Damion Dayski With Valerica Steele -

Dayski, through his modulator, added three seconds of silence. Then: “She makes the noise mean something. I only make it breathe.” The Dayski-Steele collaboration is not for everyone. It is not for radio, or commercials, or even most headphones. It is for the small hours, the liminal spaces, the moments when your phone dies and you remember that the world still has texture.

Steele’s voice on the track is processed but not hidden. Dayski lets her sit inside the distortion—her syllables triggering granular synth events. When she whispers “efficiency is a cult” , the kick drum stutters like a panicked heart. When she shouts “BURN THE DASHBOARD” , the entire mix opens into a field of crystalline feedback that feels less like music and more like weather. damion dayski with valerica steele

(29, Bucharest/Berlin) is the opposite: all presence, no filter. A former aide to a Romanian MEP, she abandoned Brussels after a leaked recording caught her calling parliamentary procedure “the slowest form of suffocation.” She now performs spoken word over industrial breakbeats. Her piece “On the Violence of Clean Desks” went viral after she delivered it while shaving her head on stage at CTM Festival. Steele’s voice is a weapon: low, grained, capable of shifting from a librarian’s whisper to a war chief’s bark in a single line. The Collision The project, tentatively titled “We Have Always Been the Glitch,” began as a dare. A mutual acquaintance—an AI ethicist with a gambling problem—claimed Dayski’s soundscapes were “too cold” and Steele’s words were “too hot.” He bet them they couldn’t fuse the two without one consuming the other. Dayski, through his modulator, added three seconds of

But if you ever hear a low rumble in a city you love, and a voice that sounds like it’s been waiting a thousand years to speak—run toward it. That’s the Fractal Alchemist and the Silk Tongue. And they are just getting started. It is not for radio, or commercials, or even most headphones

They met for the first time in a repurposed water tower outside Malmö at 3:00 AM. No managers. No engineers. Just Dayski’s modular rig (nicknamed “The Basilisk”) and a single Shure SM7B microphone.

One critic who heard a private playback described it as: “Listening to two people build a fire using only their own bones as kindling.” Despite the intensity, witnesses say their off-tape dynamic is surprisingly… functional. Dayski makes pour-over coffee for Steele before each session. Steele translates Dayski’s technical notes (which he writes in a cipher of circuit diagrams and emojis) into plain English for the producer.

They do not touch. They do not hug. They do not even sit on the same couch.