of us have been around people like that,
you don't know.
And you're going to argue you're not.
So I told them right away, because I drink a lot,
this is years ago, like you have to tell me
if it gets too much, because I won't know.
Did they tell you?
They didn't, and I still, like I would consider myself
a functioning alcoholic before they would,
and I think I trust them enough to know
that they would tell me if something was really wrong.
So what made you wanna stop drinking as much?
What made me want to stop?
It's a stupid answer, but I started writing down my calories.
Every single thing I eat or drink, everything.
I made a spreadsheet that is as easy to use as possible.
And I had other DJs ask me for it because I'm not alone.
There's other people going through whatever you're going through always.
Anytime you want to Google something, somebody's Googled it before you, right?
That's the general gist.
So I started writing down my calories because I wanted to lose fat and gain muscle.
And I started going down the rabbit hole of like, how do you do that?
What's all about?
You know, it's the very shortest is calorie in, calorie out.
Yes.
I started writing down all my calories in little things you wouldn't even think like
A G1 1 50 calories, you know, you have 10 of those things throughout the day. That's a full meal
Yeah, so I started writing them down and there was this one show where I was pretty hungry and I had the show at 1 30
AM starting and I look at my sheet and I'm like well I
Can either drink or eat because a shot of alcohol just just for the ones who are interested, is just about 100 calories, right?
One shot?
Yeah, I guess you don't drink so you can't see it.
Holy cow, 100 calories for one shot?
Yeah, and you can go through 10 shots a night.
Holy cow, that's a lot, like two meals.
Yeah, it's, you know, you can have your entire day's
worth of nutrients. Calories?
Yeah, that's crazy.
So I looked at it and I was like,
okay, well I can't afford to drink today
because I don't have the calories.
And if you mix it with other things, it's even more sugar and Sprite or drinks
It's like more calories even more calories. So I looked at my sheet and I was like, okay
well today because I want to stay on track you can undo a whole weeks of starving and
Doing well and working out by one silly night out and I will even argue that it's worth it to do that occasionally
Sure, if the right circumstances are met but in that every night one silly night out. And I will even argue that it's worth it to do that occasionally. Sure.
If the right circumstances are met.
But in that sense.
Every night and every weekend.
It was my default, right?
It wasn't even, it got to the point where I would show up
and I wanna thank everybody who does this
because it just shows how much they care.
But I would show up to places
and people would know my favorite drink,
which was Jack and Coke Zero for a long time.
There's all of it.
And it was premixed the moment I walked in.
So I didn't even have to ask for it.
Like that's really good hospitality but it
became a norm. It became like Anton's drinking and he's drinking Jack and Coke.
I would have two before I go on throughout the two-hour set probably two
to three on and like one or two after right we're talking about 700-800
calories at least. More because it's mixed and like there's probably shorter
two in between and you feel it the next morning. Oh, yeah
So two things happen. I started realizing through wearing a whoop that when I drink alcohol
My recovery was awful even if I didn't feel that way
But I don't always trust how I don't trust how I feel I don't trust my memory because I think it's really
Just in general human beings memories are pretty bad. I trust something that has no personality.
It's just there to tell me.
So if my heart is working overtime
just to keep my body clean or cleansed from the alcohol,
something's going on that's probably not ideal.
So I looked at it and I was like,
I don't like that I'm not doing something good to my body.
Number one.
Number two was I just didn't have room for calories.
So there was this one show that I previously mentioned
where I realized I'm not going to have any room for calories
so I'm going to have to play it sober
and that was going to be my first sober Vegas show.
And Vegas is a much tougher audience than virtually any other place that you can play
because not everybody bought a ticket to see it
because people go to Vegas to go to Vegas as well.
You're one element of the night.
And I was really concerned because for the longest time
I thought I wouldn't be able to play shows live.
And one of the DJs that I was kind of tipped off on
drinking way too much said that exact thing.
I could never do this sober, right?
And that's a really, really dangerous thing to say
when you play a lot of shows.
And I remember going on stage, playing sober,
45-ish minutes passed into my set,
and I had this, like, moment of waking up
where I realized, wait, I'm sober.
I felt drunk.
I felt exactly the same drunk as I felt before.
And that made me realize that what I thought the alcohol was giving me, it wasn't the alcohol
ever.
It was the adrenaline.
It was the excitement.
It was the connection to the people.
And that moment, I was like, oh my God, I can of course do this sober because I was
scared to lose this feeling.
And I was scared that if I lose this feeling, I'm going to suck on stage.
Wow.
If I suck on stage, I will just retire.
Because why would I even do that, right?
I don't have to do it if I don't want to.
And I had this fear that it's the end of my career
if I stop drinking, essentially.
Because me sucking on stage, people come to last shows.
I make no money.
I can't afford my team.
I'm retiring.
It's a full nightmare.
I'm a relative. I'm dead. I'm a relative
Yeah, but the moment I played a sober show I was like, wow, it's it's not the alcohol
I just thought it's the alcohol. It's it's really just that I love what I do. That's amazing
That was such a big realization
I immediately reached out to that other DJ and it's like you should try playing sober and
Try playing sober for a week and then went back to drinking.
Not, I can't convince somebody,
if somebody doesn't wanna have help,
I don't think you can change them.
But I think it's important to at least check in,
have a conversation, because for me,
the realization that this excitement is the carrying point
and not the alcohol was so, so big.
Because I had the fears of end of my career if I stopped drinking.
Wow.
That's pretty crazy to think about.
Sure.
But it was in me.
It was a fear I genuinely had because the moment I go on stage
and I don't like what I'm doing,
that's the I'm going to retire the next morning and cancel everything that's upcoming
because I don't have to do anything I don't want to do
and I'm unbelievably lucky to be able to say that.
And there's another DJ that will take my spot, you know gladly
I don't want to take anybody's time away if what I'm doing isn't fulfilling me with happiness and I really believe
part of the reason why people love coming to my shows and coming back to my shows is because I
Love what I do and I think it translates
I think people can tell that I love and it gets them high too
And then I see them hype and it gets me hyped.
It's this ecosystem of like excitement sharing.
Right?
100%, yeah.
If I'm the one who's not having a good time
and I see people do this
and I can tell they're not having a good time,
I just think it's like for the better
to just maybe not do it at all.
Wow, yeah.
If you don't enjoy what you're doing.
Dude, I'm so glad you're saying this.
And it's beautiful that
you can be a model for other DJs and artists to be able to, hey you've done it with alcohol and
without it, just as effective if not more effective because you're more present, you're more aware,
all these different things probably. I'm a significantly better DJ sober. That's interesting.
I can have a shot, it's going to be okay. But just the realization that wait I'm better at my craft,
I can deliver a better result for people
who have spent their hard-earned money coming to my show.
It's a duty of yours.
I kind of, sure, I can have a shot
if there's something to celebrate.
Nobody will take that personally.
They will probably be stoked that I did that
because they're doing the same.
But it's almost my duty to do anything I can
to deliver the best job possible.
100%.
I've got a couple final questions for you, Anton.
I know you gotta jump out of here soon.
But to finish with that, 20, I don't know, 22, 23 years ago,
I was going out to the clubs to Paul Olkenfold
and Tiesto and Ferry Corston
and like kind of those guys back in the day.
And I remember I would go,
and I think I was probably the only one that was sober
at every club I'd go to, right? In my like 21, 22 year old self, right? And
I would go and maybe I'd sprite or have like a red bull or water or something. But I would
just, I didn't need alcohol to feel alive. And everyone had asked me like, are you drunk?
Because I was just like jumping the whole night and in it and I was like, nah man, just get high on life.
And the energy can bring you alive, I think.
And if you bring the energy,
you're also gonna feel that as well.
That's a really amazing thing for you to say,
because I will also admit my own shortcomings
in being in the audience perspective.
Because I have a friend who hadn't had any alcohol until I believe age 31-ish,
and he was the hardest partier out of all of us.
Going crazy, right? Like, ah, you know.
Must have been high on life because there was nothing else to be high on.
He also never done any drugs.
And I will say I still am very inexperienced
in going out and partying sober.
Yeah.
First of all, I don't really go out.
Sure, you don't go out at all.
Almost ever.
Yeah.
But when I do, I still feel so much anxiety to do it.
But I love hearing you say that
because it kind of teaches me that the same perspective
of you can probably be better at what I do on stage.
I can probably have a better time
and I wake up the next day not feeling like,
because that's, I mean, you've never been hungover.
Never.
I mean, it's not the worst thing, food poisoning,
but being hungover is so terrible.
It ruins, and that was the other thing.
Being hungover directly translates to you
not being able to work out as well,
and I was in the state of, I had a perfect equilibrium between work, health, and working
out.
And every time I drank, it was like, and everything was off.
I couldn't work out, I would cancel my workout, I would skip one and then like everything,
it had such a ripple effect on me that I think just cutting down on alcohol was huge. I don't know if there's any benefit strong enough
for the case of drinking a lot of alcohol.
Like if you want to have a glass of wine or a shot once in a while, cool, whatever.
But I don't know if there's a benefit of like,
hey, I'm getting hammered tonight.
Beyond that moment, there's no other benefits.
And what it does to your brain and your health of like the consistency of that,
there can not be any good in that.
Do you think people will still be drinking alcohol
50 or 100 years from today?
100%. Really?
Because people, none of their own fault.
I mean, and I'm not here to judge
because I've had sugar highs, right?
Like my whole life, like that's been my vice is like,
okay, I'm gonna eat like a bucket of ice cream,
which is equally as bad in certain ways, right?
It's got its own thing.
I just think that whenever there's ability
to do the easier way, if you're feeling anxious,
stressed, overwhelmed, for me, it's like,
let me go to sugar, let me go to comfort food,
whatever it is, whatever the easy way is,
humans are gonna go that way.
If it's alcohol because it doesn't seem like the big issue
and it makes you feel more relaxed,
whatever is the easier way of smoking cigarettes or e-cigs,
the easy way to numb something is what human beings are
going to do, unless they're really trained on how
to regulate their emotions. And if you don't on how to regulate their emotions.
And if you don't know how to regulate emotions,
then you don't know how to get through life.
And you need something to stimulate and calm or soothe you and comfort you.
It doesn't mean you're bad or wrong.
It's not about good or bad.
It's about does it serve you?
Does it serve you? Does. Does it serve you?
Does it serve the people around you
with you being drunk or high or on drugs
and then the next day not able to deliver
or perform or you're forgetful?
Is it serve your life?
Yeah.
I mean it's a really good question to ask.
You know, everybody's answer may be different
and I will admit that in my early 20s,
I didn't get hung over at all.
So if you had asked me this question when I was 23, I would probably say, yeah, it does
because I'm no longer nervous. I'm, it's like, you know, socially, I'm much easier to like
meet people. 100%.
Serves me, serves me. And the next morning I wake up not feeling like s***. I'm good.
But you know, there comes an age where you pay.
Long term effects, yeah, you pay the price.
You pay the price and the price gets higher by the day.
And at some point it's too much to pay.
And that's when you have to start,
so like when people ask me for advice, it depends.
Like, hey, should I cut alcohol?
It depends, everything depends, everything is in the nuance.
If you're 21 years old and you go on a date with a girl and you want to not be so nervous
and you guys want to have a glass of wine, there's nothing wrong with it, in my opinion.
If you're asking me that question at 41 and you know you're going to miss your entire
week of working out and it's got all these side effects, well, maybe the answer is no.
Everybody has to decide for themselves.
I think everybody's case is different. 100%.
But what's really, really important
is to kind of learn about yourself.
Like, why do you do it?
Do you trust people around you to tell you
when you do it too much?
Because I see it all the time.
I know of people who, in my opinion, drink way too much.
And I see patterns where I think they can't control it.
And they're playing it off as like, it's funny,
or like, it's really not funny.
It's not some noxious one.
It is a, it is just a form of them being an alcoholic,
you know, so it's a difficult thing to joke about,
but I think it's good to have people around you
that you trust to tell you when you're doing it,
anything too much.
100%. I'm getting from your team, we gotta get you out of here. So I've got two final questions for you quickly. It's good to have people around you that you trust to tell you when you're doing anything too much.
100%.
I'm getting from your team, we've got to get you out of here.
So I've got two final questions for you quickly.
I could go for hours with you here.
Likewise.
But I want people to, number one, I want to go to your shows.
So I want to go to Vegas or if you're on tour, people got to go to your show.
We'll bring you.
Okay, cool.
But I want people to go see you live.
So where can they go to see you live?
So the easiest way to see my whole touring schedule
is zet.net.
Zet.net.
And it will always show my Vegas shows.
I would typically say I'm in Vegas every two weekends,
I believe, if we just realized.
So I'm there all the time.
So, you know, on all the bigger weekends, I will be there.
And then my Talos tour is a little bit of a different thing
that we just wrapped up, but we might announce a couple more shows.
Nice. Stay tuned.
You can follow me on socials, but I'm not sure you're going to see what I post.
So you might have to just check the website.
But yeah, I mean, I'm usually, I rarely take time off.
I'm kind of always on tour, I'm not I'm in the studio
So there's a good chance that I'll be in your city. Awesome. Very cool
So check it out zed.net at zed over over on social media everywhere
These are the two final questions for you before I ask them Anton
I want to acknowledge you for being an example for so many people in your industry
To continue to transform yourself. You you know, you've got the loop on,
you're talking about eating healthier.
I think that could be one of the biggest things
that holds artists back who continue to make it
at your level, where they let go of their health.
And so to see you take back control of your health
and say, how can I continue to improve
and not let the anxiety, the overwhelm, the stress
get to me and feel like I need to do more,
but how can I actually take a step back, reflect,
work on my health a little bit better?
I want to acknowledge you for that, man.
Thank you so much.
It's beautiful to see,
because I hate to see talented people
and good people burn themselves out.
Yeah.
So I appreciate and acknowledge you for that.
Thank you.
And I want to acknowledge you again
for being a light to so many people
and bringing healing energy to the world whether you're conscious of it
Or not whether you're planning to do it or not
You're doing it and hopefully you'll think a little bit more about that in the future when you step out on stage
You say how can I bring healing energy?
I think you're gonna notice something extremely powerful shift over time when you bring that intention to the audience and what you'll receive
In return just the intention. I'm here to heal. That's awesome. I'm curious over time when you bring that intention to the audience and what you'll receive in return
with just the intention that I'm here to heal. That's awesome. I'm curious to see whether you
take it or not. I will take it. I will report back. I see. It's just that I never think about it,
but it doesn't mean it's not there. 100%. 100%. Healing energy. Two final questions I got to be
quick with you. One is if you could imagine you get to live
as long as you want to live,
but it's the last day on earth for you.
It's far out in the future, but it's the last day.
You get to accomplish every dream that you have
from this moment until the last day you're here on earth.
But for whatever reason on the last day,
you have to take all of your work with you.
This conversation, gone.
All your music, gone. Anything you. This conversation, gone. All your music, gone.
Anything you've ever said, gone.
But you get to leave behind three lessons with the world that we would have to keep
from you.
What would be those three lessons that you would leave behind with the world?
Well, that's such a deep question.
Let me think about this.
Three lessons that I would leave.
Okay, so one core principle of my life is good people, good times.
That is lesson number one.
It doesn't matter what you do or go through as long as you go through it or do it with
people you love, you will always have a good time.
Probably the most important lesson I have to give at all. Second lesson is that I believe humans can achieve anything
as long as you devote enough time and dedication to it.
And I was having a conversation about perfect pitch,
something that we're born with or not born with.
And then I heard that in China, an exceedingly large number
of people have perfect pitch.
And I was like, well, why are they born with perfect pitch?
And I believe it has to do with the fact that their language is way more complex
and has intonations built into the meaning of words.
So it's not just the word, but at what pitch you say it.
So that I'm just throwing out a theory is that if you practice anything long enough,
you can get really good at it.
So people tell me, well, I'm 23.
I wish I started piano early.
Well, you start at 23 and you devote as much as you can to it.
And I really think you can become a writer, a performer, anything you want.
So the human capacity is unbelievable.
And I think my lesson is that at any age you want, you can start anything as long as you
really devote yourself to it, you can start anything as long as you really devote yourself to it,
you can become great at it.
Lesson number three.
Oh, what could be less number three?
Sleep.
Silly one, but sleep matters so much.
I've underestimated the effects of sleep and the need of sleep.
Everything I do in my 24 hours minus, suffers drastically when I don't get good
sleep.
So invest in a good pillow, invest in a good mattress, and in a good chair for working
throughout the day.
I think if you look at the amount of money you spend on coffee and other things throughout
your life, overall throughout your life, a good mattress and a good pillow is
a good investment.
So it really takes sleep seriously.
Awesome.
Three good lessons.
Final question, Anton, what's your definition of greatness?
Oh, my definition of greatness.
Can you give me an example?
My definition is to pursue your unique talents and gifts,
or excuse me, to maximize your unique talents and gifts
in pursuit of your dreams, and in that pursuit,
make the maximum impact on the people around you
in a positive way.
For me, that's greatness.
But I've been practicing this for 12 years.
You know what I'm saying?
That's an incredible answer.
I think anything I say will be in that same realm.
And it really follows my life philosophy
of surrounding yourself with people that you love,
that inspire you, that you can inspire back.
I wish I had a better definition that I can just say like that.
But just to explain it, I think it's
going to be almost a copy of yours.
But really following your dreams and following your guide
and not letting me or anyone else tell you what to do or how to do,
but really do it the way you want to do it
because you're one of a kind and nobody's you
and you have your own unique talents and energy
and completely follow the guide that that is.
Don't listen to me.
My man. I Appreciate you, man.
I appreciate you.
Thank you so much for listening to this episode.
If you enjoyed this and if you found value,
make sure to share this with one friend.
Just copy and paste the link and text a friend where you
feel would be truly inspired by this episode as well.
Also, make sure to click the follow button on Apple or Spotify,
wherever you're listening to this episode because we have episode as well. And also make sure to click the follow button on Apple or Spotify wherever
you're listening to this episode because we have a massive episode coming up next that
I do not want you to miss. So make sure to follow this and be on the lookout for the
next episode coming with some massive content and guests. Also, I have a brand new book
called Make Money Easy. If you are
looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in your life,
and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier,
you want to make it flow, you want to feel abundant, then make sure to go to makemoneyeasybook.com
right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is gonna help you
transform your relationship with money
this moment moving forward.
We have some big guests and content coming up.
Make sure you're following and stay tuned
to the next episode on the School of Greatness.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. School of Greatness. ad free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel exclusively
on Apple podcasts.
Share this with a friend on social media and leave us a review on Apple podcasts as well.
Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review.
I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support
and serve you moving forward.
And I want to remind you of no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy,
and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.