The noise that started it all

Part of the culture, not above it

Becomming Karda

Karda was never meant to be quiet. From the moment he could move, he was making noise — with his mouth, with sticks, with anything that would vibrate. His mother couldn’t stop him. She tried, but honestly, she didn’t stand a chance. Music didn’t just entertain him; it swallowed him whole. He listened to everything, and he means everything. But the sounds that stuck to his bones came from the old legends — Queen, Elvis Presley, Elton John. Even as a kid, something in their rawness felt like truth.


At eight years old, Karda discovered EDM — at least, that’s how friends and family tell the story. As if it happened by accident. But the truth is simpler: he heard it once and felt something snap into place. He fucking loved it. The energy, the rebellion, the electricity — it felt like someone had handed him a map to a place he already knew. From then on, he couldn’t stop listening. Every beat, every synth, every kick led him deeper.


When he was thirteen, Karda decided he needed his own tools. So he worked for his uncle for a year — sweaty days, long hours, saving every bit he could. And when he finally had enough, he bought his first set of speakers and FL Studio. That moment felt like unlocking a new version of himself. He didn’t know what he was doing, but he knew exactly why he was doing it:

because he had a need to express something he couldn’t say out loud.


Even now, that urge hasn’t faded. If anything, it’s louder.



People see Karda today and think it all happened fast, but the truth is very different. It took him ten years to understand what he wanted from music — ten years to figure out who he was as an artist, to connect all the loose pieces, and to break the creative rules that kept him stuck. He tried different paths, including logo design, chef school, building an e-commerce business, and more. He quit them, came back to music, quit again, and always returned. It was as if the universe kept dragging him back to one truth: this is who you are. And still, for years, he didn’t know how to express it the right way. Not until everything finally aligned.


Karda is the part of him that finally broke free. The rebel, the outlaw, the creative weirdo. The version of himself that doesn’t care about boxes, genres, rules, or expectations. He believes freedom doesn’t come from playing it safe — it comes from breaking things open. Karda is Sieb, amplified. Bigger, louder, more expressive, more raw. A mirror reflecting everything he always felt but never dared to show.


Today, Karda’s sound is a fusion of everything that shaped him: underground culture, nostalgia, groove, 909s, 80s and 90s hip-hop, old house, and tech house. Influences include Run DMC, Beastie Boys, Technotronic, and Armand Van Helden — artists and sounds that raised him without him even realizing it. The result is an underground nostalgic sound in a new jacket. Unpolished, real, minimal, groovy. Raw energy in its purest form. Like the past and the future shaking hands.



People see Karda today and think it all happened fast, but the truth is very different. It took him ten years to understand what he wanted from music — ten years to figure out who he was as an artist, to connect all the loose pieces, and to break the creative rules that kept him stuck. He tried different paths, including logo design, chef school, building an e-commerce business, and more. He quit them, came back to music, quit again, and always returned. It was as if the universe kept dragging him back to one truth: this is who you are. And still, for years, he didn’t know how to express it the right way. Not until everything finally aligned.


Karda is the part of him that finally broke free. The rebel, the outlaw, the creative weirdo. The version of himself that doesn’t care about boxes, genres, rules, or expectations. He believes freedom doesn’t come from playing it safe — it comes from breaking things open. Karda is Sieb, amplified. Bigger, louder, more expressive, more raw. A mirror reflecting everything he always felt but never dared to show.


Today, Karda’s sound is a fusion of everything that shaped him: underground culture, nostalgia, groove, 909s, 80s and 90s hip-hop, old house, and tech house. Influences include Run DMC, Beastie Boys, Technotronic, and Armand Van Helden — artists and sounds that raised him without him even realizing it. The result is an underground nostalgic sound in a new jacket. Unpolished, real, minimal, groovy. Raw energy in its purest form. Like the past and the future shaking hands.



ABOUT KARDA

One thing Karda never wanted was distance. He doesn’t see himself as above the fans or the community. He is part of it — and always will be.

After shows, Karda can be found in the crowd, at the afters, celebrating life alongside everyone else. He doesn’t stand on a pedestal; he stands in the middle of the chaos, where the real moments happen. The underground isn’t just a genre to Karda. It’s a culture, a heartbeat, a rebellion shared by everyone who feels it. Karda started as a kid making noise with sticks. Now he makes noise that moves dance floors, pulls people into shared moments, and builds a culture around raw, honest energy.


Karda is the story of someone who refused to be quiet — and turned that noise into a movement, a community, and a sound that feels like home.



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CONTACT

management@kardamusic.com

contact@kardamusic.com

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