Description
#crave #vinyl #vinylrecords
Jonathan Katsav, a creative force in the music world for over two decades, continues to challenge the confines of conventional rap. Through his Crave project, he delves deep into the southern legacy of Memphis and Houston, creating sounds that resonate as much with the chaotic dissonance of Merzbow as with the hypnotic rhymes of Tommy Wright III.
Katsav, who has also created waves under aliases like Lieu Noir, Sniper Bait, and Soul Collector, finds his most compelling voice as Crave. His latest offering, “Inner War Delirium”, stands as a testament to his expansive and cinematic vision. Each track unfolds like a scene from an intricate film, drawing inspiration from real-life experiences and invoking a diverse range of emotions and characters.
The producer’s mastery is evident in how he seamlessly blends contrasting elements: somber narrators and aggressive vocal styles, pulsating trap synths bathed in neon lights, and haunting choirs set against a backdrop of distorted kicks and submerged industrial soundscapes.
The opening track, ‘PHYLLIS’, pulls listeners into an eerie realm of twisted field recordings and buzzing static, later jolting them with jagged synths and vocals that dance menacingly between rap and grindcore. It’s a daring introduction to Katsav’s audacious sonic landscape.
“Inner War Delirium” beautifully captures the interplay between shadow and light, life and demise. Its tracks weave a narrative, blurring the lines between intoxicated hip-hop beats and the abrasive noise of a chainsaw.
Katsav’s auditory artistry is more than mere sound – it’s a visceral experience. He curates these audioscapes like a filmmaker, cutting and piecing together scenes, drawing us into the labyrinth of his life. In the album’s concluding track, listeners are thrust into a visceral scene: confined in the trunk of a car, rain pelting down, with the distant echoes of the album as the only connection to the outside world. It’s a profound moment, as Katsav turns the spotlight on the listeners, urging them to confront their own complex realities.
In “Inner War Delirium”, Crave doesn’t just tell a story; he invites everyone to be a part of it, making it an immersive odyssey worth undertaking.