Why Health In The EDM Scene Goes Beyond Mental Health - EDM news article
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Why Health In The EDM Scene Goes Beyond Mental Health

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Summary of the article

Why Health In The EDM Scene Goes Beyond Mental Health as touring, nightlife, and constant schedules put physical wellbeing into focus As Mental Health Awareness Month brings more attention to how people protect their wellbeing, the EDM scene also needs space for a closely connected issue: physical health. The industry often celebrates long runs of shows, packed festival weekends, late-night sets, international flights, and artists who keep going even when their bodies are already under pressure.

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Why Health In The EDM Scene Goes Beyond Mental Health as touring, nightlife, and constant schedules put physical wellbeing into focus As Mental Health Awareness...

Why Health In The EDM Scene Goes Beyond Mental Health as touring, nightlife, and constant schedules put physical wellbeing into focus As Mental Health Awareness Month brings more attention to how people protect their wellbeing, the EDM scene also needs space for a closely connected issue: physical health. The industry often celebrates long runs of shows, packed festival weekends, late-night sets, international flights, and artists who keep going even when their bodies are already under pressure. But recent and past cases involving John Summit, Alesso, Hardwell, Headhunterz, Timmy Trumpet, and Avicii show why the conversation cannot stop at mental health alone. In dance music, looking after the body means taking illness, injury, hearing problems, exhaustion, recovery, and rest seriously, especially in a scene where the next show, flight, or festival weekend can make it harder to slow down. That does not only apply to artists, either. Crew, teams, promoters, photographers, nightlife workers, and fans all exist around the same late hours and high-pressure schedule, making physical wellbeing part of the wider health conversation in electronic music. The Physical Demands Behind Every Flight, Set Time, And Festival Weekend Avicii remains one of the most important examples of why physical health has to be part of any wider wellbeing discussion in the EDM scene. Before conversations around artist burnout became more public, his career had already shown how intense touring could affect the body in serious ways. After years of heavy touring, health problems, hospitalizations, and cancelled shows, Avicii retired from live performance in 2016 while continuing to make music. His decision made one thing clear: stepping away from touring did not mean stepping away from music. It meant that the physical demands around live performance had become impossible to ignore. That same issue has continued to appear across different parts of dance music. Alesso opened up in 2025 about severe tinnitus after several cancelled shows, bringing hearing health into the conversation in a very specific way. For a DJ, hearing is not separate from the job. It affects studio work, live monitoring, travel recovery, and the ability to perform over time. Hardwell also stepped away from touring in 2018 after years of heavy schedules, interviews, deadlines, release dates, and pressure around one of the biggest careers in electronic music. Headhunterz later announced that he would stop performing from 2024, with his decision tied to the toll of touring and the need for more balance. These cases are not identical, but they show how often the same problem appears: the schedule can keep moving even when the body needs time to recover. That is why recent health-related cancellations from John Summit in Peru and Chile fit into a wider discussion, even without treating his situation as the same as anyone else’s. In the EDM scene, physical health is affected by more than one difficult weekend. It is long flights, short sleep, loud spaces, late set times, irregular meals, dehydration, illness, injury, hearing strain, and the pressure to be ready for the next show because tickets have been sold and the next city is waiting. The same reality can affect crew, tour managers, photographers, promoters, nightlife staff, and fans who spend long hours around the same environment. During Mental Health Awareness Month, the point is not to take attention away from mental health. It is to recognize that looking after the body is also part of staying well in a scene built around late nights, travel, and constant movement. *]:pointer-events-auto [content-visibility:auto] supports-[content-visibility:auto]:[contain-intrinsic-size:auto_100lvh] R6Vx5W_threadScrollVars scroll-mb-[calc(var(--scroll-root-safe-area-inset-bottom,0px)+var(--thread-response-height))] scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id="request-69fc3939-6570-8399-9095-aa6664a2eee1-13" data-testid="conversation-turn-86" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn="assistant"> Why Physical Health Matters For Attendees, Crew, And Everyone In The Rave Scene Physical health in the rave scene is not only an artist issue, because the same environment that affects DJs also affects the people standing, working, shooting, managing, serving, securing, and moving through the event. For attendees, a club night or festival weekend can mean hours on their feet, loud sound, packed crowds, heat, limited sleep, long travel home, and another commitment the next morning. For crew, photographers, security, bar teams, stagehands, artist teams, and promoters, those same conditions can last much longer because the work starts before doors open and continues after the crowd leaves. A night out may feel temporary from the dancefloor, but repeated weekends in loud, late, crowded spaces can add up through hearing strain, fatigue, dehydration, poor recovery, muscle soreness, and disrupted sleep.

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