Zedd
Anton Zaslavski (born September 2, 1989), known professionally as Zedd, is a Russian-born German record producer, DJ, and songwriter specializing in electronic dance music.[1] Raised in Kaiserslautern, Germany, by parents who were classically trained musicians, Zaslavski began playing piano at age four and later performed as a drummer in the rock band Dioramic before transitioning to electronic production.[2] His stage name derives from "Zed," the English pronunciation of the letter Z in German.[3] Zedd rose to international prominence with his 2012 single "Spectrum" and debut studio album Clarity (2013), the title track of which featuring Foxes earned him a Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording in 2014. Subsequent releases include the album True Colors (2015), featuring collaborations with artists such as Selena Gomez and Liam Payne, and multi-platinum hits like "Stay" with Alessia Cara.[4] He has produced tracks for Lady Gaga's Artpop (2013) and worked with Ariana Grande, contributing to his reputation as a versatile producer in pop and EDM genres.[5] In addition to five Grammy nominations overall, Zedd's achievements encompass Billboard Music Awards and widespread chart success, with tracks topping dance/electronic charts and crossing into the Billboard Hot 100.[5] His third studio album, Telos, released in 2024, reflects continued evolution in his sound amid global tours and festival headlining appearances.[6] Known for blending melodic elements with high-energy drops, Zedd has influenced modern EDM production techniques.[7]Early life
Family background and childhood
Anton Zaslavski, professionally known as Zedd, was born on September 2, 1989, in Saratov, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union, to Russian Jewish parents Igor and Marina Zaslavski.[8][1] Both parents were professional classical musicians—his father a cellist and his mother a violinist—exposing Zaslavski to instrumental performance from an early age in a culturally insular Soviet environment.[9][10] The Zaslavski family relocated to Germany when Zaslavski was three years old, settling in the small village of Dansenberg near Kaiserslautern in southwestern Germany amid the economic turbulence following the Soviet Union's dissolution.[11][12] This move shifted the family from a non-Western upbringing to integration into German society, where Zaslavski attended local schools while preserving Russian language and traditions at home.[10][1] In Kaiserslautern, a region with a significant U.S. military presence due to nearby Ramstein Air Base, Zaslavski's childhood emphasized musical fundamentals through parental guidance rather than formal lessons initially, cultivating discipline in a bilingual household that blended Eastern European heritage with Western European stability.[9][12] The family's professional ethos instilled self-reliance, as Zaslavski navigated cultural adaptation without reliance on extended networks in a rural setting of approximately 3,500 residents.[12][10]Musical education and initial influences
Born to musician parents in Kaiserslautern, Germany, Anton Zaslavski began formal classical piano training at age four under the guidance of his mother, a piano teacher.[13] This early immersion in classical composition and technique, within a household emphasizing musical proficiency, laid the groundwork for his structural approach to melody and harmony.[14] By age six, he was recording initial songs, demonstrating precocious engagement with basic production elements.[15] In adolescence, Zaslavski expanded beyond piano, taking up drums at age 12 and joining a post-hardcore band, which introduced rock-oriented rhythms and live performance dynamics.[15] Self-taught in electronic production through hands-on experimentation—stemming from recording experiences in his band—he adopted digital audio workstations without formal mentorship, prioritizing intuitive sound design over institutional methods.[16] Key influences included electronic acts like Daft Punk, whose album Discovery he cited as his first purchase, sparking interest in synthesized textures and melodic hooks.[17] This blend of classical precision and self-directed exploration in rock and electronic realms fostered Zaslavski's hybrid style, evident in early demos crafted during his late teens, though professional outputs emerged later.[9]Career
2009–2011: Formative productions and underground recognition
In 2009, Anton Zaslavski, performing under the alias Zedd, transitioned to electronic music production, drawing from his classical piano background and emerging influences in house and electro genres.[2] His early efforts focused on crafting progressive builds and drops characteristic of electro-house, shared initially through online communities and digital marketplaces.[9] A pivotal early release was Zedd's remix of Skrillex's "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites," issued on mau5trap recordings in 2010, which peaked at number 4 on Beatport's charts and number 2 on iTunes electronic rankings, signaling niche appeal among DJs and producers.[18] This remix demonstrated Zedd's technical skill in layering aggressive synths and rhythmic tension, earning organic traction via peer-to-peer sharing and forum discussions rather than promotional campaigns. Building on this, Zedd released his debut single "Shave It" on October 4, 2011, via Skrillex's OWSLA label, blending pulsating basslines with melodic progressions that resonated in underground sets.[19] These formative outputs established Zedd's reputation in electronic subcultures, with consistent Beatport charting reflecting producer endorsements and download momentum independent of mainstream exposure.[20] By late 2011, his tracks featured in select underground festival lineups and garnered buzz on platforms like SoundCloud, underscoring a grassroots ascent driven by production quality over industry connections.[9]2012–2014: Clarity breakthrough and mainstream ascent
Zedd released his debut studio album Clarity on October 5, 2012, via Interscope Records, marking a pivot toward structured electro-house tracks emphasizing vocal hooks and melodic drops.[21] The album debuted at number 38 on the Billboard 200 chart, driven by singles like "Spectrum" featuring Matthew Koma and the title track "Clarity" with British vocalist Foxes, which peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot 100.[22] "Clarity" earned 3× Platinum certification in the United States by the RIAA, reflecting over 3 million units sold or streamed, and accumulated more than 734 million Spotify streams as of recent data.[23] [24] In 2013, Zedd expanded Clarity with a deluxe edition including "Stay the Night" featuring Hayley Williams of Paramore, released as a single on September 23, which topped the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart and reached number 18 on the Hot 100, bolstering radio airplay and cross-genre appeal.[25] The track's success, certified 2× Platinum, underscored Zedd's strategy of partnering with established pop vocalists to fuse EDM drops with accessible lyrics, a tactic that propelled album sales but drew observations of formulaic dependence on featured artists for mainstream traction. "Clarity" itself won the Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording at the 56th Annual Grammy Awards in 2014, validating its production quality amid rising EDM-pop hybrids.[23] [26] Supporting tours, including select dates on Deadmau5's Meowingtons Hax Tour extending into early 2012, helped cultivate a dedicated live audience through high-energy sets showcasing Clarity's anthemic builds, with events like the Moment of Clarity tour in 2013 drawing thousands to venues such as Chicago's Aragon Ballroom. This period's empirical gains—chart peaks, certifications, and Grammy recognition—causally advanced Zedd's transition from underground remixes to arena-level viability, as vocal-driven tracks like those on Clarity empirically correlated with EDM's broader pop chart infiltration by providing radio-friendly structures over pure instrumental drops.[27]2015–2016: True Colors and pop crossovers
Zedd's debut full-length studio album, True Colors, was released on May 15, 2015, via Interscope Records, marking a shift toward broader pop-oriented electronic productions with featured vocalists including Selena Gomez, Jon Bellion, and Logic.[28] The lead single, "I Want You to Know" featuring Gomez, peaked at No. 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart for four weeks.[29][30] Follow-up "Beautiful Now" with Bellion reached No. 64 on the Hot 100 but achieved stronger radio airplay, peaking at No. 15 on pop stations with over 5,500 spins in one tracking week.[29][31] True Colors debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, selling approximately 40,000 equivalent units in its first week, and secured No. 1 on the Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart.[32] The album ultimately sold 500,000 copies in the United States, ranking 127th among 2015 releases.[33] Relative to Zedd's prior Clarity (2012), which produced a No. 8 Hot 100 single in its title track and sustained higher mainstream traction, True Colors showed diminished streaming momentum and chart longevity for its singles, coinciding with broader EDM oversaturation as producers increasingly relied on similar presets and samples, diluting genre innovation.[34][35] In support, Zedd launched the True Colors Tour in mid-2015, expanding to arena-scale productions across North America, Europe, and Asia through 2016, with sets incorporating larger visual and lighting elements to enhance live electronic performances.[36] These shows emphasized deeper bass drops and hybrid pop-EDM structures, though commercial metrics reflected a cooling in big-room electronic demand as hip-hop began eclipsing EDM on charts.2017–2023: Independent singles, collaborations, and creative evolution
Following the release of his second studio album True Colors in 2015, Zedd adopted a strategy of issuing standalone singles and collaborations rather than pursuing immediate full-length projects, aligning with the rise of streaming platforms and shorter-form content consumption. His 2017 single "Stay," featuring Alessia Cara and released on February 23, debuted at number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100 and ultimately peaked at number 7 after 31 weeks on the chart.[37] This track, produced under Interscope Records, marked an early example of his pivot toward vocal-driven electro-pop hybrids amid a broader cooling in mainstream EDM hype post-2016.[38] In 2018, Zedd continued this approach with high-profile partnerships, including "The Middle" alongside Maren Morris and Grey, released on January 23, which achieved a peak of number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Pop Songs airplay chart.[39] Additional releases that year, such as the remix of Shawn Mendes' "Lost in Japan" (peaking at number 48) and "Happy Now" with Elley Duhé (number 90), demonstrated sustained chart presence but reflected diminished peak commercial dominance compared to prior eras, with metrics showing reliance on radio and digital sales in a fragmented market. "Get Low," a collaboration with Japanese artist LiSA released in September, further exemplified cross-cultural experimentation, charting at number 91.[39] The period saw Zedd venturing into niche areas, including a remix of "Die For You" for Riot Games' Valorant in 2021, integrating his production into esports soundscapes and signaling adaptation to gaming media's growing influence on electronic music distribution.[40] Releases grew sparser post-2018, with tracks like "Inside Out" featuring Remi Wolf in 2021 underscoring a focus on selective, artistically driven output over volume, as Zedd later attributed this phase to avoiding self-imposed album deadlines in favor of organic creativity amid industry shifts toward viral, platform-specific virality.[41] This evolution prioritized personal control, rejecting formulaic pressures, and laid groundwork for an extended creative pause by 2023, during which streaming data indicated maintained fan engagement without blockbuster peaks.[42]2024–present: Telos release, anime contributions, and festival dominance
In August 2024, Zedd released his third studio album, Telos, on August 30, following significant delays from its initial projections and marking his first full-length project since True Colors in 2015.[43] [44] The 10-track album, self-produced by Zedd, emphasizes personal artistic expression over market-driven formulas, as he prioritized tracks reflecting his evolving creative process amid industry shifts.[44] Notable singles include "Lucky" featuring Remi Wolf, released August 9 with an accompanying music video on November 1, which highlights introspective themes of longing and chance.[45] [46] Zedd expanded into anime soundtracks with contributions to Dragon Ball DAIMA, composing the opening theme "Jaka Jaan" featuring C&K, announced on September 4, 2024, and the ending theme "NAKAMA" featuring AI.[47] [48] These tracks integrate Zedd's electronic production with the series' high-energy narrative, drawing from his long-standing admiration for the franchise and marking a departure into licensed media composition.[49] Zedd maintained festival prominence with headline sets at Coachella on April 13 and 20, 2025, where he collaborated onstage with guests including John Mayer, Maren Morris, and Bea Miller, delivering medleys of classics like "Clarity" alongside Telos material.[50] [51] He closed Ultra Music Festival Miami's mainstage on March 30, 2025, with a high-production set incorporating tributes to influences like Daft Punk.[52] The TELOS Asia Tour '25, announced November 17, 2024, launched in February 2025 with dates in Japan featuring supports like Atarashii Gakko! and Fruits Zipper.[53] [54] Concurrently, his Las Vegas residency at Omnia Nightclub and Tao Beach continued into 2025, building on the 2024 series that began February 10.[55] [56]Musical style and production techniques
Core elements of electro-house sound
Zedd's electro-house productions rely on supersaw synths generated via plugins such as Sylenth1, featuring multiple detuned sawtooth oscillators to produce thick, shimmering chord stabs and leads that form the backbone of melodic builds and drops.[57][58] This waveform layering creates a sense of width and harmonic density, enabling gradual tension accumulation through rising pitches and filter sweeps, which resolve into accessible drops emphasizing euphoria rather than the distorted, mid-range aggression typical of dubstep's wobble bass.[10] Sidechain compression is a cornerstone technique, applied to synth elements and sub-bass against the kick drum to induce rhythmic pumping, where the kick's transient triggers gain reduction for clarity and groove enhancement; this causal dynamic in the mix prevents low-end clutter and amplifies perceived impact, as observed in spectral analyses of Zedd's tracks.[10][59] His classical piano training manifests in MIDI-driven chord progressions that prioritize harmonic sophistication, such as the A♭ major framework (I-IV-V chords) with borrowed modal elements in "Clarity," verifiable via theory tabs and keyboard playback methods, lending emotional narrative to otherwise functional EDM structures.[60][10][9] While these core elements anchored early electro-house appeal through technical precision, Zedd's pivot toward pop-EDM hybrids diluted some big-room intensity per genre purist critiques, yet streaming data affirm retention efficacy, with "Clarity" surpassing 736 million Spotify plays by October 2025.[61][10]Evolution and genre influences
Zedd's early productions in the late 2000s and early 2010s were rooted in progressive house and electro house, employing supersaw lead synths, layered builds, and high-energy drops that aligned with the era's festival-oriented sound, as seen in tracks like "Shave It" released in 2011.[9] This foundation drew from technical presets common in software like Sylenth1, which facilitated the bright, anthemic textures prevalent in EDM at the time, enabling efficient sound design for underground recognition before mainstream breakthroughs.[62] By the mid-2010s, Zedd adapted his style toward pop-infused electro house, integrating vocal hooks and melodic progressions that broadened accessibility, evident in the structural shifts from pure instrumental drops to hybrid verse-chorus formats in releases around 2015.[9] This evolution reflected advancements in digital audio workstations like Cubase, which supported precise bus processing and clipping for polished, radio-friendly mastering without over-limiting dynamics.[10] In his 2024 album Telos, Zedd pursued experimental fusions, blending electro house cores with orchestral swells, rock guitars, and multi-genre elements like trap breakdowns and ambient interludes, marking a departure from commercial pop constraints toward self-directed complexity.[44] [63] Track comparisons, such as the driving synth stabs of 2012's "Clarity" versus Telos's layered string ensembles in "Orchestral" versions, demonstrate substantive adaptation to expanded plugin libraries and hybrid production chains rather than mere trend alignment.[64] Recent works incorporate anime-inspired motifs, as in the 2024 Dragon Ball DAIMA opening theme "Jaka Jaan," which fuses electronic pulses with J-rock energy and thematic swells tailored to narrative pacing, leveraging modular synth emulations for dynamic scoring.[49] This cross-genre borrowing extends Telos' arc of tool-based independence, prioritizing verifiable output diversity over reported personal narratives.[65]Personal life
Relationships and privacy
Zedd has maintained a notably private personal life, avoiding public disclosures about romantic involvements beyond a few high-profile instances. In early 2015, he dated singer Selena Gomez following their professional collaboration on the track "I Want You to Know," with the relationship lasting from approximately January to April before ending amicably.[66][12] Zedd later expressed discomfort with the intense media scrutiny that accompanied the romance, stating it overshadowed the music itself.[67] Subsequent rumored links, such as a brief encounter with model Olivia Culpo spotted dancing together at Coachella in April 2019, did not develop into confirmed relationships and received minimal confirmation from Zedd.[68] He has not publicly acknowledged any long-term partnerships since, and as of 2025, remains unmarried with no children.[69] Zedd's approach to privacy intensified post-fame, characterized by selective social media use that prioritizes professional updates over personal details, reflecting a deliberate strategy to shield relationships from tabloid exploitation and industry pressures.[12] This discretion aligns with his broader aversion to fame's invasive aspects, as evidenced by limited interviews on the topic and no verified accounts of ongoing romantic affiliations in recent years.[70]Immigration experiences and lifestyle
Anton Zaslavski relocated from Russia to Kaiserslautern, Germany, with his family in 1992 at age three, adapting to a new cultural and linguistic environment through early immersion in music education.[11] He later moved to the United States around 2012 to support tours and capitalize on emerging opportunities in electronic music production, entering on an O-1 visa reserved for individuals demonstrating extraordinary ability in sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics.[12][71] This merit-based pathway enabled renewable three-year stays tied to professional achievements, such as remixes and performances that elevated his profile without reliance on familial or systemic support structures.[72] In Los Angeles, where Zaslavski has maintained residences including a $19 million Encino property acquired in 2021, his routine emphasizes disciplined productivity and recovery from high-intensity touring schedules.[73] He incorporates regular leg-day workouts in a home gym, focusing on compound lifts like squats and deadlifts to build endurance for performances involving prolonged standing and energy exertion, complemented by a nutrition plan featuring high-protein meals from a stocked refrigerator.[74] To counter creative burnout, he dedicates time to PC gaming, including competitive play in titles like Valorant and strategy games such as Settlers of Catan with collaborators, viewing it as a mental reset that parallels the pattern recognition in music composition.[75][76] Zaslavski's financial independence reflects sustained output in live events and studio work, with earnings exceeding $19 million in 2024 from festival headlining and collaborations, contributing to an estimated net worth of $60 million as of 2025 derived primarily from royalties, tour revenues, and production credits rather than external subsidies.[77][78] This trajectory underscores adaptation through skill acquisition and market-driven success across transatlantic transitions.Political views and activism
Responses to immigration policies
In response to President Donald Trump's Executive Order 13769, signed on January 27, 2017, which temporarily suspended entry for immigrants and travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries and paused the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, Zedd organized the "Welcome!" benefit concert to support the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).[79] The event, held on April 3, 2017, at Staples Center in Los Angeles, featured performances by artists including Incubus, Imagine Dragons, Halsey, Skrillex, Macklemore, and Daya, with 100 percent of proceeds allocated to the ACLU for legal opposition to the order.[80][81] As a visa-reliant artist born in Germany to Russian parents who relocated to the United States to pursue his career, Zedd cited his immigrant background as a key motivator, stating, "As an immigrant myself I feel the need to stand up against the tyranny that threatens our basic human rights."[82][83] Zedd framed the initiative as a personal stance rather than partisan activism, noting in interviews that he is "not a political person" and that the travel ban had "not directly affected me in any way," though he perceived broader risks to immigrants like himself amid increased scrutiny of visa processes.[79][84] The concert assembled in approximately 72 hours through direct outreach to collaborators, bypassing management, and aligned with a surge in ACLU donations following the order, which the organization used to challenge its implementation in court.[84][81] Critics of Zedd's actions, particularly among those supportive of stricter immigration enforcement, highlighted potential hypocrisy in a visa-dependent entertainer opposing policies that could indirectly complicate his own professional mobility in the U.S., viewing it as self-preservation masked as altruism.[83] Others in the entertainment industry dismissed such critiques as overlooking the event's focus on civil liberties, interpreting Zedd's involvement as consistent with patterns of high-profile signaling against perceived overreach, though without measurable long-term impact on immigration policy outcomes.[85] Zedd maintained the effort aimed at unity rather than division, receiving recognition from Los Angeles officials for contributing to ACLU defenses that contributed to the order's repeated judicial blocks.[81]Free speech stances and international repercussions
In October 2019, Zedd (Anton Zaslavski) faced permanent exclusion from performing in China after liking a tweet from the official South Park account, which celebrated the show's ban in the country following an episode satirizing Chinese censorship and the Communist Party's influence on Hollywood.[86][87] Zedd publicly confirmed the repercussions on October 10, 2019, stating he had been notified of the ban by Chinese authorities, resulting in the cancellation of scheduled appearances and forfeiture of a significant market for electronic dance music events.[88] Despite the financial and professional losses—China represented a growing venue for international DJs—the incident drew praise from free speech advocates across ideological lines, including commentators who highlighted it as a stand against state-imposed content controls rather than partisan posturing.[89] This event underscored Zedd's opposition to authoritarian censorship, consistent with classical liberal emphases on unrestricted expression, even as domestic political remarks suggested left-leaning preferences. In a October 23, 2020, Billboard interview, he casually remarked that "any living organism would be more fit for the job than Trump," framing it as a hyperbolic aside amid discussions of music and collaborations rather than a sustained activist position.[76] Such comments invited criticism from conservative outlets and figures wary of celebrity electoral interference, viewing them as emblematic of entertainment industry echo chambers, yet they paled against his tangible risks in challenging Beijing's controls.[90] Media narratives occasionally cast Zedd's views as uniformly progressive, but the China fallout reveals a broader aversion to suppression mechanisms, irrespective of regime ideology, prioritizing empirical resistance to speech curbs over ideological alignment. This distinction avoids conflating anti-Trump quips—often off-the-cuff in artist interviews—with principled commitments, as evidenced by the absence of similar repercussions from U.S. domestic advocacy and the acclaim from non-left sources for defying China's digital firewall.[91]Controversies
Professional feuds and plagiarism accusations
In June 2019, singer-songwriter Matthew Koma publicly accused Zedd of toxic and abusive behavior during their collaborations, claiming Zedd failed to properly credit or compensate him for contributions to tracks including "Spectrum" from Zedd's 2012 album Clarity.[92][93] Koma alleged in an Instagram post and subsequent tweets that Zedd exhibited unethical business practices, such as underpaying for songwriting and production work post-Clarity, and described their professional relationship as one-sided, with Zedd taking undue credit for lyrics and melodies while minimizing Koma's role.[94][95] Zedd responded on Twitter, denying the claims by asserting that all agreements were contractually documented and compensated according to industry standards, labeling Koma's statements as self-serving and timed for personal gain amid Koma's own career promotions.[92][96] The dispute highlighted tensions over melody ownership and collaboration credits, with Koma implying Zedd repurposed ideas without fair attribution after their successful Clarity-era work, though no legal action ensued and specific evidence of stolen melodies was not publicly detailed beyond anecdotal claims.[93] Zedd maintained that their fallout stemmed from Koma's unreliability and demands exceeding original deals, leading to a cessation of joint projects; empirical outcomes include no further collaborations between the two since around 2015, despite earlier hits co-produced together.[92][96] In March 2016, producer Diplo accused Zedd of plagiarizing Australian artist Flume's production style in the track "Candyman," a remix for an M&M's advertisement featuring Aloe Blacc, specifically criticizing the song's drop as a "fake Flume drop" executed for commercial gain.[97][98] Zedd dismissed the allegation on Twitter, calling Diplo a "jealous little bitch" and urging him to focus on his own work rather than unsubstantiated critiques, with independent audio analyses later noting superficial waveform similarities in risers and synth layering but no direct melodic theft.[97][99] The exchange escalated briefly via social media but resolved without formal complaints, resulting in no verified infringement and limited long-term impact on Zedd's output, though it fueled perceptions among some critics of Zedd borrowing genre tropes without innovation.[100][101] Additional plagiarism claims against Zedd include a 2018 accusation from producer Absrdst alleging that Zedd's single "Stay" (with Alessia Cara) copied elements from Absrdst's earlier track, supported by side-by-side audio comparisons showing structural parallels in builds and drops, though Zedd's team did not publicly respond and no lawsuit followed.[102] These incidents collectively reflect a pattern of disputed influences in Zedd's electro-house productions, with defenders citing genre conventions and Zedd's contractual diligence as rebuttals, contrasted by detractors pointing to reduced high-profile collaborations post-2019 as evidence of reputational strain.[93][92] None have led to resolved legal findings of wrongdoing.Venue decisions and cancellations
In January 2019, Zedd canceled his scheduled February 1 performance at the Opera nightclub in Atlanta, days after a sexual assault at the venue was captured and livestreamed on Facebook Live. The incident occurred on the crowded dance floor on January 19, prompting multiple viewer tips to the Atlanta Police Department, which initiated an investigation into the apparent non-consensual act involving a woman and a male assailant.[103] [104] [105] Zedd announced the cancellation via Twitter, stating, "Hey guys. I'm sorry I will no longer be performing at Opera Atlanta on February 1st. I'm sorry for any inconvenience this may cause," without explicitly referencing the assault or safety issues. The timing, however, directly followed the viral exposure of the scandal, positioning the move as a calculated avoidance of reputational and operational risks tied to a venue under police scrutiny.[104] [106] This decision exemplified risk mitigation in EDM bookings, where empirical data highlight heightened vulnerabilities: a 2020 study found that 11.5% of electronic dance music event attendees reported non-consensual sexual contact in a single night, underscoring causal factors like dense crowds, alcohol, and dim lighting that amplify assault probabilities in nightclub settings. No lawsuits arose from the cancellation, and coverage in music outlets framed it as a prudent step amid the venue's fallout, though it incurred revenue losses from the high-profile Super Bowl-weekend slot.[107][103]Censorship incidents
In October 2019, Zedd (Anton Zaslavski) announced that he had been permanently banned from entering or performing in China after liking a tweet from the official South Park Twitter account.[87][86] The tweet, posted amid backlash against the show's episode satirizing Chinese censorship and government influence, read: "Seriously China, let Stan and Kyle come to your country, I'd much rather get the NBA out of China and the making of South Park back in China."[89][91] This action followed South Park's own effective ban in China, highlighting the government's sensitivity to perceived criticism of its policies.[108] The ban prompted Chinese authorities to instruct promoters to cancel Zedd's scheduled shows in the country, directly curtailing his ability to perform in one of Asia's largest electronic dance music markets.[109][110] Zedd confirmed the government's involvement, noting that event organizers faced pressure to terminate contracts, resulting in immediate disruptions to his touring plans.[109] While specific financial figures for foregone earnings were not publicly disclosed, the incident exemplified the geopolitical risks for international artists reliant on China's growing live music sector, where state censorship can override commercial agreements.[111] Zedd responded publicly with a tweet expressing surprise and amusement, stating, "I just Got Permanently Banned from China Because I Liked a South Park Tweet 😂😂😂," framing the event lightly rather than issuing a formal protest.[89][88] This understated approach contrasted with broader commentary decrying China's expansive enforcement of online speech controls, which extend to foreign social media interactions and have ensnared other entertainers for similar minor engagements.[87] Critics of the regime's tactics, including reports from outlets like Variety and CNBC, portrayed the ban as disproportionate overreach, underscoring tensions between artistic freedom and authoritarian content moderation.[86][87] Conversely, some industry observers advised caution in navigating such markets, viewing the like as a foreseeable trigger in a context of known digital surveillance and blacklisting practices.[111] The episode reinforced the causal reality that even passive online endorsements can precipitate market exclusion, prompting artists to weigh expressive actions against access to high-revenue territories.Discography
Studio albums
Zedd's debut studio album, Clarity, was released digitally on September 24, 2012, and physically on October 2, 2012, via Interscope Records, comprising 12 tracks. It debuted at number 38 on the US Billboard 200 chart and has sold over 1 million copies worldwide.[22][112] His follow-up, True Colors, arrived on May 19, 2015, also through Interscope, with 11 tracks. The album earned gold certifications in the United States and Canada, reflecting sales of approximately 500,000 units in the US.[113][33] Nearly a decade later, Zedd issued his third studio album, Telos, on August 30, 2024, featuring 10 tracks that incorporate orchestral and classical influences alongside electronic production. This self-directed project emphasizes genre experimentation and personal artistic purpose, as indicated by the album's title, a Greek term for "end" or "purpose." Zedd attributed the prolonged gaps between releases to rigorous self-imposed standards for production quality, noting doubts about achieving the desired level of refinement earlier in his career.[114][63][65]| Album | Release Date | Label | Track Count | Key Certifications/Sales |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarity | September 24, 2012 | Interscope | 12 | Over 1 million copies sold worldwide |
| True Colors | May 19, 2015 | Interscope | 11 | Gold (US, Canada); ~500,000 US sales |
| Telos | August 30, 2024 | Independent | 10 | N/A (recent release) |
Singles and collaborations
Zedd's non-album singles and collaborations have spanned electro house, pop, and dance genres, often featuring prominent vocalists and achieving multi-platinum status through sales and streaming. Early efforts included "Stay the Night" featuring Hayley Williams of Paramore, released September 23, 2013, which peaked at number 2 on the UK Singles Chart after a delayed release prompted fan demand.[115][116] Later, "I Want You to Know" featuring Selena Gomez, released February 23, 2015, debuted at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100, driven by digital sales exceeding 100,000 units in its first week.[117][118] In 2017, Zedd issued "Stay" with Alessia Cara on February 23, which entered the Billboard Hot 100 and later received multi-platinum certification from the RIAA for over 2 million units in the U.S.[119] The track exemplified his pivot toward radio-friendly pop-dance hybrids. Similarly, "Break Free" as a featured producer on Ariana Grande's single, released July 2014, earned platinum certification from the RIAA on August 26, 2024, reflecting sustained streaming accumulation.[120] Post-2020 releases adapted to streaming dominance, with viral traction on platforms like TikTok boosting visibility. "Lucky" featuring Remi Wolf, released August 9, 2024, debuted at number 27 on the Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart, marking Wolf's first entry there amid Zedd's focus on eclectic vocal pairings.[121][122] These efforts contributed to Zedd amassing over a dozen RIAA-certified singles across collaborations, prioritizing digital metrics over traditional radio in the streaming era.[123]| Single | Year | Featured Artist | Billboard Hot 100 Peak | RIAA Certification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stay the Night | 2013 | Hayley Williams | N/A (Dance/Electronic focus) | Multi-Platinum equivalent via streams |
| I Want You to Know | 2015 | Selena Gomez | 17 | Platinum (as of May 7, 2025)[123] |
| Stay | 2017 | Alessia Cara | Entry position | Multi-Platinum |
| Break Free (featured) | 2014 | Ariana Grande | 4 (Grande lead) | Platinum (2024)[120] |
| Lucky | 2024 | Remi Wolf | N/A (Dance/Electronic: 27) | Pending |
Soundtrack contributions
Zedd contributed the track "Find You", featuring Matthew Koma and Miriam Bryant, to the soundtrack for the 2014 film Divergent, where it appeared as the lead single on the Divergent: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack album released by Interscope Records on March 11, 2014. The song, produced by Zedd, integrates electronic elements with vocal performances, aligning with the film's dystopian themes, and received playlist placements on platforms like Spotify, contributing to its streaming metrics within the compilation.[124] In 2024, Zedd co-composed the opening theme "Jaka Jaan" with KEEN of the Japanese duo C&K for the anime series Dragon Ball Daima, which premiered on October 11, 2024, in Japan.[125] The track, performed by Zedd and C&K with lyrics by Yukinojo Mori, features upbeat electronic production fused with J-pop influences and served as the opening from episode 2 onward, marking Zedd's entry into anime media tie-ins.[126] Additionally, Zedd released a full-length version of the ending theme "NAKAMA" featuring Japanese singer AI, expanding the series' musical outreach beyond its original broadcast format.[127] These soundtrack placements represent targeted extensions of Zedd's production style into cinematic and animated narratives, distinct from his primary discography of standalone singles and albums, with verifiable credits in official releases rather than extensive scoring roles.[128]Awards and nominations
Grammy Awards
Zedd secured his only Grammy win at the 56th Annual Grammy Awards on January 26, 2014, earning Best Dance Recording for "Clarity" featuring Foxes, where he served as producer and mixer.[129] The track triumphed over competitors including Armin van Buuren and Trevor Guthrie's "This Is What It Feels Like" and Calvin Harris featuring Florence Welch's "Sweet Nothing."[129] This recognition highlighted Zedd's production in the electronic dance genre, though the same song received a nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance that year without prevailing.[129] Subsequent nominations have primarily fallen outside core electronic categories, underscoring a pattern where Zedd's electronic-focused work garners targeted acclaim amid broader pop-oriented nods that did not convert to wins. In the electronic field, he received a nomination for Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical, for the 3SCAPE DRM remix of "Inside Out" at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards in 2022.[5] At the 67th Annual Grammy Awards on February 2, 2025, Zedd was nominated for Best Dance/Electronic Album for Telos, competing against entries like Kaytranada's TIMELESS and Justice's works, but did not win the category.[130] This lone recent electronic album nod reflects ongoing industry acknowledgment of his output in the genre, albeit without additional victories as of 2025.| Year (Ceremony) | Category | Work | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 (56th) | Best Dance Recording | "Clarity" (featuring Foxes) | Won[129] |
| 2022 (64th) | Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical | "Inside Out (3SCAPE DRM Remix)" | Nominated[5] |
| 2025 (67th) | Best Dance/Electronic Album | Telos | Nominated[130] |
Billboard Music Awards and other mainstream honors
Zedd won the Billboard Music Award for Top Dance/Electronic Song at the 2019 ceremony for his collaboration "The Middle" with Maren Morris and Grey, a chart-driven honor reflecting the track's performance on Billboard rankings.[131] The Billboard Music Awards primarily base categories on sales, streaming, radio airplay, and touring data rather than fan votes or jury decisions, distinguishing them from more subjective mainstream honors.[132] In the MTV Video Music Awards, Zedd secured the MTV Clubland Prize in 2014 for "Stay the Night" featuring Hayley Williams, recognizing its impact in electronic club music, and the Best Dance Video award in 2017 for "Stay" with Alessia Cara, selected through a combination of critic and fan input.[133][134] He received additional nominations at the VMAs, such as for Best Editing in 2014, but these did not result in further victories.[135] Zedd also earned iHeartRadio Music Awards for Dance Song of the Year in 2018 for "Stay" and in 2019 for "The Middle," both fan-voted categories emphasizing popularity within dance tracks.[136][137] Despite multiple nominations for Favorite Electronic Dance Music Artist at the American Music Awards, including in 2013 and 2015, he did not win in that fan-voted category, which has historically favored artists like Calvin Harris.[135]Electronic and international accolades
Zedd has received recognition in electronic music rankings, notably through DJ Mag's annual Top 100 DJs poll, a fan-voted list reflecting popularity within the EDM community.[138] He placed at #44 in 2025, #54 in 2024, #47 in 2023, #58 in 2022, and #64 in 2021, indicating sustained but mid-tier visibility amid shifting genre preferences away from big-room EDM toward more varied styles like house and techno.[139][140] These positions, while not topping the poll, underscore his enduring fanbase post the 2010s EDM commercial peak, with over a decade of inclusions highlighting consistent global touring and releases.[141] In EDM-specific honors, Zedd earned an iHeartRadio Titanium Award in 2019 for "The Middle" (with Maren Morris and Grey), recognizing one billion total audience spins across iHeartMedia platforms, a metric of streaming and airplay dominance.[142] This accolade, awarded to tracks achieving massive empirical playback thresholds, reflects the song's viral success and algorithmic favor in electronic-pop crossovers, though Zedd has secured few outright wins in pure electronic categories after 2015, aligning with broader industry data on declining big-room festival dominance.[143] Internationally, Zedd garnered a nomination for Best Electronic at the 2014 MTV Europe Music Awards (EMA), competing against global acts in a category emphasizing cross-continental electronic impact.[144] In Australia, his co-writing on "The Middle" contributed to four APRA Music Awards in 2019, including Most Performed Urban Work and Songwriter of the Year for collaborator Sarah Aarons, acknowledging the track's songwriting craftsmanship and performance metrics in international markets.[145] These nods, totaling around 20 nominations across electronic and global ceremonies since 2013 with limited post-2015 victories, evidence early-2010s momentum from hits like "Clarity" tapering as EDM evolved toward niche subgenres and pop integrations.[146]| Year | DJ Mag Top 100 DJs Position |
|---|---|
| 2021 | 64 |
| 2022 | 58 |
| 2023 | 47 |
| 2024 | 54 |
| 2025 | 44 |