Firefliez
“Without darkness there is no light — and without silence there is no sound.”
DJ Peter Antal was two years deep into depression when a friend handed him a way out — not therapy, not medication, but a remix competition for a LAUV track. That act of creative rescue became the origin story of Firefliez, the electronic duo Peter now shares with DJ Ferx (Ferenc Bekefi), and the unlikely birthplace of Darklight Pop: a genre they invented from scratch to hold the emotional experiences that existing music couldn’t quite reach.
Since forming in the summer of 2025, Firefliez have built a catalog of roughly 60–70 songs around a single unifying idea — that darkness and light aren’t opposites to be chosen between, but forces to be held at the same time. Depression, anxiety, ADHD, loneliness: not hidden from, but scored, produced, and sung directly at. We sat down with Peter and Ferenc to find out how you build a genre out of a mental health crisis — and why they think that’s exactly where music should be going.
Music became something healing for us. We believe you can only truly help people if you have experienced those emotions yourself. Otherwise, you are only scratching the surface.— Firefliez
That emotional duality isn’t just a concept — it shapes the DNA of how they write, produce, and perform. Peter brings the human instability; Ferenc builds the architecture that holds it.
That line — “without darkness there is no light, and without silence there is no sound” — isn’t just a production philosophy. It’s the closest thing Firefliez has to a manifesto. Everything else builds outward from it.
Darkness and light complete each other — without darkness there is no light, and without silence there is no sound.— DJ Ferx (Ferenc Bekefi), Firefliez
The shift they’re describing is structural — not a fade or a build, but a rupture. Something snaps. And that’s the moment they’re after every time.
The idea of techniques that give the artists themselves chills while creating is notable — it points to something raw in the process, not just the product.
Someone shared that our song “Home Back Again” helped them during periods of depression and bipolar struggles. That showed us that the music truly works emotionally and can help people heal.— Firefliez
What Firefliez are building is less a discography than a body of evidence — proof that music can meet people in the places most songs won’t go. The fact that it started with one friend pulling another out of a two-year depression, through a remix competition for a pop song, is either deeply unlikely or completely inevitable. Sixty-plus songs in, and with “Summertime” ahead, they’re not slowing down. They don’t seem interested in the surface. They never were.







