This band are streaming an album of total silence on Spotify

LA musicians Vulfpeck have done a John Cage and released Sleepify to fund an upcoming tour

Over the past year, Spotify has been at the forefront of conversation in the music world, with giants such as David Byrne and Thom Yorke speaking out against the unfair payment infrastructures at the online streaming service.

However, an LA band called Vulfpeck have manipulated the royalties system to their advantage and released what they believe to be "the quietest album ever recorded". As in, it's an album of total silence. 

The concept behind Sleepify is simple. On the record there are 10 short tracks of silence, so you can "listen" to it in all its glory while you sleep. The band reckons that people can stream the 376-second album enough times during an eight-hour sleep period to earn them $4 in royalties, in turn funding their US tour. Even though the album is just silence, they're particular about how it's listened to – under no circumstances should Sleepify be shuffled.

Streaming darklords Spotify are taking it all in good grace though. "This is a clever stunt, but we prefer Vulfpeck's earlier albums," a Spotify spokesperson told Digiday.

The piece is reminiscent of experiment composer John Cage's legendary work "4'33", which consists of a pianist simply going to the piano and not hitting any keys, with conductor, orchestra and audience all in tow.

You can watch Vulfpeck explain how it all works here: 

You can stream Sleepify below and help Vulfpeck realise their ambition of touring across the US. Which one's your favourite track?

Read Next
The Autumn 2025 Issue‘I’m the underground rap princess’: Cortisa Star and OPIA go head-to-head

From rural Delaware to the Met Gala in a matter of months, hip hop’s hottest new diva Cortisa Star talks to fashion disruptors Opia about furry conventions, squat raves, and becoming the rap star she was born to be

Read Now

ListsRobyn’s 5 best tracks, ranked

In honour of her seminal self-titled album being reissued 20 years after its initial release, we look back at the era-defining career of the Swedish popstar

Read Now

PlaylistListen to our ‘uncensored’ Dazed Autumn 2025 playlist

Dazed travelled from Walthamstow Wetlands to Tiananmen Square to meet the most outspoken artists for our Autumn 2025 Issue. Here are the sounds of Dazed Autumn

Read Now

What Went DownJameson Distilled Sounds Year Two was bigger and better than ever

The music programme brought young musicians from across the globe to Ireland, spearheaded by Grammy Award-winning artist Anderson .Paak

Read Now