At 19, Hanzel was working overnight shifts at a print shop in Neukölln, Berlin, when a graffiti writer named Sera gave him a black marker and said, “Sign something you’re afraid to lose.” He signed his mother’s last letter to him—the one where she wrote, “Do not make yourself small so others feel large.” He wrote Bold beneath her signature.
At the door, he turns back. “Tell them I said: Don’t be loud. Be bold. It costs nothing and changes everything.”
His music—a visceral blend of lo-fi industrial beats, spoken-word poetry, and sampled field recordings from half a dozen countries—carries that same DNA. His 2022 album Cracked Teeth & Stained Glass opens with the sound of a train braking, then his voice, unadorned: “They told me to lower my voice / so I swallowed a megaphone.” Hanzel Bold is famously allergic to the attention economy. No TikTok dance challenges. No beefs. No sponsored posts. His Instagram is a single photo—a black square—posted in 2019. His manager (a former librarian named Indira) handles press only for projects, not personalities.
“I’ve been writing a story about a woman who walks across a frozen lake every night to send a single sentence to a dead physicist via ham radio. It’s not about the lake. It’s about why she keeps walking.” hanzel bold
Critics have called him pretentious (“a starving artist who chose the menu,” wrote one Pitchfork columnist). Others have questioned his use of African rhythms while living primarily in Europe—a charge he answers not with defensiveness but by releasing a live EP recorded entirely in Dar es Salaam with local taarab musicians, proceeds going to a community arts space there.
His live shows are rituals. No opening act. No encore as a gimmick. Instead, he enters from the center of the audience, walks slowly to the stage, and pours a small vial of earth from his birthplace onto the floor. “Grounding,” he says. “You can’t fly if you don’t know where you’re from.” Of course, “authentic” doesn’t mean “universally loved.”
Because the work hits .
“You don’t get to claim a place just by blood,” he admits. “But you can serve it. That’s what legacy is—service, not ownership.” Rumors swirl about a film project. A novel, even. When asked, Hanzel Bold smiles for the first time in the interview—a slow, crooked thing.
In an era of manufactured personas, one voice refuses to whisper. He doesn’t introduce himself with a title. No “artist,” no “visionary,” no “disruptor.” When the Zoom call connects, a man in a worn leather jacket leans back against a cracked plaster wall, steam rising from a chipped ceramic mug. “Just Hanzel,” he says. “The ‘Bold’ is for the people who forgot how to be.”
Then he’s gone, into a Berlin drizzle, leaving behind only the smell of rain, black coffee, and the faint echo of a supernova you almost missed. Hanzel Bold’s new project, is out digitally on all platforms for 48 hours only—then erased. No explanation given. No apology offered. At 19, Hanzel was working overnight shifts at
Yet he sells out theaters from Warsaw to Vancouver. Why?
Take “Red Soil Lullaby” — a seven-minute elegy for a friend lost to deportation. It builds from a single acoustic guitar pluck to a choir of distorted children’s voices, then collapses into a whispered list of names. Fans don’t just listen; they witness . Concertgoers often stand in silence for a full minute after it ends before applauding.
But who is he, really? The surname “Bold” was not a stage choice. It was a dare. Be bold
“I don’t write hooks,” he says. “I write doorways. You walk through or you don’t.” Visually, Hanzel cultivates what his creative director calls “honest decay.” Frayed cuffs. Hand-painted leather. A single silver earring forged from a melted-down padlock. He collaborates only with small, ethical designers—most famously the Oaxaca-based collective Mano Negra .
Session expired
Please log in again. The login page will open in a new tab. After logging in you can close it and return to this page.