The EP’s centerpiece is a slow-burn duet (with Steele harmonizing against a pitch-shifted ghost of herself). Dayski’s use of detuned piano and a subtle, almost subliminal breakbeat pushes Steele into uncharted territory. She snarls, coos, and finally breaks into a desperate, looped whisper that dissolves into static. It’s the sound of two artists pushing each other past their comfort zones.
FKA twigs, Massive Attack, Chelsea Wolfe, and the Cyberpunk 2077 radio station Night FM .
The only misstep comes midway. The track leans too heavily on a four-on-the-floor kick and a repetitive synth stab that feels more generic festival-ready than the rest of the EP’s sharp, angular beauty. Steele’s vocal is still excellent, but Dayski’s beat here lacks the textural invention of tracks like “Iron Lullaby.” damion dayski valerica steele
If Trent Reznor and Portishead built a nightclub inside an abandoned cathedral and hired a torch singer who had just made a deal with a rogue AI, you’d get close to the haunting magic of Echo in the Static , the surprise collaborative EP from producer Damion Dayski and vocalist Valerica Steele.
Dayski, known for his lush, globe-trotting sample work and deep bass textures, strips back some of his world-music gloss here, opting for a colder, more mechanistic palette. In contrast, Steele—whose previous solo work leaned into theatrical gothic rock—restrains her vibrato, delivering something far more intimate and unnerving. The EP’s centerpiece is a slow-burn duet (with
The opener hits like a slow-motion car crash. Dayski lays down a glitching, half-time beat that sounds like a broken heart trying to reboot, overlaid with a reversed cello loop. Steele enters not with a belt, but with a whisper: “You cut the power / I loved the dark.” The chemistry is immediate. His production leaves negative space for her voice to crack and echo, and when the bass finally drops in the second verse, it feels less like a dancefloor moment and more like a structural failure.
Rating: 8.7/10 Vibe: Cyberpunk speakeasy / Cinematic downtempo It’s the sound of two artists pushing each
Echo in the Static is a rare meeting of minds. Dayski gives Steele the most dangerous playground she’s ever had; Steele gives Dayski a human heart for his machines. It’s moody, sexy, uncomfortable, and brilliant—best listened to on good headphones, late at night, with the lights off.