Yet, actors beg to work with him. "He listens to dialogue like a musician listens to a cello," said actress Priya Kaur, star of Silent Loop . "He told me that my voice has a 'woody resonance' around 250 hertz. He boosted that frequency. He didn't just record my voice; he sculpted it." As of 2026, Jason Dayment has four Academy Awards for Best Sound Mixing and one Special Achievement Award for "expanding the emotional vocabulary of cinema." He is currently working on his most controversial project yet: a silent film. Not a film with a score, but a truly silent film, released only with a live orchestral foley performance.
Instead, Dayment forces directors to watch their rough cuts in total silence. He then layers in what he calls "found foley"—sounds recorded not in a studio, but in the actual locations where the film was shot, months after the crew left. jason dayment
For the 2018 sci-fi thriller Axiom , Dayment flew back to the abandoned mining town in New Mexico where the film was shot. He spent three days recording the wind passing through rusted elevator shafts and the subsonic hum of a decommissioned power generator. He mixed these into the film’s "silent" spacewalk scene. The result was a deep, unsettling drone that audiences felt in their chests rather than heard with their ears. Dayment’s magnum opus—and the film that finally brought him public attention—was the 2022 psychological horror film Silent Loop . The premise was a nightmare for a sound designer: a protagonist who goes deaf halfway through the movie. Yet, actors beg to work with him
To the casual moviegoer, Dayment is a ghost. To the sound designers, Foley artists, and re-recording mixers who have worked alongside him, he is the "Sculptor of Silence"—the man who understands that what you don’t hear is often more terrifying than what you do. Born in Portland, Oregon, in 1978, Dayment didn’t dream of standing behind a camera. He dreamed of frequency. As a teenager in the early 90s, he was obsessed with the analog warmth of tape hiss. While his friends argued over Nirvana vs. Pearl Jam, Jason was dissecting the production of Pink Floyd’s The Wall , isolating the sound of a ringing telephone or the thud of a boot on a hollow floor. He boosted that frequency
Most sound designers would have simply turned down the volume. Dayment did the opposite. He created a "subjective soundscape." When the protagonist loses her hearing, Dayment didn't remove the audio; he ruptured it.
"It’s the ultimate test," he says. "Can you tell a story using only the sound of a jacket zipper, a door closing, and a glass of water vibrating? I think you can."
After a brief, unhappy stint at a traditional film school, he dropped out to work at a local radio station. "I realized I hated telling stories with pictures," he once said in a rare 2015 interview with Sound on Screen magazine. "Pictures lie. Sound tells the truth. A shaky camera is a style. Shaky audio is just a mistake."