Slushii
Slushii, born Julian Michael Scanlan on May 1, 1997, in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, is an American electronic dance music producer, DJ, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist based in Los Angeles.[1][2] He is renowned for his genre-blending style that fuses future bass, hyperpop, and nostalgic anime-inspired elements, often performed at major festivals like Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC) Las Vegas, Tomorrowland, and Ultra Music Festival.[3][4] Scanlan first gained widespread recognition in 2016 with the self-released debut album Brain Freeze, which showcased his high-energy tracks and earned support from industry figures like Steve Aoki, Tiësto, and Skrillex.[5] His early career included viral remixes, such as his take on The Chainsmokers' "Closer" featuring Halsey, and collaborations with artists managed by Moe Shalizi, including Marshmello.[6] Under his alias sapientdream, he released the breakout single "Past Lives" in 2023, a dreamy electronic track that amassed millions of streams and inspired a sci-fi webtoon partnership with WEBTOON, launched in summer 2025 as Sapient Dream with ongoing episodes.[1][7][8] In 2025, Slushii marked a creative evolution with the album Chrysalis, an 18-track project co-produced under his Slushii and sapientdream aliases, blending manga visuals, hyperpop experimentation, and introspective themes of transformation.[9][10] The release featured singles like "Needed Your Heart," alongside quiet drops under a new alias, Dinner With Judy, exploring hyperpop sounds.[5][11] Chrysalis earned a spot on the 2026 Grammy Awards ballot, highlighting "Past Lives" for potential nomination, while Slushii continued touring, including dates in Nashville and Anime Expo panels.[12][13] His work often draws from personal experiences, including his diagnosis of Asperger's syndrome, emphasizing emotional depth in electronic music production.[1]Early life
Upbringing and family
Julian Scanlan, professionally known as Slushii, was born on May 1, 1997, in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, where he spent his childhood in a duplex with his mother, Wendy, and younger sister.[2] His mother worked as a hairdresser at a nearby mall to support the family, while his father was absent from their lives; Wendy had a brief background in New York's Latin freestyle music scene and noted that Julian kicked in rhythm to the beats during her performances while pregnant with him.[2] Scanlan was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome early in childhood, which affected his social interactions and contributed to challenges in school.[2][14] He faced significant bullying in middle and high school, where peers taunted him over his appearance, perceived oddities, and social difficulties, leading to isolation, depression, and a retreat into music.[2][14][15] Scanlan graduated from a local high school in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, around 2015.[2] Following graduation, he took classes at a local community college while working part-time as a customer service attendant at Best Buy, earning minimum wage.[2][14] These early experiences with personal challenges began to shape his interest in music as an outlet during adolescence.[2]Initial musical interests
Slushii, born Julian Michael Scanlan, first engaged with music through his involvement in the psychedelic power-pop band Deuteronomy, where he served as bassist and songwriter from 2009 to 2012. During this period, he contributed to the band's debut album, The Propaganda of Deuteronomy, released in 2012.[16][2] Around the same time, Scanlan participated in the musical duo Monsters With Tiny Mustaches alongside collaborator MHKAZ, further exploring collaborative songwriting and performance in a more intimate format. These experiences marked his initial forays into live music and composition during his teenage years.[17] By 2013, while still in high school, Scanlan began transitioning toward electronic music production, adopting the alias DJ Swoon and uploading initial tracks to SoundCloud, where he built a modest following through remixes and original dubstep-oriented works. His production skills were entirely self-taught, honed through independent experimentation with digital audio workstations during this formative period; the DJ Swoon SoundCloud account was later deleted, prompting a rebrand. This shift reflected a growing interest in dance music, influenced by electronic artists like Skrillex, whom he discovered at age 13.[17][16][2]Career
2013–2015: Early endeavors
In 2013, Julian Scanlan, who had previously played guitar in the rock band Deuteronomy until 2012, transitioned to electronic dance music production under the alias DJ Swoon.[18] He began uploading experimental tracks to SoundCloud, focusing on dubstep and electro styles inspired by artists like Skrillex, which garnered a modest local following through basement-style productions shared online.[2] However, later that year, SoundCloud terminated his DJ Swoon account during a widespread copyright enforcement action, wiping out his emerging audience of around 8,000 followers.[18][2] Undeterred, Scanlan adopted the new alias Slushii—derived from a concept of a morphing, liquid-like character reminiscent of anime influences—and relaunched on SoundCloud in 2015, starting fresh with remixes and original experiments that quickly rebuilt his online presence.[18][2] These early uploads, often shared informally with peers, helped cultivate a small but dedicated following among electronic music enthusiasts, emphasizing high-energy drops and melodic elements that would define his sound.[2] During this period, Slushii engaged in informal collaborations with local producers and performed at small gigs in the New Jersey area, including house parties and community events, while balancing part-time work at Best Buy.[2] By mid-2015, seeking greater opportunities in the electronic scene, he relocated to Los Angeles to pursue music production full-time, marking a pivotal shift from amateur experimentation to professional aspirations.[2][4]2016–2017: Breakthrough and debut
In early 2016, Slushii signed with Red Light Management, a pivotal step that connected him with influential figures in the electronic dance music (EDM) scene, including support from OWSLA founder Skrillex.[19][2] His breakthrough came with the release of the single "Emptiness" on Monstercat on April 20, 2016, marking his first major label output and showcasing his signature future bass sound with emotive melodies and uplifting drops.[20] This was followed shortly by his self-released debut extended play (EP), Brain Freeze, on May 20, 2016, which featured seven tracks blending dubstep, future bass, and dance elements, including standout cuts like "Sapient Dream" and "Make Me Feel."[21] Building momentum into 2017, Slushii released the dubstep-leaning single "Catch Me" on March 3, which highlighted his vocal production skills and aggressive basslines.[22] Around the same time, on March 17, he collaborated with fellow masked producer Marshmello on "Twinbow," a high-energy future bass track that emphasized their shared playful aesthetic and garnered attention within the genre.[23] Slushii's debut studio album, Out of Light, arrived on August 4, 2017, as a self-released 13-track project that delved into personal themes of emotion and growth, with notable songs like the introspective "Dear Me" and the title track.[24][25] The album received positive critical reception for its emotional depth and cohesive production, praised as a "roller coaster of emotions" that demonstrated Slushii's maturity at age 20, though it did not achieve significant mainstream chart positions as an independent release.[26][27][28] During this period, Slushii expanded his live presence with early tours and festival appearances, including sets at Lollapalooza Chicago and Ultra Music Festival Miami in 2017, often bolstered by Skrillex's onstage surprises and endorsements that elevated his profile in the EDM circuit.[29][2]2018–2022: Expansion and Dream series
Following the momentum from his 2017 debut album Out of Light, Slushii entered a prolific phase marked by the release of his sophomore album Dream on December 14, 2018, a self-released 16-track project that shifted toward more introspective and melodic electronic sounds.[30][31] This album introduced a softer, emotional aesthetic, featuring tracks like "Find" and "Stay" that emphasized vulnerability and atmospheric production.[32] In 2019, Slushii continued this evolution under his alias sapientdream with Dream II, released on November 22, a 17-track sequel that deepened the narrative themes of longing and self-reflection through chillwave and lo-fi influences.[33][34] The trilogy culminated in Dream III on September 18, 2020, co-billed with sapientdream and comprising 17 songs that concluded the emotional arc with uplifting resolutions in tracks such as "Painter" and "Fall for You."[35][36] Collectively, the Dream series formed a thematic trilogy exploring personal growth and relationships, self-released to maintain artistic control and connect directly with fans. Slushii's growth extended to key collaborations during this period, including the trap-infused "Sandcastles" with Ookay in January 2020, which debuted at major festivals and highlighted his bass-heavy production style.[37] He also featured on Jauz and Crankdat's "I Hold Still" in 2017, but deepened ties through shared performances and management under Moe Shalizi's Shalizi Group, which oversaw his roster including Jauz and facilitated cross-promotions.[38][39] Under Shalizi's guidance since 2016, Slushii benefited from strategic touring and branding that amplified his visibility.[2] This era saw Slushii solidify his live presence with major festival slots, including sets at Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC) Las Vegas in 2018 and Ultra Music Festival Miami in 2018 and 2022, where he delivered high-energy performances blending future bass and dubstep elements.[40][41] He embarked on international tours, such as the There X2 Tour in 2018 spanning North American cities and extensions to events like EDC Mexico, alongside European and Asian festival appearances that expanded his global fanbase.[42] A career milestone came in 2020 with "All I Need" featuring Aviella, released on Monstercat, which became his most-streamed track to date, surpassing 30 million global streams and serving as the intro song for Rocket League.[43] In 2021, Slushii began exploring experimental avenues beyond his established EDM sound, quietly releasing hyperpop tracks under the alias Dinner With Judy on SoundCloud, marking an initial pivot toward more eclectic production styles. Building on the foundational dream-pop elements of his earlier Dream series, these understated uploads, including the punk-infused "Blackout," showcased a hyperpop direction with saccharine melodies and raucous energy, allowing him to test boundaries without mainstream fanfare. This phase of reinvention emphasized personal creative freedom, influencing his subsequent multimedia expansions.[11] In 2022, Slushii diversified his output with E.L.E. (Extinction Level Event), a 14-track dubstep-focused album released on Monstercat on March 3, featuring collaborations like "Do That" with Volt and emphasizing heavy drops and experimental bass.[44] Later that year, on September 23, he compiled his summer singles into A Slushii Summer via Dim Mak Records, a 15-track collection including "Forever With U" and "Smoke" that captured upbeat, nostalgic vibes and marked his second full-length release of the period.[45][46]2023–present: Reinvention and recent projects
In 2023, Slushii's reinvention gained momentum with the release of the breakout single "Past Lives" under his sapientdream alias, a dreamy electronic track that amassed millions of streams across platforms and laid the groundwork for his multimedia expansions, including a remix by The Chainsmokers.[1] Slushii's return to major releases in 2025 highlighted his genre-blending evolution, starting with the single "It's Not Over (Til It's Over)" in February, a cinematic track featuring chopped vocals and swelling synths that built tension through progressive house and dubstep influences. This led to the EP Operation: Overload in May, his first in over two years, comprising eight tracks that fused melodic trap, bass-heavy anthems, and emotional vocal chops, as seen in collaborations like "Wanna Be The One" with Seddy Hendrinx and DJ Whookid. The project captured his full sonic range, from high-energy drops to introspective builds, signaling a bold chapter of overload and experimentation.[47][48][49] A pinnacle of this period arrived with the collaborative album Chrysalis in July 2025, co-produced with his ambient alias sapientdream under the new label SONICdream, featuring 18 tracks that intertwined EDM, dream-pop, and electronic elements with narrative depth. The album's themes drew from sci-fi and transformation motifs, blending high-impact basslines with ethereal soundscapes in songs like "What Could Have Been" and a refreshed "Past Lives," creating a cohesive alternate universe. Chrysalis earned placement on the 2026 Grammy Awards ballot in categories such as Best Dance/Electronic Album, positioning it as a high-impact contribution to electronic music's evolution, while "Past Lives" was highlighted for potential nomination.[10][50][12] Complementing the album, Slushii announced a partnership with WEBTOON in June 2025 for Sapient Dream, a sci-fi action webcomic inspired by his hit "Past Lives," which has amassed over 16 billion streams across platforms. The series fuses manga-style storytelling with musical immersion, where each chapter syncs to Chrysalis tracks, expanding his work into interactive multimedia and appealing to global anime and EDM audiences through joint promotions like Anime Expo panels.[7][51] Throughout 2024 and 2025, Slushii maintained momentum with ongoing tours and festival appearances, including U.S. headline dates and slots at events like Beyond Wonderland, emphasizing his reinvention through live sets that incorporated hyperpop, dubstep, and ambient transitions to engage diverse crowds. These performances underscored his adaptability, blending high-energy bass music with experimental visuals to reinforce his multimedia identity.[13]Musical style and influences
Characteristics and production techniques
Slushii's sound is defined by a fusion of electronic dance music (EDM) subgenres, prominently featuring helium-like high-pitched and pitch-shifted vocals, giddy trance-inspired synths, trap-style drums, and intense dubstep drops that create a saccharine yet high-voltage neon aesthetic.[2] This combination yields spacey, emotional beats that balance cutesy melodies with heavy, "nuclear" drops, as heard in early remixes blending pop hooks with dubstep aggression.[2] In his initial productions, Slushii emphasized future bass and melodic elements, incorporating soft-tempo textures, R&B-infused vocals, and piano-driven intros to evoke longing and escape, diverging from purely aggressive EDM norms.[18] His debut album Out of Light exemplified this approach, using layered synths to build depth and seamless emotional transitions across tracks.[27] Techniques such as gradual intensity builds and chopped drops heightened tension and release, pairing light-hearted, rhythmic synths with downtempo beats for a vulnerable, hope-infused dance sound.[28] Over time, Slushii's production has expanded into broader electronic experimentation, integrating stripped-down vocals, slow-building tension, and euphoric sonic shifts while retaining core melodic foundations.[52][48] His live sets reinforce this evolution through visual and thematic consistency, employing colorful, youthful aesthetics like anime-inspired narratives and multiverse visuals to synchronize with the music's playful yet immersive energy.[52]Influences and evolution
Slushii's musical influences draw heavily from the electronic dance music (EDM) landscape, particularly the future bass scene, where he found inspiration in producers like Marshmello, with whom he formed a close friendship and collaborated on tracks such as "Twinbow" in 2017.[53] Early support from Skrillex, who touted him as a torch-carrier for the next generation of EDM artists, played a pivotal role in shaping his trajectory and encouraging his entry into the genre.[3] These figures, alongside broader influences from the upbeat, bass-heavy sounds of future bass pioneers, helped Slushii develop his signature helium-like vocal processing, a consistent element that emerged as a hallmark of his style.[54] His creative process has been profoundly impacted by his Asperger's diagnosis, which presented challenges in social interactions during his youth but fostered a unique, introspective approach to music-making, allowing him to channel emotions and personal experiences into lyrics that emphasize themes of isolation, growth, and connection.[55] This perspective drove Slushii's evolution from his early roots as a bassist and songwriter in the psychedelic power-pop rock band Deuteronomy, where he contributed to their 2012 album The Propaganda of Deuteronomy, to fully immersing himself in electronic production after quitting the band at age 16 to pursue EDM independently.[56] Post-2022, Slushii's style underwent significant reinvention, incorporating hyperpop experiments under aliases like Dinner With Judy, where he explored glitchy, high-energy vocal manipulations and genre-blending elements in tracks released in 2025.[11] This shift culminated in the 2025 album Chrysalis, a collaborative project with his alias sapientdream that integrates manga-inspired storytelling—tied to a sci-fi webcomic co-created with WEBTOON—resulting in genre-bending sounds that fuse electronic, pop, and narrative-driven introspection for a transformative, multiverse-like sonic experience.[50]Discography
Studio albums
Slushii's studio albums represent a progression from high-energy electronic dance music to more introspective and experimental soundscapes, often exploring themes of emotion, dreams, and personal transformation. His debut full-length release marked a pivotal moment in his early career, transitioning from singles to a cohesive body of work that showcased his production versatility. Subsequent albums, particularly the Dream trilogy, delved into ambient and lo-fi influences under aliases like sapientdream, while later projects returned to bass-heavy roots with innovative twists. These works have been self-released or issued through labels like Monstercat, emphasizing Slushii's independence and creative control.[57]| Album Title | Release Date | Track Count | Label | Key Themes and Reception |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Out of Light | August 4, 2017 | 13 | Self-released | Emotional introspection and future bass elements; praised as a strong debut blending uplifting melodies with personal storytelling, earning positive reviews for its heartfelt production.[58] |
| Dream | December 14, 2018 | 16 | Self-released | Dreamlike motifs and chill downtempo vibes; received acclaim for its introspective, ambient tracks that offered a softer contrast to Slushii's high-energy style, highlighting his evolution toward emotional depth.[59][31] |
| Dream II | November 22, 2019 | 17 | Self-released (as sapientdream) | Continuation of dreamlike soundscapes with lo-fi hip-hop influences; noted for enhancing the trilogy's narrative through moody, melodic compositions, with critics appreciating its cohesive sequel quality.[33][60][34] |
| Dream III | September 18, 2020 | 17 | Self-released (as Slushii & sapientdream) | Culmination of the trilogy focusing on ethereal, alternative R&B-tinged motifs; lauded for completing the emotional arc with immersive, genre-blending tracks that emphasized vulnerability and growth.[61][35][62] |
| E.L.E. (Extinction Level Event) | March 3, 2022 | 14 | Monstercat | Experimental dubstep and trap with apocalyptic undertones; celebrated as a bold return after a hiatus, featuring high-impact drops and collaborations that revitalized Slushii's bass music presence.[63][44][64] |
| A Slushii Summer | September 23, 2022 | 15 | Dim Mak Records | Compilation of upbeat summer singles blending future bass and EDM; released as part of a weekly single campaign, marking a prolific period post-E.L.E. and showcasing collaborative energy.[65] |
| Chrysalis | July 11, 2025 | 18 | SONICdream (self-released as Slushii & sapientdream) | Transformation and manga-inspired narratives with eclectic electronic fusions; hailed for its four-year development process, blending visual storytelling and emotive sound design in a genre-defying manner.[66][67][9][50] |
Extended plays and singles
Slushii's extended plays represent pivotal moments in his discography, showcasing his evolution from early future bass experiments to genre-blending reinventions. His debut EP, Brain Freeze (2016), marked his initial foray into professional releases as a self-released project featuring seven tracks that blended dubstep, future bass, and trap elements, serving as a foundational showcase of his playful, high-energy sound.[16] Later EPs like Watch Yo Back (2019, Monstercat) and Operation: Overload (2025) further highlighted his growth, with the latter comprising eight tracks that explored dubstep, future bass, EDM, ambient, and hip-hop influences, positioning it as a bold return following a creative hiatus.[70] Overall, Slushii has released three EPs alongside over 16 singles, contributing to streaming milestones such as exceeding 750 million total Spotify streams across his catalog.[71] Key singles have often propelled career breakthroughs, with "Emptiness" (2016) serving as his Monstercat debut and lead track that introduced his signature melodic dubstep style, amassing millions of streams and establishing his breakthrough presence in the EDM scene. "Catch Me" (2017) followed as an independent single that emphasized uplifting future bass drops, reinforcing his rising popularity through viral YouTube plays.[72] The collaboration "Twinbow" with Marshmello (2017) fused their styles in a high-octane trap track, peaking at notable chart positions on electronic music platforms and highlighting Slushii's ability to co-produce with major artists.[23] In the 2020s, singles like "All I Need" (2020, feat. Aviella) became a cornerstone, serving as the soundtrack for Rocket League's intro and achieving over 52 million Spotify streams as Slushii's most-streamed original track to date, underscoring his mainstream gaming crossover impact.[71][64] More recently, "It's Not Over (Til It's Over)" (2025) led the Operation: Overload EP with its anthemic EDM build-ups, signaling a refreshed creative phase.[70] "Past Lives" (2023, with sapientdream) exploded virally, inspiring the sci-fi webcomic Sapient Dream on WEBTOON, where it integrates as a thematic soundtrack episode by episode.[73]| Extended Play | Release Year | Label | Tracks | Notable Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brain Freeze | 2016 | Self-released | 7 | Debut project blending genres; foundational for early fanbase.[16] |
| Watch Yo Back | 2019 | Monstercat | 5 | Monstercat debut EP; aggressive bass-heavy tracks. |
| Operation: Overload | 2025 | Independent | 8 | Post-hiatus reinvention; genre-spanning evolution.[70][48] |