


Synergy is a Russian drum and bass producer duo: Evgenii Zverev and Igor Vitte. Their work sits between drum and bass and liquid/ melodic strands of the sound — early recognition came via neurofunk-style releases, later material moves toward melodic and electronic-influenced drum & bass. Members are based in Ekaterinburg and Saint Petersburg; some listings note they have spent time based in France.
They originally released under the moniker Segment & Concept Vision before adopting the Synergy name. As a production duo they handle sound design, arrangement and release strategy together; credits and collaborations list them jointly on tracks and label releases rather than as solo projects.
Stylistically their early output is aligned with neurofunk: tight, processed drum programming, sculpted and modulated bass patches, and focused midrange clarity that favours movement and automation in the low end. Their later material pushes melodic and electronic elements — greater use of layered pads, vocal features and cleaner, more weathered synth textures consistent with liquid-influenced DnB. The single “Satellites” (ft. flowanastasia) exemplifies their move toward vocal-led, melodic arrangements, while “Made Of Glass” (with Skylark) is a named collaboration that sits within their more melodic phase.
Synergy’s catalogue includes releases on labels such as Blackout, Eatbrain, NEU, Dividid and Pilot. Those label credits reflect the duo’s crossover from heavier, tech-driven releases into more melodic and electronically textured drum & bass. They have worked with vocalists and fellow producers on specific tracks (notably flowanastasia and Skylark) and their releases appear under the Synergy name following the Segment & Concept Vision era.
Public statements listing direct artistic influences are limited; what is documented is the stylistic movement from neurofunk-oriented production toward melodic, electronic-tinged DnB and liquid textures. For listeners, that shift is traceable across the credited releases and the named collaborations on “Satellites” and “Made Of Glass.”
The duo remain identified with Ekaterinburg and Saint Petersburg and have both Russian and some France-based listings in public sources, while their recorded output preserves the transition from neurofunk sound design to a more melodic, vocal-forward drum & bass approach.
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