Profetik Talks ‘The Waking’ as his five-year return opens a darker, cinematic chapter with Roniit Profetik recently marked his return with ‘The Waking’ featuring Roniit, a release that introduces a darker, more cinematic direction after several years away from releasing music. During that time, he continued refining his sound and rebuilding his creative identity, moving toward a style that balances
techno" class="text-primary hover:underline font-medium" data-entity-link="genre">Melodic Techno with undertones of Melodic
House. In this interview, Profetik talks about the process behind ‘The Waking’, the collaboration with Roniit, and the mindset behind this new chapter. What’s the reception been like for ‘The Waking’ so far? The response has been overwhelming, honestly. This is a different sound from what I was making five years ago, and it is something much darker, more cinematic, built for bigger stages. So, there was real uncertainty going into this. You never know how people are going to react when you come back sounding like a different artist. But the reception from listeners has been incredible and I love seeing their messages and responses. People are connecting with it in a way that tells me the evolution was the right call. *]:pointer-events-auto R6Vx5W_threadScrollVars scroll-mb-[calc(var(--scroll-root-safe-area-inset-bottom,0px)+var(--thread-response-height))] scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id="request-6a029dc2-a358-83ec-9b17-884e929939be-11" data-turn-id-container="request-6a029dc2-a358-83ec-9b17-884e929939be-11" data-testid="conversation-turn-18" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn="assistant"> After stepping back for five years, what made you feel ready to return and why was ‘The Waking’ the right track to mark that moment? I went five years without releasing a single track. Not because I stopped making music. I never stopped. I just wasn’t ready. The sound wasn’t there yet. And I’d rather disappear than put out something I don’t believe in. So, I kept writing, experimenting, evolving the sound without any pressure to put it out. At some point I realized the music had grown past where I left off and it deserved to be heard. Protoculture heard an early version, and his reaction was a turning point. When someone whose ear you trust that much tells you it’s ready, you listen. ‘The Waking’ felt right as the first release because it captures that transition. It is dark and atmospheric but there is an emotional depth to it that reflects where I am now as a producer. It felt like the most honest reintroduction I could make. This release signals a shift in your direction. What elements of the track would you say define your renewed sound? The biggest shift is in how I approach building a world inside a track. The foundation starts with a driving bassline. Not rolling, not bouncy. Driving. Something that locks you in and doesn’t let go. On top of that, the melodic elements come from unexpected places. I’m not just layering synths. In ‘The Waking,’ the sitar carries a lot of the melodic weight, and it brings out this atmospheric quality that a standard synth lead never could. Then Roniit‘s vocals added another dimension entirely. Her voice is raw and ethereal at the same time, and it gave the track this haunting power that I couldn’t have created with production alone. And then underneath all of it, there are these atmospheric layers that pull you into the scene. That’s what I’m after now. I want the listener to feel like they’ve been transported somewhere. Not just hearing a track but being inside it. *]:pointer-events-auto R6Vx5W_threadScrollVars scroll-mb-[calc(var(--scroll-root-safe-area-inset-bottom,0px)+var(--thread-response-height))] scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id="request-6a029dc2-a358-83ec-9b17-884e929939be-13" data-turn-id-container="request-6a029dc2-a358-83ec-9b17-884e929939be-13" data-testid="conversation-turn-22" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn="assistant"> Take us inside the studio for ‘The Waking,’ what was the starting point for the track? The starting point was an image. Exiles wandering through the desert. Not a glamorous scene. It is a picture of struggle and resilience, people pushing forward through something vast and unforgiving. I built the track around that feeling. The sitar, the atmospheric layers, the driving bassline. Everything was in service of putting the listener in that landscape. When Roniit came in with her vocal, she brought this element of empowerment that I hadn’t planned for but immediately recognized as the missing piece. Her interpretation spoke to the resilience side of the story in a way that elevated the whole track. It turned it from something heavy and dark into something powerful and defiant. The track carries a strong cinematic and atmospheric quality. How did you build that sense of narrative within the production? I try to pull as much influence as I can from outside the genre I work in. Hans Zimmer and Howard Sho