daine promo photo

daine

daine promo photo

Agent:
Natasha Khan Asrar

There is something volatile about Daine. Not chaotic for the sake of it, but combustible in the way only truly vulnerable artists can be. Emerging from Melbourne’s underground in the late 2010s, they have built a catalogue that fuses emo, electronic abrasion, celestial pop and digital hardcore into something both intimate and confrontational. It is music that feels diaristic yet widescreen, fragile yet deliberately weaponised.

Daine first drew attention with early singles like Picking Flowers before solidifying their voice on the 2021 EP Salt, which went on to win the Music Victoria Award for Best Pop Release. Since then, each project has widened the frame. Shapeless Mixtape and 2025’s I Want The Light To Swallow Me Whole pushed their sound into darker, more cinematic territory, created alongside collaborators including Lonelyspeck and Darcy Baylis. The result is a body of work that moves easily between club intensity and confession booth honesty.

International momentum followed naturally. Daine has performed sold out headline shows in Los Angeles and New York, toured Europe with yeule, played Tokyo, and supported artists including Charli XCX, 100 gecs, EDEN, Mallrat and Bring Me The Horizon. On stage, the songs rupture. Guitars swell, distortion bites, and crowds scream lyrics back with something close to devotion. It is less a performance than a collective purge.

In late 2025, Daine released the double single Make It Right / I Run My Hands Thru It via Pack Records in the United States, the first signal of a larger body of work unfolding across 2026. They are currently recording their debut album in Los Angeles, continuing to expand a sound that has always thrived on contradiction, tenderness and abrasion sharing the same breath. As of early 2026, Daine reaches close to 300,000 monthly listeners on Spotify, with a rapidly growing international audience.

Press support has been both local and global. NME called them “a future emo icon.” Pitchfork has highlighted the emotional intensity and genre fluidity of their music. The FADER positioned them as a defining voice within contemporary alternative culture, while The Guardian described their work as “healing and painful, like looking directly at a solar flare.” Across DAZED, i-D, Crack and DIY, Daine has been recognised not simply as a songwriter, but as an artist constructing a fully realised world.

As an artist living with disability, including POTS and Autism, Daine also speaks openly about accessibility within live music and has been announced for Ability Fest, Australia’s fully inclusive and accessible music festival. Advocacy sits naturally alongside their practice, not as branding, but as lived experience.

Entering 2026, Daine stands in that rare space where cult devotion begins to tip toward scale. The rooms are getting bigger. The songs are getting sharper. The emotional stakes remain intact. What started as bedroom confession now feels architectural. And through it all, Daine has resisted smoothing out the edges. They remain restless, self interrogating, and unmistakably their own.



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