Ghostly echoes and haunting remembrances litter the floor of Nazar's sound. The Angolan producer grew up in Belgium until his late teens, after which he returned to Angola when its long civil war ended. He has since returned to Europe, but his otherworldly productions are informed by the uglier side of what he witnessed back home. Warped vocal samples, pitch-shifted into other dimensions, characterise his smothered R&B sound. He uses the term "rough Kuduro" to describe his music, referencing a hard-edged reinterpretation of the Angolan dance style. His debut album Guerilla (2020) is an anthropological piece of sound design and production, drawing on Nazar's personal story of the Angolan civil war and its aftermath. While it's deeply grounded and personal, his music also slips into the realm of sci-fi, with its recontextualised rave sirens and dark electronics. He cites cyberpunk anime Ghost In The Shell as a core inspiration for his album Demilitarize (2025). In it, loud cybernetic noise and catchy rhythms in the vein of SOPHIE meet with subtle phosphorescent atmospheres, summoning memories of Burial's debut.