Album - Truth Is A Weapon
Released On June 13th 2025
Listen on bandcamp here
Truth Is a Weapon is my seventh album, but in many ways, it feels like the first.
This is the first time I have sung on an album that I released. The first time I realized that voiceovers weren’t enough - I needed the diction, the rhythm, the raw presence of a singing vocal performance. And the only voice I had was mine.
This album pulls no punches. It fuses funk grooves, electronic grit, philosophical spoken word, and heavy lyrical themes into something that I hope hits on multiple levels. It moves. It questions. It doesn’t sit politely in the background - and it’s not supposed to.
This isn’t music for the algorithm. It’s a transmission to my fellow human beings. A signal cutting through the noise.
The world’s in a strange place. From the masks we wear in daily life to the billionaires playing god, to the quiet numbness that creeps into our routines - I felt like I had to speak on it.
Track Highlights
Manifesto
This is the declaration - the mission statement. It lays it out plain:
“Truth without disguise. Groove without compromise”
If you want to know what this album aims to achieve, then start here.
Do You Believe It?
A sharp-edged piece that questions leaders, billionaires, and the tech-fueled circus we call “progress.”
“They burn it all, watch it crash, without a single care.”
This track was me staring at the headlines and asking, do people, myself included, really believe what’s going on? It all seems so ridiculous.
The World Is in Her Way
A portrait of entitled behavior - and what happens when that entitlement meets raw, shared human experience.
“She thought she was entitled, even India was in her way”
First world entitlement is replaced later in the track with third world reality, texture and rhythms.
Nothing Deferred
A quiet rebellion against societal romantic expectations. It’s not bitter - it’s honest.
“This crown of stillness, it fits just right.”
It’s about choosing your own path without apology. Personal life goals can be about way more than just being in a relationship. I realized that, way too late in my life, and honestly making music feels like my family now. I feel like I'm home.
The Faceless One
Maybe the most personal track on the album. It's about the masks we all wear, at work, in relationships, and in society.
“I wear the mask so well, even I forget I’m here.”
That line says it all really.
Something’s Watching
The verses are spoken, almost numb. The chorus is sung - a haunting echo.
“It pulls me under, it won't let go.”
It’s about the unspoken weight we carry from what we witness every day, in real life, and on the news, but don’t process or deal with.
It Comes And Goes
This is probably the grooviest track. It's about recognizing that most of the struggle we experience comes from systems and laws that we ourselves, and as a species, have created.
“Let’s break the cycle and turn it around.”
A reminder that we can let go - if we choose to.
Illusion Of Self
Philosophically inspired. If you’ve ever read Alan Watts or thought about the ego vs the true self, this is that - turned into rhythm.
“We are not the body or the mind. We are the watchers through time.”
This one was written from deep introspection.
Ride The Wave
Time is limited. And too many people are sleepwalking through it.
“Ride a blazing stallion through the darkest night.”
It’s both tongue-in-cheek and deadly serious. Its about not being afraid to take risks while you have the time to do so.
The Last Honest Thing
A spoken word piece delivered with full force.
“You’re the last honest thing in a world that forgot what honesty even feels like.”
It’s for anyone still trying to stay human, especially creatives and musicians, in a world that feels anything but.
Final Thoughts
I made this album because I had to. I was compelled to. The world in some respects has seemingly gone crazy. Voiceovers weren’t enough anymore. I needed to put myself on the line - with melody, with rhythm, with words that didn’t flinch. And if even one person hears it and starts asking better questions about their existence, then it did what it was supposed to do.