Levi Zadoff

Levi Zadoff isn’t just an artist — he’s a world-builder. With hip-hop bones and a punk bloodstream, his work cuts across music, painting, and writing, each medium feeding the other but carrying the same raw, unfiltered voice.

Raised in the Bay Area and now rooted in Los Angeles with time spent in Portland and Melbourne, Levi represents a culture of independence and experimentation. His influences span Bay legends like 2Pac, Mac Dre, Andre Nickatina, and E-40 to punk and alt icons like Green Day, Nirvana, and My Chemical Romance. That mix shows up in his sound: anthemic hooks with rap cadences, confessional lyrics over dirty guitars, and a stage presence that feels less like performance and more like catharsis.

Breakout projects like Welcome Back, Golden Boy cemented his voice in hip-hop, while the collaborative Dead Summer EP with Dead Hendrix marked his fearless dive into genre-bending pop-punk and rap-rock. His latest single, Bite Marks, pushes further — a lust-driven, gritty confession inspired by intimacy, proving that vulnerability and edge can coexist in one track.

Zadoff’s career hasn’t been without its storms. A forced pause in 2018 tested his resilience, while recent battles with mental health and a decision to step away from alcohol sharpened his focus and deepened his art. Instead of breaking him, those scars became the fuel for a vision bigger than any one medium.

For Levi, art isn’t a hobby — it’s survival. His songs are paintings you can hear, his paintings are poems you can see, and his writing is music without instruments. It all ties together into one universe: messy, honest, and human. In a time when much of art feels manufactured, Levi Zadoff offers something one-of-a-kind — a reminder that imperfection, resilience, and brutal honesty can be beautiful.