To say you “listen” to noah himsa is inaccurate. You survive him. His music arrives not as a waveform but as a glitch in reality: 808s that distort into digital shrapnel, melodies that sound like lullabies sung through a broken Speak & Spell, and lyrics that vacillate between nihilistic bravado and a whisper-quiet plea for someone to stay.
Critics have struggled to categorize him. Pitchfork called his 2023 mixtape scrapyard_angel “a beautiful migraine.” Anthony Fantano described him as “what happens when you raise a JPEGMAFIA fan on a diet of early Owl City and mid-2000s screamo.” Himsa himself rejects the labels.
“I don’t believe in the God they sold me,” he says. “But I believe in the shape of worship. The ritual. The kneeling. The surrender. I just replaced the altar with a DAW and the communion wafer with a low-pass filter.”
That connection is visceral. At a recent show in a Brooklyn warehouse, I watched a teenager sob during —a four-minute track that is little more than a distorted piano loop and himsa repeating “I’m trying to be soft but the world keeps asking for shrapnel” until his voice cracks. After the set, the teenager approached the stage. Himsa, still hidden behind the static veil, reached down and placed a single cracked guitar pick in their palm. No words. Just a broken thing, shared. The Future Is a Corrupted File So what comes next? Rumors swirl of a full-length LP titled $u1c1d3_notes_pt._2 (a nod to Kurt Cobain, another fractured artist from the Pacific Northwest’s spiritual opposite). Himsa will only say this: “I’m learning to let the soft parts live. It’s harder than the noise.” noah himsa
“There’s no money in it,” admits himsa. “I made $47 from streaming last month. But that’s not the point. The point is that someone in Tulsa or Newcastle or rural Japan hears that broken 808 and thinks, ‘Oh. Someone else’s brain works like this. I’m not alone.’”
The fallout was spectacular. He describes coming out as queer at 17, being sent to a “residential program,” and spending his 18th birthday in a motel parking lot with nothing but a backpack and a cracked iPod Nano loaded with The Money Store and Crimson by Alkaline Trio.
That tension is everywhere in his music. builds from a Gregorian chant sample into a breakcore meltdown, with himsa howling, “You said ‘fearfully and wonderfully made’ / I said ‘have you seen the error log?’” It is, simultaneously, a deconstruction of faith and a desperate, bleeding prayer. The Scene That Hides in Plain Sight Despite his solitary persona, noah himsa is not an island. He is part of a loose collective of producers and visual artists called CRT//CLUB —a rotating roster of digital natives who communicate almost exclusively through Discord and private SoundCloud playlists. Members include the deconstructed club producer angelhair.exe , the noise-pop artist wifisfuneral2 , and the 3D animator rendered.rat . To say you “listen” to noah himsa is inaccurate
“When you show your face, people decide who you are before the first note drops,” he explains. “They see a white guy from the Midwest and think they know the story. But the story isn’t in my face. It’s in the feedback.”
“That’s the real me,” he says. “Just scared. Just humming. Trying to remember that even corrupted files can be recovered if you don’t write over them too fast.”
Over the last three years, the mysterious producer/vocalist (who goes by he/they and refuses to show his face in promotional material) has cultivated a cult following that spans the dying embers of SoundCloud’s underground and the algorithmic chaos of Spotify’s hyperpop playlists. But to reduce noah himsa to a genre is to miss the point entirely. This is a project about the fracture —the space between who we are online, who we are in the dark, and who we become when the two can no longer be separated. Our interview—conducted over an encrypted messaging app, his voice modulated just enough to strip away identifiable cadence—begins with a question about identity. Critics have struggled to categorize him
Himsa—a name he says he borrowed from a Sanskrit term for non-harm , chosen ironically for music that often feels like a controlled demolition—refuses to play the celebrity game. There are no press photos. His album art is usually glitched-out frames from old DVDs or corrupted JPEGs of suburban basements. On stage, he performs behind a veil of projector static, his silhouette thrashing like a marionette whose strings have been cut.
“Perfection is a lie of the corporate world,” he says. “A glitch is a moment where the machine tells you the truth about itself. I want my voice to sound like it’s coming from the other side of a failing hard drive. Because emotionally? It is.” Perhaps the most arresting element of noah himsa’s work is its unexpected spiritual depth. Tracks like “sabbath.exe has stopped working” and “throne of splinters” weave Christian iconography with coding terminology. Himsa grew up in a strict evangelical household in rural Indiana, where “the only music allowed was hymns and, weirdly, the Chronic 2001 instrumental album because my dad didn’t know there were no words.”
“Hyperpop is dead,” he says flatly. “It became a costume. We’re in the post-corruption phase now. I’m not making music for the club. I’m making music for the three hours between 2 AM and 5 AM when you’re refreshing your ex’s Instagram and your chest feels like it’s full of broken glass.”
Together, they’ve built a micro-economy. They sell “corrupted” merch (T-shirts with glitched-out barcodes that don’t scan, USB drives pre-loaded with data rot). They release music on VHS tapes and floppy disks. Their live shows—held in DIY spaces, basements, and once an abandoned Blockbuster in Ohio—are less concerts than exorcisms.