Harry Styles says a Radiohead concert in Berlin reminded him exactly why he walks out onstage night after night.
The 32-year-old singer explained how being part of the crowd — not the performer — gave him a jolt of clarity about his purpose as an artist.
Harry said the realisation hit him while he was deep in the audience, surrounded by strangers who were completely lost in the music.
He told Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1: “I think dancing in Berlin.
“I went to see Radiohead in Berlin, and felt so part of the audience.”
Harry explained that instead of watching the band from a distance, he became absorbed in the atmosphere around him — the tiny interactions, the shared emotion, the way the crowd moved as one.
He went on: “I’m watching this and feeling everything that’s happening around me in the crowd.
“There’s people picking up each other’s things and people are bringing each other things. It’s this sense of strangers looking at each other and massaging each other’s shoulders when someone’s emotional and looking into the eyes of a stranger and screaming out a chorus together.”
That sense of unity, he said, made him suddenly aware of the role he plays for his own fans.
He noted: “I had a moment of like, ‘I’m there so that people can have this’, you know? I’m soundtracking this.”
The moment appears to have been a turning point for Harry, who has been reflecting publicly on the emotional weight of performing and the responsibility that comes with it.
In a recent interview with Runner’s World UK, Harry – who has today (06.03.26) returned with his fourth solo album Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occassionally. – admitted he has often questioned his purpose while touring.
He said: “Something I’ve often struggled with, in the middle of a tour, is feeling like I’m not sure what I’m giving, not sure what I’m adding to the world. Especially when the reward system and the kind of… adulation that you can receive feels so loud. Like clearly I’m getting so much from this, I’m getting all this energy. People are giving me so much, which I deeply appreciate. But what am I contributing? At times I felt quite existential about that.”