Marlena Shaw – Woman of the Ghetto (Flume’s Jackin House Mix).I can’t really blame him, ‘Afterlife’ comes from one of Arcade Fire‘s most divisive records and is personally not a highlight from that album, so perhaps there wasn’t all that much to work with? But, context or no context, it still just doesn’t quite get there. Released in 2014, it came after the iconic remix of Lorde‘s ‘Tennis Court’, so expectations where high but even with a 10-minute running time, we are left just wanting more. But, given just how great some of his remixes really are, this one gets the wooden spoon. There’s nothing really wrong with this remix as such, and I do know of some people who will defend this remix to the death. So, this then got us thinking within Purple Sneakers HQ: what IS Flume‘s best remix? There are so many excellent ones, but what is the best of the best? Is it one of his most famous, or is it an early gem that many fans might not even know exists? Given we’ve been covering the man since 2012 and even booked him for a few of his very first shows, we decided to do the hard yards and rank his remixes to find out the answer once and for all… #16: Arcade Fire – Afterlife The same man who delivered the remixes of ‘Tennis Court’, ‘Hyperparadise’, ‘You & Me’ and more. This isn’t to say there was anything necessarily wrong with it, but this is Flume we’re talking about. While it had all the markings of a classic Flume release, and we can absolutely expect to cranking it at a socially-distant/self-isolated rave soon, it left us feeling a little underwhelmed as well. Last week, FLUME released his long-teased remix of Eiffel 65‘s ‘Blue’. From Eiffel 65 to Tennis Court: Every Flume remix, ranked