Noah Himsa Review

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.

“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.”

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

That story, pieced together from oblique lyrics and rare interviews, is one of late-diagnosed neurodivergence, evangelical trauma, and the specific loneliness of the “cable modem years”—growing up with one foot in the physical world and the other in the neon glow of early internet forums, Flash animations, and 64kbps MP3s. Listen to his breakout track, “pray4me.mp3 (corrupted)” . It opens with a sample of a Windows XP error chime, which then pitches down into a sub-bass growl. Over this, himsa whisper-screams: “I built a cathedral out of dead hyperlinks / The choir is a dial-up tone.”

His production process mirrors this ethos. He composes primarily on a hacked Nintendo 3DS and a 2008 Dell laptop that he insists on keeping unplugged from the internet. “The latency, the glitches, the random crashes—that’s not a bug. That’s the collaborator.” He records vocals in a closet lined with egg-crate foam, but he deliberately introduces digital artifacts: bit-crushing, spectral folding, and what he calls “buffer underrun poetry.” Himsa—a name he says he borrowed from a

“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.”

The line goes quiet. The voice note ends. And somewhere, on a dying laptop in a dark room, noah himsa is building another cathedral out of broken code—one glitch at a time. On stage, he performs behind a veil of

“I killed Noah three times last year,” he types, then sends a voice note. The voice is low, tired, but sharp. “The first time was ego death. The second was a PR move. The third… the third was real.”