
Q&A: Empire Of The Sun's Luke Steele On Loss, Grief, Al Green And More
Australian electronic duo Empire of the Sun just wrapped a hugely successful before now heading overseas. They'll return to the US in October to play Austin City Limits festival. Among the US shows was a sold-out LA date as part of the immersive Cercle Odyssey run, which also included Moby, Jungle and more at dates in LA, Mexico City and Paris.
It was after the Cercle Odyssey show in LA that I connected over Zoom with Empire's Luke Steele to catch up on the tour and more. In a profoundly moving conversation, Steele talked about the power of music and the tour. Having lost his father a few months before the tour being with the fans each night took on a much deeper meaning for him.
Steve Baltin: We're going to have fun to start with because I just finished interviewing Christian McBride, the jazz great bassist. And later today, I'm interviewing Willie Nelson. And I am sure that I'm the only person in the history of the universe to interview you and Christian McBride and Willie Nelson in the same day. So, if you guys are playing a benefit together and it's the all-star finale, what song do you want to do with Willie and Christian?
Luke Steele: Oh, Willie's song, "Something You Get Through" from a record he did a few years ago. It just broke my heart cause I found that song right as the pandemic hit and all these people from the older generation, the '70s and '80s were losing the loved ones, and it was just so heartbreaking. These people had been married for 40 or 50 years and he just released this song, "Something You Get Through." I think I posted it on Empire where I just thought, 'Wow, it's not something you can explain really. It's just really something you get through.' So, that would have to be the song. Willie would have to take the lead on that one.
Baltin: I like the way you put it though; it's just something that speaks to you. I was listening to your stuff again last night and I've always loved the song 'Alive.' Having nearly died twice, it takes on different meaning. For you, are there stories you've heard that really resonate with you, or they have similar effects for other people that's 'Something You Get Through' had for you.
Steele: Exactly. I came back to that song because my father passed away a couple months ago. We had the funeral and then I'm on this world tour, but my mom was like, 'Your dad was a musician his whole life and even by the end in his eighties, that's two and three shows a week.' And mom said, 'You have to get on the road. That's what he would have wanted.' So, I was sitting in the back of the tour bus. And then that song for me, when I heard in the pandemic, it came back up. It's amazing, music it's like a beautiful friend, like a close friend that stays with you.'
Baltin: For you, what are those songs from childhood because I know exactly what you mean. There are songs like "Fire and Rain" by James Taylor is one for me. The songs that have been with you for like 30 years and you don't know why, you don't know what it is about. It hits you when you're a kid and that's your song.
Steele: Incredible, yeah. I always loved John Lennon, I remember going through my dad's vinyl collection probably when I was 10 or 12 or something and just not knowing anything about any of the artists, which is kind of a beautiful thing and then always coming back to Lennon, going, "Man, the melodies with this guy." Yeah, Lennon, Carole King, James Taylor, John Prine, all those old great artists.
Baltin: I lost my dad two years ago. So, I'm very sorry about your dad. I know it's something that hits you each day and it resonates in a different way. I've talked about this with a lot of artists and grief is not a linear thing at all. It just comes about in very weird ways. So, for you have there been moments when you're on stage and there's just this catharsis from tens of thousands of people out there singing back to you?
Steele: I know exactly what you mean. I hear about your dad as well, man. Yeah, there are certain moments and triggers. We do the song 'Ask That God' in the show, on the stage set there's like this big rock and I go and I stand on this rock and it hits the chorus on the visual, this giant hand comes across the stage and always that moment it takes me to the very time when he went to be with the Lord. It's quite incredible, it always takes me to that exact same place of crossing the Rubicon to the next side.
Baltin: Does the song change for you or has the meaning changed?
Steele: Yeah, that's what is so beautiful, the lyrics just take on a whole different meaning. Yeah, I think for that one because it just felt so heavenly. The songs called 'Ask That God,' don't ask the world, ask the father. I think it'smore powerful now for me. I've been reading this C .S. Lewis book about grief that my agent actually gave me. They said, love is the price of grief, and you get all these different quotes, and stories about it andwhat's been quite amazing is I always wondered about people delivering food to your house. But I realized what that is now like when someone really close to you passes away your food and cooking and everything is such a bizarre thing. With us it was hundreds of dishes and pasta and all this stuff and that's I now see like that in the movies. So, I understand that it's quite an amazing experience to understand that someone bringing a lasagna or something means so much. It's so warming to your heart.
Baltin: What was the comfort food during all of this process?
Steele: There's onions and bread and all that kind of stuff. It's incredible to see the array of people my father touched, from young musicians to he worked with some disabled people. He worked with the Vietnam veterans. So it was like that film, Big Fish. It's got the circus and this guy, and then at the funeral, they're all there and I just keep thinking about that film because it was like blues players in Houston, Texas to a choir that was put together and people from the street and stuff. He worked with this choir and then he worked with the veterans and all that. So, it was quite amazing to see the different fabrics of life and all the different people's hearts he touched.
Baltin: That's got to be so interesting though, to see all the different lives he touched, and then you get to be out there and see all the different people who come to see you and all the different lives you touch.
Steele: Especially now on this tour there's a real urge for people to escape the world and to live in that place. I ended up saying that quite a lot on the stage; this is our place, this is where you cry, where you laugh, you dance, you give it up to the Lord. This is the time of letting go. The shows took on a whole elevated meaning for that, cause it's not just music. It's never just music. It's always so many breakthroughs and spiritual overcoming's and things.
Baltin: Who first did that for you when you were a kid? I remember seeing the Nick Cave shows after he dealt with loss. And those were transcendent.
Steele: I can't think of the one show cause I'm just funny like that. But yeah, the show we're doing, it's taken on a whole other meaning. But everything from The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion to obviously seeing the boss. I remember flying back in from LA actually and had super jet lag and someone was like, "We got three tickets to the boss." And it was one of those, I drank a few wines and ended up just making it as the boss comes on, that was just incredible. BB King, I love BB King. I love that because it was just such classic Southern American showmanship, like this big basket of obviously fake gold watches, but he had necklaces, and he walked down the front and handed them out and it was just so rich, reverent kind of blues. That was like Al Green first time. I wasn't married at the time, but it was in LA doing a remix of Yoko Ono actually. I'm starting over and actually got the original vocals from Double Fantasy and we finished the session and then Al Green was at the Hollywood Bowl and I'd never been to the Bowl and managed to get some tickets and at the time I was carrying a little speaker on my hip, you know, one of those little amps with I was wearing the iPods around 20 years ago. And all the church groups from the South have come up, so there'd be groups of 10 or 15 all walking in, singing 'Let's Stay Together.' But that was another show with real reverence. Like, he'd come down the front, take his jacket off, and he'd go, 'Oh, half the ladies want me to keep it on, half want me to take it off.' That was just such another memorable concert.
Baltin: Let's come onto the Cercle show then for a second. How much fun was it to be the one who helped start something off? It's like when you play a festival. I know you guys are doing ACL. It's a good challenge because it's not just your crowd. They're your fans there, but there's also people there to see Olivia Rodrigo.
Steele: Yeah, it was pretty incredible, being able to step into something so immersive and so new. We designed our show called the Miracle Room. I built our show based on you're walking through the desert, and you find this giant box and you walk into it and it's like the new church of the future. It's early days all around you on the roof and you fall into this transcendental prayer which goes through a whole cycle of songs and ends with the cleansing and healing and that's what our show was designed about.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kate Hudson Says She and Son Ryder ‘Leaned on' Brother Oliver ‘Without Me Even Having to Ask' amid Chris Robinson Divorce
Kate Hudson can always count on her brother Oliver Hudson. The two answered fan-submitted questions on the Monday, July 21, edition of the Sibling Revelry with Kate Hudson and Oliver Hudson podcast, when one listener asked them to describe a moment in their life during which they really "leaned on each other." While Kate, 46, said she feels it happens "often," the "biggest time was in divorce." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! "For me, with you in my divorce with having Ryder and being a working mom, I felt like you really stepped up without me asking," Kate told Oliver. She and her ex-husband, Chris Robinson, were married from 2000 to 2007 and share a son, Ryder Russell Robinson, 21. "It's just that you just stepped up as Uncle Ollie and was really there for us and Ryder. I think that period of time, you really stepped up for me without me even having to ask for it," Kate continued. "In reflection, you were so stable for Ryder and myself." The Running Point star noted that two "created fun times with the kids." In addition to Ryder, Kate is also a mom to Bingham "Bing" Hawn, 14, with ex-fiancé Matt Bellamy. She shares Rani Rose Hudson Fujikawa, 6, with her now-fiancé Danny Fujikawa. For Oliver, 48, there are "micro leanings" that happen between him and his sister all the time. 'There's little things that happen. It's not these big catastrophic events where it's like, 'Here, put your head on my shoulder.' It's the little things," he said. In a June 2024 conversation with PEOPLE, Kate opened up about her blended family, expressing that they are "very connected" and are "very close." 'Love can change form. It's interesting when you have that modern family; there's so much love for all the kids," she said. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. 'I think the thing that's so unique about my life is that in this very patchwork family, we all have figured it out … The kids feel like they have this huge family,' continued Hudson, adding that her exes' daughters and Rani 'are like sisters … There is something that has been able to be nurtured in our family that is personally what I think is, it's very rare." Read the original article on People


Fox News
29 minutes ago
- Fox News
Mike Baker: This trend is just another reason why TikTok should've been banned
Greg Gutfeld and the panel discuss Alec and Hilaria Baldwin's rendition of the TikTok adult baby trend on 'Gutfeld!'
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Today's Quordle Hints (and Answer) for Wednesday, July 23, 2025
If you're looking for the Quordle answer for Wednesday, July 23, 2025, read on—I'll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Beware, there are spoilers below for July 23, Quordle #1276! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today's Quordle game. (If you play Wordle, Connections, and Strands, check out our hints for those games, too.) How to play Quordle Quordle lives on the Merriam-Webster website. A new puzzle goes live every day. If you've never played, it's a twist on The New York Times' daily Wordle game, in which you have a limited number of attempts to guess a five-letter mystery word. In Quordle, though, you're simultaneously solving four Wordle-style puzzles, and each of your guesses gets applied to the four puzzles simultaneously. Due to the increased difficulty, Quordle grants you nine guesses (12 if you play on 'Chill' mode, or eight if you play on 'Extreme'), rather than Wordle's six. To start, guess a five-letter word. The letters of the word in each of the four quadrants will turn green if they're correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn't in that secret word at all. Ready for the hints? Let's go! Can you give me a hint for today's Quordle? Upper left: Protective layer Upper right: Currency Lower left: Benefit of an exit row seat Lower right: Bigger side-to-side Does today's Quordle have any double or repeated letters? Upper left: Yes, a repeated vowel. Upper right: No. Lower left: Yes, a double vowel. Lower right: No. What letters do today's Quordle words start with? Upper left: O Upper right: P Lower left: R Lower right: W What letters do today's Quordle words end with? Upper left: E Upper right: E Lower left: Y Lower right: R What is the solution to today's Quordle? Upper left: OZONE Upper right: PENCE Lower left: ROOMY Lower right: WIDER How I solved today's Quordle I'll start with SLATE and MOUND, as always. That gets me a few hits. I'll try CRONE for the upper left. Not quite, but the O is in the right spot and I got yellows in the other words. Maybe PHONE? Nope, time to move on. I think PENCE makes the most sense for the upper right. There we go. ROOMY might fit the bottom left. Yep. Ah, ROOMY just let me know that there are actually two Os in the upper left, which means it has to be OZONE. I'll try WIDER for the bottom right. Got it! The best starter words for Quordle What should you play for that first guess? We can look to Wordle for some general guidelines. The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that's still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn't a single 'best' starting word, but The New York Times's Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these: CRANE TRACE SLANT CRATE CARTE Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you'll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these: SALET REAST TRACE CRATE SLATE Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it's better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out. Solve the daily Crossword