Jason Dayment Here
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.
His big break came in 2004. A low-budget horror director had lost his sound team two weeks before the final mix. Desperate, he hired the 26-year-old Dayment. The film was Hollow Point , a forgotten slasher flick. But the audio was revolutionary. Dayment had replaced the standard "stinger" chords (loud, abrupt orchestral hits) with the sound of a lubricated ratchet strap tightening slowly over a period of twelve seconds. The tension was unbearable. That director went on to recommend Dayment to a producer at Blumhouse. By 2010, Jason Dayment was in high demand, but on his own terms. He famously has a clause in his contract known internally as the "Dayment Rule": No temp music . He forbids directors from playing temporary placeholder scores during editing. jason dayment
For an industry hurtling toward AI-generated scores and algorithmic soundtracks, Jason Dayment remains stubbornly, gloriously analog. He is a reminder that in a world of sensory overload, the most radical thing you can do is ask the audience to listen closely. Instead, Dayment forces directors to watch their rough