Rezz
Isabelle Rezazadeh (born March 28, 1995), known professionally as Rezz, is a Ukrainian-born Canadian electronic dance music producer and DJ raised in Niagara Falls, Ontario.[1] She specializes in midtempo bass genres, crafting tracks with dark, atmospheric, and eerie production elements that distinguish her within the EDM landscape.[2] Beginning her career uploading beats to SoundCloud from her parents' basement, Rezz rapidly ascended to mainstream recognition after signing with Mau5trap and releasing her debut EP Something Wrong Here in 2016, followed by albums such as Mass Manipulation (2018) and Spiral (2021).[3] Her achievements include two Juno Awards for Electronic Album of the Year and seven nominations overall, alongside features on the covers of Billboard (2019) and DJ Mag (2018).[2] In 2025, she released her album As the Pendulum Swings, marking a refined evolution in her sound amid sold-out tours and a dedicated fanbase built without reliance on radio play or viral social media hits.[4]
Early life and background
Childhood and relocation
Isabelle Rezazadeh was born on March 28, 1995, in Ukraine to a Ukrainian mother and an Iranian father.[5][6] Her family relocated to Canada when she was young, settling in Niagara Falls, Ontario.[5][7] Rezazadeh grew up in Niagara Falls amid a multicultural family background shaped by her Ukrainian and Iranian heritage, which contributed to her early cultural exposures in the border region's diverse environment.[6][8] The move from Ukraine provided a foundation in a modest, immigrant household, though specific details on family socioeconomic conditions during this period remain limited in public records.[5]Initial musical interests
Isabelle Rezazadeh, professionally known as Rezz, initially gravitated toward punk and rock music during her teenage years in Niagara Falls, Ontario, drawing inspiration from genres including emo, goth, and punk before transitioning to electronic dance music (EDM).[9] This early affinity shaped her raw, aggressive sound preferences, honed through personal listening rather than structured education.[10] Her discovery of EDM occurred around age 16, sparked by sneaking into underground raves and nightclubs in nearby Toronto, where she encountered the energy of live electronic sets.[11] A transformative experience came in 2013 when she attended a deadmau5 performance, which ignited her passion for production and prompted her to experiment with the genre.[12] Soon after, she began DJing locally in Ontario, performing at small venues and building foundational skills through repetitive practice without formal mentorship or institutional support.[13] Rezazadeh taught herself production using Ableton Live, acquired around age 18, relying on online tutorials and trial-and-error in her parents' basement to craft initial tracks.[14] This self-directed approach, free from elite training or privileged access, emphasized empirical experimentation, allowing her to develop technical proficiency in beat-making and sound design independently by 2013.[15]Career
2013–2016: Local performances and online breakthroughs
Rezazadeh commenced electronic music production in 2013 at age 18, self-educating via online tutorials and initially sharing rudimentary tracks on SoundCloud without industry connections, relying on organic listener shares for initial visibility.[16][14] This grassroots approach underscored her persistence, as she iteratively refined dark, minimal bass-heavy demos amid limited resources in Niagara Falls, Ontario, prior to any formal mentorship.[17] By 2015, her SoundCloud uploads attracted notice from established producers; Skrillex contacted her directly via Twitter after encountering her material, prompting submissions that resulted in her debut EP Insurrection on OWSLA's Nest HQ sublabel, marking her first professional release.[18] This digital breakthrough facilitated early exposure, though her output remained independent and unpolished, emphasizing self-driven experimentation over curated opportunities.[14] Concurrently, Rezazadeh initiated live DJ sets in modest Ontario venues around 2013–2014, honing a nascent stage presence with basic equipment while drawing inspiration from deadmau5's concerts to integrate original productions into performances.[19] Her sets evolved to incorporate thematic visuals by 2016, coinciding with a mau5trap signing after deadmau5 recognized her potential, providing informal guidance without immediate collaborative remixes. Performances progressed from local clubs to her Shambhala Music Festival appearance in August 2016, where she debuted fuller live integrations of her SoundCloud-gleaned tracks to receptive crowds.[20]2017–2018: Debut albums and major label deals
Rezz released her debut studio album, Mass Manipulation, on August 4, 2017, through the record label mau5trap.[21] The eight-track project featured singles such as "Relax," which accumulated nearly three million streams on Spotify by mid-2018.[22] Following the album's launch, Rezz embarked on the Mass Manipulation World Tour, commencing on September 2, 2017, in the United States and extending internationally. The tour included multiple sold-out performances, including back-to-back nights at Seattle's Showbox SoDo on October 21 and 22, 2017, and two shows at Denver's Ogden Theatre in November 2017.[23][24] The tour emphasized Rezz's signature hypnotic and otherworldly aesthetics through innovative visuals, creating immersive experiences described as "hypnotizing" and evoking an "otherworldly" atmosphere at venues like Portland's Expo Center.[25][26] These elements, paired with her midtempo bass production, contributed to rapid commercial viability following her prior independent releases.[21] On August 3, 2018, Rezz issued her sophomore album, Certain Kind of Magic, also via mau5trap, featuring collaborations with artists including 1788-L and Deadmau5.[27] The release built on the momentum from Mass Manipulation, with tracks like "H E X" garnering over 1.8 million plays on YouTube Music by subsequent years.[28] This period solidified her transition from underground online presence to established electronic artist status under mau5trap's distribution, though the label remained independent rather than a traditional major.[29]2019–2021: Expanded releases and festival dominance
In 2019, Rezz released her EP Beyond the Senses on July 24, featuring tracks like "Falling" with Underoath and "Dark Age," which incorporated intensified industrial and bass-heavy elements building on her prior work.[30] The EP earned her a Juno Award for Electronic Album of the Year in 2020, marking her second win in the category following Mass Manipulation in 2018.[31] The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted live touring in 2020, halting Rezz's momentum after a strong 2019 schedule that included performances at events like Backwoods Music Festival, yet she maintained visibility through online streams and single releases.[32] By late 2021, as restrictions eased, she headlined high-profile venues including two nights at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on September 2–3, delivering full sets that underscored her festival draw with immersive visuals and production.[33] Rezz's full-length album Spiral followed on November 19, 2021, via HypnoVizion and Rezz Music, comprising 11 tracks that delved deeper into hypnotic, darker sonic territories with collaborations amplifying her midtempo bass signature. This period saw her tracks accumulate tens of millions of streams across platforms, reflecting sustained fan engagement amid touring limitations, while appearances at festivals like EDC Las Vegas and Sunset Music Festival solidified her dominance in electronic lineups.[34][35]2022–2025: Independent label founding and latest projects
In October 2022, Rezz founded HypnoVizion Records as an independent imprint distributed by Universal Music Canada, marking a shift toward greater artistic autonomy following prior major label affiliations.[36] The label's inaugural release was the Halloween-themed mix and album Nightmare on Rezz Street 2 later that month, emphasizing her DIY ethos in electronic music production.[37] HypnoVizion facilitated subsequent projects, including the EP It's Not a Phase released on July 20, 2023, featuring collaborations such as "Signal" with Grabbitz and exploring heavier bass-driven sounds.[38] This was followed by the full-length album Can You See Me? on March 14, 2024, comprising 10 tracks like "Black Ice" and "Dysphoria," which Rezz described as focusing on "the heaviest, craziest sounds" in her evolving style.[39][40] In 2024, Rezz updated her 2016 track "Edge" with a refreshed version released on May 29 via mau5trap, incorporating modern production elements while retaining core midtempo bass characteristics.[41] She also advanced the REZZMAU5 collaborative project with deadmau5, culminating in joint live performances such as closing Tomorrowland's Freedom Stage and a Coachella 2025 set, where the duo exchanged insights on creative processes amid shared Canadian electronic roots.[42][43] Touring remained robust, with Rezz headlining Shambhala Music Festival from July 25–28, 2025, debuting elements of her PORTAL production show, and achieving sold-out capacities at venues like Red Rocks Amphitheatre across multiple performances.[44][45] These efforts sustained her festival dominance amid broader industry transitions toward independent operations.[46]Musical style and production techniques
Core sonic elements and genre fusion
Rezz's productions are anchored in midtempo bass, a style defined by tempos typically between 100 and 140 beats per minute, which facilitates prolonged atmospheric layering and deliberate tension accumulation rather than rapid rhythmic drive. This foundation integrates heavy, modulated low-end frequencies that form the rhythmic and harmonic core, often processed with distortion to yield dense, evolving basslines capable of sustaining listener immersion over extended durations.[47][48] Central to her sound are dark techno infusions, manifesting as minimalistic percussion patterns and repetitive, machine-like motifs that evoke mechanical precision, blended with industrial-grade abrasion through harsh, metallic noise elements and gritty textural overlays. Synths draw from sci-fi motifs, employing wavering, dissonant leads and pads that generate hypnotic, eerie environments, where slow builds—characterized by gradual filter sweeps and reverb tails—escalate toward bass-heavy drops for causal release of built pressure.[49][50] This genre fusion extends to electro and glitch influences, where intricate sound design buries melodic content beneath aggressive processing, prioritizing tactile, visceral impact over harmonic clarity; for instance, jaunting synth stabs and analog-style scratches intersect with low-end dominance to produce a menacing, otherworldly cohesion. Such elements underscore a causal emphasis on sonic density, where bass modulation and effects chaining create perceived "slimy" or fluid distortions in the low frequencies, enhancing the genre's dark, introspective allure without reliance on high-velocity euphoria.[50][51]Key influences and evolution
Rezz's foundational influences stemmed from punk and rock bands encountered in her youth, including Bring Me the Horizon and Green Day, which ignited her passion for guitar playing and emotionally charged, rebellious sounds.[10] Her shift toward electronic dance music incorporated inspirations from producers such as deadmau5—whose 2012 track "Cthulhu Sleeps" profoundly impacted her atmospheric approach—Gesaffelstein's dark industrial aesthetics, Skrillex's aggressive bass elements, and Tiësto's trance-infused energy, forming the eerie, midtempo bass core of her early releases like the 2016 EPs The Silence Is Deafening and Something Is Wrong Here.[52][53][2] By 2023, with the EP It's Not a Phase, Rezz began integrating punk, emo, and progressive rock influences—collaborating with artists like Silverstein and Alice Glass—to expand beyond her established bass-heavy template and revisit her rock origins.[10] This evolution continued in the March 2024 album Can You See Me?, where she emphasized punk-driven variety to challenge assumptions of stylistic uniformity, prioritizing broad sonic experimentation over genre constraints.[54][2]Reception and impact
Commercial success and awards
Rezz has achieved significant commercial success through digital streaming and live performances, accumulating tens of millions of streams on platforms like Spotify since her 2016 breakout.[55] Her music has driven sold-out shows at major venues, including eleven consecutive performances at Red Rocks Amphitheatre, with the most recent in October 2025 drawing full capacity crowds.[56] She has headlined prominent festivals such as Bonnaroo starting in 2017, contributing to her reputation for commanding large audiences.[17] In 2025, Rezz's PORTAL tour marked further milestones, selling out the 12,000-capacity Cow Palace in Daly City, California, for its debut on March 1, and expanding to arenas like the Tacoma Dome, where she became the first female electronic DJ to headline.[57][58] These events underscore sustained viability post-major label deals, with rapid sell-outs indicating robust fan demand independent of traditional chart dominance.[59] Rezz has received peer recognition via Juno Awards, winning Electronic Album of the Year twice—first for Mass Manipulation in 2018—and earning seven nominations overall since then.[60][2] These accolades highlight her impact within Canadian electronic music, prioritizing production quality over mainstream pop metrics.[61]
Critical praise and fan achievements
Rezz has garnered critical praise for her distinctive bass-heavy sound and immersive live productions, often described as creating "otherworldly" experiences through hypnotic visuals and atmospheric effects. Reviews of her 2017 Mass Manipulation tour emphasized the spellbinding quality of her sets, which blended dark techno with psychedelic elements to transport audiences into an alternate sonic realm.[26] Dance Music NW lauded her ability to mesmerize with tracks like those on the Something Wrong Here EP, capturing a dark industrial techno style that resonates deeply with electronic music enthusiasts.[62] Music publications recognized Rezz's rapid ascent early in her career, naming her Breakout Artist of 2016 by Dancing Astronaut for her innovative debut releases and festival performances, and Breakout Artist of the Year by Billboard in 2017 following the success of her Mass Manipulation album.[63][64] Critics from Flood Magazine and Distorted Sound Magazine praised later works like As the Pendulum Swings for psychedelic influences drawn from non-musical sources and It's Not a Phase for its authentic cyberpunk vibe, highlighting her evolution in fusing genres.[65][66] Rezz's fanbase, dubbed the "Cult of Rezz," achieved notable loyalty through organic growth, enabling sold-out amphitheaters and millions of streams without traditional radio support, as detailed in Billboard coverage.[3][67] The community, formalized in online groups since 2016, demonstrates high engagement via repeat attendance at tours and festivals, sustaining her career longevity amid electronic dance music's competitive landscape.[68] MusicTech noted the fans' perception of Rezz as a "wizard of sound," underscoring the devoted following that amplifies her branding and visual innovations.[12]Criticisms and overrated debates
Critics have frequently accused Rezz of producing repetitive sets and tracks characterized by a formulaic midtempo bass sound, with detractors arguing that her performances lack variation and innovation despite her technical proficiency.[26] [69] Such claims emerged prominently in online EDM forums as early as 2017, where attendees described her live shows as "tightly rehearsed" but predictable after multiple viewings, reducing the excitement for repeat listeners.[70] By 2018, debates intensified around her rapid rise, with some labeling her "highly overrated" due to perceived hype outpacing artistic depth, often tied to a narrow sonic palette reminiscent of early influences like G Jones but without sufficient diversification.[71] [72] These overrated assertions persist into the 2020s, with forum users in 2024–2025 contending that Rezz's output remains stagnant, her sets "boring" and confined to the same repetitive drops and atmospheric builds, potentially limiting her appeal beyond a dedicated niche.[73] [74] Counterarguments emphasize repetition as an intentional hypnotic mechanism, aligning with her self-described goal of creating immersive, trance-like experiences rather than chasing broad versatility; this approach, rooted in midtempo bass principles, prioritizes sustained tension and release over eclectic mixing.[75] Evidence of evolution appears in album releases, such as the 2021 Spiral, which Rezz positioned as an "evolved version" incorporating new structural elements while retaining hypnotic cores, and 2025's It's Not a Phase, noted for matured songwriting and sound design shifts toward internal conflict themes.[75] [76] From a first-principles standpoint, the repetition debate hinges on whether her consistent aesthetic—dark, pulsating synths and minimalistic builds—serves causal immersion (evidenced by fan retention in festival slots) or signals creative limitation (as her discography shows incremental rather than radical genre shifts since Mass Manipulation in 2018).[77] While detractors in community discussions undervalue this as mere stasis, Rezz's trajectory refutes total stagnation, with post-2021 works demonstrating adaptive production amid independent ventures, though the core formula endures as both strength and point of contention.[76]Controversies
Responses to repetitive style accusations
Rezz has countered accusations of stylistic repetition by emphasizing the deliberate hypnotic framework of her production, which prioritizes bold simplicity to induce trance-like immersion without excess redundancy. In an August 2023 interview, she articulated that "hypnotic music is simple, bold, and repetitive. But not too repetitive," framing repetition as a controlled element essential to her midtempo bass sound rather than a limitation.[10] This approach, she explained, draws from influences like deadmau5, allowing for atmospheric depth through layered synths and sub-bass rather than constant variation.[79] To demonstrate adaptability against claims of stagnation, Rezz highlighted her extensive experimentation across genres, underscoring years of iterative production that refute narratives of unearned or formulaic success. In a March 2024 interview, she described incorporating "punk tones and all sorts of different genres" into tracks, as evident in the goth-punk influences on her 2023 EP It's Not a Phase and the broader sonic shifts in her fourth studio album Can You See Me?, released March 14, 2024, via HypnoVizion Records.[54][80] These evolutions, including distorted guitars and rawer structures, build on her core electronic foundation while expanding into hybrid forms, with production techniques like custom plugin breakdowns revealing ongoing refinement.[81] In response to live performance critiques, Rezz implemented setlist and visual variations during her 2017 Mass Manipulation Tour, directly addressing prior complaints of uniformity. Reviewers observed that sets diverged markedly from earlier shows—having attended ten prior performances, one critic noted the tour's "incredibly different" structure, incorporating unpredictable drops and thematic visuals tied to the album's release on August 4, 2017.[26] This shift maintained her signature otherworldly aesthetic while introducing dynamic elements, such as evolving hypnotic spirals and track remixes, to enhance replay value across dates.[82]Gender misgendering incidents and industry gender dynamics
In January 2024, Rezz publicly addressed instances of fans misgendering her on social media platforms, posting on Facebook that "I am a girl" and clarifying that she produces her bass-heavy tracks herself, amid perceptions of her as male due to her androgynous stage persona and the male-dominated genre.[83] She expressed tolerance for occasional misgendering but stressed the importance of recognizing her as female, given the low number of women in electronic music production, stating it aids representation for aspiring female artists.[83] The electronic dance music (EDM) industry exhibits stark gender imbalances in production roles, with women comprising only about 2.8% of producers across analyzed popular tracks and roughly 5% of recognized electronic producers overall.[84][85] While festival lineups have improved to around 27% female artists by 2020–2021 from 9% in 2012, backend production remains disproportionately male, attributable not solely to alleged systemic barriers but to causal factors such as the solitary, self-taught demands of skills like sound design and synthesis, which require extensive isolated practice.[86] Rezz has attributed lower female participation in bass subgenres to audience demographics skewed toward males, logically extending to fewer women pursuing production in those styles, underscoring self-identification with biological sex and individual effort over narratives of pervasive discrimination. Her career exemplifies success through technical mastery and persistence, rejecting ambiguity in favor of clear gender assertion amid industry norms that sometimes blur such distinctions.[83]Personal life
Family and relationships
Isabelle Rezazadeh, known professionally as Rezz, was born on March 28, 1995, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, to a Ukrainian mother and an Iranian father.[87] Her family relocated to Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada, when she was young, where she was raised in a multicultural household blending Persian, Ukrainian, and Canadian influences.[14] This early move from Ukraine to Canada has been noted in biographical accounts as shaping her adaptive mindset amid cultural transitions, though Rezz has maintained limited public commentary on familial dynamics beyond acknowledging supportive parental encouragement for her music pursuits.[5] Rezz has kept her personal relationships largely private, with no verified details on siblings or extended family publicly disclosed. In a 2022 interview, she described receiving affirming support from her family upon coming out, highlighting a stable home environment that contrasted with her high-profile career demands.[88] She announced her engagement to electronic music producer fknsyd (Syd) on August 15, 2023, via social media, characterizing the relationship as healthy and grounded.[89] The couple married in late September 2024, as confirmed by Rezz in an October announcement, marking a rare personal milestone shared publicly without accompanying media spectacle.[90] Rezz's approach to personal life emphasizes discretion, avoiding scandals or tabloid exposure that often accompany artists of her stature, and instead channeling focus toward professional output and self-reliance. No substantiated reports of relational controversies exist, aligning with her stated prioritization of career autonomy over relational publicity.[91]Public persona and self-reliance narrative
Rezz, born Isabelle Rezazadeh, has cultivated a public image rooted in meritocratic achievement through individual effort, beginning her electronic music journey at age 16 by self-teaching production via YouTube tutorials and performing at local high school dances in Niagara Falls, Ontario.[92] This grassroots approach extended to uploading early tracks on SoundCloud, where she garnered initial attention without reliance on industry connections, leading to her first releases in 2015.[93] Her narrative emphasizes causal links between sustained practice and breakthroughs, such as signing with Deadmau5's mau5trap label after organic online growth rather than nepotism or shortcuts.[11] In public statements, Rezz counters perceptions of an unearned ascent, asserting in a 2024 social media post that misconceptions of ease ignore the underlying dedication required for her trajectory from local gigs to festival headliner.[94] This self-reliance ethos aligns with accounts of her pre-fame years, including working as a waitress while honing skills post-high school in 2013, underscoring effort over privilege as the driver of her sold-out shows and millions of streams.[3][95] Her artistic persona projects introspection and immersion in sonic frequencies, framing music as a vibrational tool for altered consciousness rather than commercial spectacle or celebrity indulgence. Rezz describes her bass-heavy, hypnotic productions as portals to frequency-based experiences, drawing from personal experimentation with sound's therapeutic effects to create immersive, genre-bending works detached from EDM's party-centric excesses.[47][96] This focus manifests in minimalist visuals and thematic depth, prioritizing creative autonomy and audience hypnosis over mainstream validation.[97]Business ventures
HypnoVizion Records establishment
HypnoVizion Records was founded by Canadian electronic music producer Rezz (Isabelle Rezazadeh) on October 4, 2022, as an independent imprint aimed at fostering greater artistic independence after her prior associations with major labels such as Mau5trap and Rezz Music. Distributed through Universal Music Canada and Virgin Music, the label prioritizes hypnotic, bass-heavy electronic sounds and serves as a platform for visionary artists aligned with Rezz's aesthetic, emphasizing DIY ethos over traditional industry constraints.[36][98][99] The inaugural release, the Halloween-themed Nightmare on Rezz Street 2 mix and album, arrived later that October, setting the tone for subsequent output under the imprint. This was followed by the It's Not a Phase EP in July 2023, which Rezz described as a bold declaration of her evolving "goth era," featuring uncompromised dark, thematic production free from external editorial influence. The label's structure enabled direct oversight of curation and release timing, aligning with Rezz's specified touring schedule and creative priorities.[100][101] Subsequent releases, including the fourth studio album Can You See Me? on March 14, 2024, exemplify the imprint's role in amplifying Rezz's unfiltered vision, with its experimental bass chaos and extensive collaborations reflecting a relaxed, self-directed process conducted in her Toronto home base. By 2025, the label supported further evolution in As The Pendulum Swings, incorporating French electro elements and heightened collaboration, while sustaining Rezz's sold-out tours and consistent output—evidence of viable independence for mid-career artists in electronic music, countering reliance on full major-label infrastructure through strategic distribution partnerships.[50][4][102]Discography
Studio albums
Rezz's studio albums consist of full-length releases that highlight her development in electronic music production, particularly within midtempo bass genres. As of October 2025, she has issued four such albums, each distributed through established labels and available in digital, physical, and streaming formats.| Title | Release date | Label |
|---|---|---|
| Mass Manipulation | August 4, 2017 | Mau5trap |
| Certain Kind of Magic | August 3, 2018 | Mau5trap |
| Spiral | November 19, 2021 | Rezz Music / RCA Records |
| Can You See Me? | March 14, 2024 | HypnoVizion Records |
Extended plays and singles
Rezz's debut extended play, Insurrection, was released on July 20, 2015, via Nest HQ, comprising three tracks that highlighted her emerging midtempo bass style and drew endorsements from producers including Skrillex.[105][106] Following her signing to mau5trap in 2016, she issued The Silence Is Deafening on January 22, 2016, featuring the breakout single "Edge," which propelled early viral buzz through its hypnotic basslines and garnered millions of streams.[107][108] That same year, Something Wrong Here followed as another EP under mau5trap, emphasizing experimental sound design in tracks like "Relax."[109] In 2019, Rezz released Beyond the Senses on May 14 via mau5trap, a four-track EP that explored darker, atmospheric elements and served as a bridge to her full-length albums.[109] Standalone singles from this period included "Fourth Impact" with K?d in 2017, a non-album collaboration blending bass-heavy drops.[110]| Extended Play | Release Date | Label | Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insurrection | July 20, 2015 | Nest HQ | 3[106] |
| The Silence Is Deafening | January 22, 2016 | Mau5trap | 4[109] |
| Something Wrong Here | 2016 | Mau5trap | 4[109] |
| Beyond the Senses | May 14, 2019 | Mau5trap | 4[109] |