Ineska Winter Transforms Heartbreak Into Euphoria With Future-Pop Anthem “DejaVu Bez Snu”
Ineska Winter has emerged from her creative chrysalis with “DejaVu Bez Snu,” a searingly honest yet irresistibly danceable single that marks her most compelling artistic statement to date. Released on December 19, 2025, the track represents far more than just another addition to the Polish pop landscape. It’s a declaration of independence wrapped in pulsating electronic silk, a manifesto of self-reclamation disguised as a club banger that demands both your attention and your dancing shoes.
What makes this release particularly significant is the production pedigree behind it. Jakub Liszko, the Polish producer who earned a Grammy nomination for his work on Usher’s album “Coming Home,” has crafted a sonic foundation that feels simultaneously intimate and arena-ready. His involvement elevates “DejaVu Bez Snu” beyond regional boundaries, infusing it with the kind of global production sophistication that translates across cultures while maintaining the track’s deeply personal core. The result is a composition that could soundtrack a sunrise set at Burning Man just as easily as it could dominate New Year’s Eve playlists, which it has already begun to do.
The genius of “DejaVu Bez Snu” lies in its deliberate contradiction. The subject matter is heavy, exploring the psychological quicksand of toxic relationships and the exhausting cycle of false promises and hollow returns. Yet the sonic delivery is pure liberation energy, a future-pop confection that marries club euphoria with atmospheric R&B sensibilities. This juxtaposition isn’t accidental; it’s the entire point. Ineska understands that sometimes the most powerful way to process pain is to dance through it, to transform the weight of difficult experiences into kinetic release.
Lyrically, the track operates as a visceral chronicle of emotional entrapment. The narrative voice finds itself caught in a repetitive loop of manipulation, where declarations of love evaporate into absence, where eyes communicate betrayal more eloquently than words ever could. The magnetic pull toward someone who consistently inflicts harm becomes the song’s central tension, captured in imagery that’s both specific and universally recognizable. The titular déjà vu represents those sleepless nights where the same toxic patterns replay endlessly, where cold promises freeze the spirit even as they somehow maintain their hypnotic allure.
The metaphorical language throughout the composition is particularly striking. The comparison of this pull to a magnet that simultaneously attracts and burns speaks to the paradoxical nature of destructive attachments. The acknowledgment that this dynamic isn’t love but rather a trap, that sweet words function merely as masks concealing manipulation, demonstrates a clarity of vision that makes the continued return all the more poignant. There’s brutal honesty in admitting that even when recognizing the toxicity, even when declaring enough is enough a thousand times over, the gravitational force remains powerful enough to draw one back.
Yet beneath this narrative of cyclical return lies the song’s ultimate message of breaking free. The very act of articulating these patterns, of naming them and examining them within a framework of celebration and dance, becomes a form of exorcism. Ineska has transformed her own experiences into a universal anthem for anyone who’s ever found themselves trapped in emotional déjà vu, offering not just commiseration but a pathway toward liberation through acknowledgment and ultimately, through movement.
The musical architecture supporting these lyrics is where Liszko’s production expertise truly shines. The electronic foundation pulses with club-ready momentum while expansive synthesizers create atmospheric depth, preventing the track from feeling one-dimensional. Ineska’s vocals navigate this sonic landscape with sensual confidence, delivering lines with a conversational intimacy that makes even the most stylized moments feel genuinely personal. The chorus achieves that rare quality of being both instantly memorable and emotionally resonant, a hook that lodges in your consciousness while carrying genuine weight.

Ineska Winter herself brings a multidisciplinary artistry to this project that extends far beyond conventional pop musicianship. Her training at Egurrola Dance Studio under the guidance of renowned choreographer Agustin Egurrola means every stage moment is choreographed with intentionality. Her work with respected vocal coaches Maciej Moszyński and Agnieszka Szewczyk, both of whom have competed at the highest levels of Polish music competition, has refined her instrument to convey nuance and power in equal measure. Her modeling background and success in pageantry, including her Miss Zduńska Wola 2013 title and finalist positions in Miss Open Hair 2014 and Miss Polonia 2015, contributes to her commanding visual presence.
This convergence of skills has birthed what Ineska describes as “club couture,” a aesthetic philosophy where high fashion sensibility meets uninhibited dancefloor energy, where the futuristic visual vocabulary of Burning Man culture merges with sophisticated pop songcraft. Her performances transcend typical concert experiences, becoming multi-sensory spectacles that engage audiences on visual, sonic, and kinetic levels simultaneously.
The strategic pause she took before releasing “DejaVu Bez Snu” has clearly paid dividends. There’s a maturity and confidence radiating from this single that suggests an artist who has found her voice rather than merely searching for it. Her acknowledgment that musical identity requires time to deepen, like wine gaining complexity through patience, reveals an understanding that authentic artistry cannot be rushed or manufactured.
“DejaVu Bez Snu” positions Ineska Winter not as a promising newcomer but as a fully realized artist ready to claim her space on both domestic and international stages. The track’s inclusion on New Year’s Eve hit lists and its reception as one of the most intriguing Polish releases closing out the year validates this bold artistic evolution. This is music that refuses to choose between substance and accessibility, between introspection and celebration, between personal catharsis and collective euphoria. It’s all of these things at once, and that ambitious multiplicity is precisely what makes it essential listening.

In this exclusive interview, Ineska takes us behind the scenes of her transformation. From the dust of Burning Man to the precise studio sessions with a world class producer, she reveals how she found the courage to stop being “correct” and started being real.
Read on to discover how Ineska Winter is turning a new page and why this chapter is one you cannot ignore. Learn more about Ineska Winter: linktr.ee/Ineska.Winter
- EDMecho: “DejaVu Bez Snu” sounds like a turning point in your career. What changed within you to make this “new chapter” possible?
Ineska Winter: This track was not born out of impulse. It came from silence and reflection. I realized that artistic maturity is not about constant action but about the ability to stop, listen to yourself, and figure out what comes next. During my break, I stopped thinking about market expectations and started thinking about the truth. I asked myself if I wanted to be just “correct” or truly authentic. This “new chapter” was only possible once I dared to be uncompromising. “DejaVu Bez Snu” is the moment I stopped being afraid of my own voice, both literally and metaphorically.
- EDMecho: The track is about breaking free from a toxic emotional loop, yet it is very danceable. Why choose club energy instead of melancholy?
Ineska Winter: Because to me, true liberation does not sound sad. It pulses with energy. Melancholy often closes things off, whereas I wanted to open up space. The club beat symbolizes that moment when you regain control over your body, your emotions, and your life. Dance becomes a form of therapy here rather than an escape. I wanted people to be able to dance to a story that is difficult but ends in strength. This is not a song about suffering. It is a song about walking out of it. It is hard to leave a toxic relationship because it is so addictive. However, when you finally get out, you have to celebrate it because it means life is opening up again.
- EDMecho: What does “Déjà vu bez snu” symbolize for you emotionally?
Ineska Winter: “Deja Vu Bez Snu” represents a state of emotional limbo where everything seems familiar but simultaneously exhausting. It is that moment when you keep repeating the same patterns, even though you know how they end and that they are bad for you. The “lack of sleep” signifies a lack of regeneration and a lack of a new beginning. It is an emotional fatigue that stops you from moving forward. It is a trap that is hard to escape despite knowing it is wrong and unhealthy. The title is like a warning. It is a signal that you need to wake up. For me, it symbolizes the decision to break the cycle and reclaim yourself.
- EDMecho: Why was involving your fans in the premiere and the music video so important?
Ineska Winter: Because this song only really comes alive when it connects with people. So many people can identify with it. Plus, my fans are part of my journey as they have seen the moments of searching, the doubt, and the growth. I did not want this breakthrough moment to be locked away in a studio or on a set. I wanted it to happen for real. The energy of the audience gave the story authenticity. It was a shared ritual. It was not just a premiere but an experience. That is exactly how I envision this new era. We are doing it together rather than from a distance.
- EDMecho: Are your concerts a performance, a ritual, or an immersive experience?
Ineska Winter: I identify most with the concept of an immersive experience with elements of a ritual. For me, a concert is not just about recreating songs. It is about going through an emotional story. The lights, movement, fashion, dance, emotions, and sound all form one single organism. I want the audience to not just listen but to feel and participate. There is something primal about it. It is shared energy, transformation, and cleansing. The stage for me is a space for transformation rather than just presentation.
- EDMecho: What aspect of Burning Man culture resonates most with your artistic identity?
Ineska Winter: What resonates most is the freedom to be yourself without filters. Burning Man is a space where you do not have to prove anything. You can simply exist and create. The temporality and intensity of the experiences are also very close to my heart. It is art that happens in the “here and now” without calculation. That world taught me visual and emotional courage. I am bringing that philosophy to the stage by creating moments instead of products.
- EDMecho: What did your collaboration with Jakub Liszko teach you?
Ineska Winter: How to work at the highest level without losing your soul. Jakub showed me just how important detail and consistency of vision are. Every production decision was conscious and never accidental. I learned to think of a track as a holistic experience rather than just a song. This collaboration gave me the feeling that my sound can compete globally. That was incredibly empowering.
- EDMecho: What “flavor notes” have finally appeared in your music?
Ineska Winter: There is a newfound depth and a calmness in the decisions. There are darker tones but also more light. The electronics have become more sensual, and the emotions more distinct. I have stopped rushing and trying to prove myself. The flavor is intense but mature. It does not scream but rather resonates. This is the moment where I feel I truly know who I am as an artist.
- EDMecho: How much of the track is your real life, and how much is artistic transformation?
Ineska Winter: Emotionally, it is a very personal track. It grows out of my experiences and decisions. However, the form is a conscious transformation so that the story can become universal. I am not recounting a specific relationship but an emotional state. Thanks to that, everyone can find themselves in it. Art allows me to process my privacy into something shared. That is exactly where I see its purpose.
- EDMecho: What comes first: sound, movement, or image?
Ineska Winter: I always start with an emotion which then takes the form of sound. When I hear the first sounds, my body reacts on its own so the movement is natural. The image and fashion appear as a consequence of the energy of the track. I think about music spatially and scenically. For me, a song does not exist without a vision. All the elements are born from a single impulse.

- EDMecho: How has dance and body awareness influenced your singing and performances?
Ineska Winter: Dance taught me control but also how to trust my body. I know how to work with breath and tension which directly impacts my vocals. Sometimes it is a tough challenge, especially during major performances, but after a moment everything becomes exactly how I want it to be. Because of this, my performances are cohesive and intense. The body and voice tell the same story. It gives me immense freedom on stage. I cannot imagine performing without dance.
- EDMecho: How do fashion and music fuel each other for you?
Ineska Winter: For me, fashion is the initial emotional message. Before you hear a sound, you see a story. The styling helps me step into the role and the energy of the track. In turn, the music gives the fashion meaning and movement. It is a dialogue where one inspires the other. In “club couture,” it is not about trends. It is about expressing identity.
- EDMecho: How has your relationship with your voice changed?
Ineska Winter: I went from a relationship based on total control to one based on trust. Technique gave me safety, but the real change came when I allowed myself to feel. My voice became more human and less perfect. I stopped being afraid of silence and delicacy. Today I treat my vocals as a tool for truth rather than for showing off. That is a huge change.
- EDMecho: Is dancing to a song born of pain an act of closure or victory?
Ineska Winter: It is an absolute victory. The pain has been processed into something that gives people joy and energy. It is proof that emotions do not have to destroy us. They can strengthen us. Seeing people dance to this song makes me feel the purpose of the entire journey. That is the moment the story stops hurting. All that is left is strength.
- EDMecho: What does female power mean to you in the years 2025 and 2026?
Ineska Winter: Female power is self awareness and being aligned with yourself. It is the ability to say “no” without guilt. It is combining sensitivity with boundaries. In 2025 and 2026, I see femininity as a space of freedom rather than definitions. It is being yourself without explaining yourself. It is the courage to walk your own path.
- EDMecho: What did the break teach you that success would not have?
Ineska Winter: The break taught me silence and patience. Success often drowns out the truth about yourself because you lose yourself in it. Away from the stage, I could see what really matters to me. I learned to trust the process rather than the pressure of time. That break was an investment in quality instead of a loss. Without it, this comeback would not be so conscious.
- EDMecho: Were you afraid of being this honest in your music?
Ineska Winter: Yes, because honesty always carries the risk of rejection. But I was even more afraid of creating something hollow. At a certain point, I realized that wearing masks is more exhausting than the truth. Authenticity became my foundation. If someone does not identify with it, that is okay. This music is for those who feel the same way.
- EDMecho: Do you feel pressure representing Polish pop globally?
Ineska Winter: I do not feel pressure. I feel responsibility. The Polish scene is becoming increasingly bold and diverse. I want to be its modern voice rather than a copy of foreign trends. I think globally, but I do not give up my own identity. That combination creates authenticity. Authenticity always resonates the strongest.
- EDMecho: What should someone understand about you in the first three minutes of the track?
Ineska Winter: That I am a conscious artist who is not afraid of contrasts. That I combine emotion with energy and body with voice. I would want them to feel the truth instead of a pose. I want them to understand that this music is an experience and not background noise. If they stay longer, it means we resonate.
- EDMecho: What can listeners expect next?
Ineska Winter: Even greater intensity and courage. The emotions will be deeper because I am no longer running from the truth. Visually, I am heading toward even more futuristic and sensual worlds. Musically, this is just the beginning of this future pop evolution. This chapter is an opening rather than a finale. The most interesting part is just beginning.
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