Lilith Czar performs on the Main Stage at Louder Than Life 2024

Lilith Czar performed on the Main Stage at Louder Than Life in Louisville, Kentucky on Saturday, September 28, 2024.

After braving rain for a couple of days, the singer gave a shout out to all of the campers at Louder.

“You are a bunch of badasses,” she said.

During her set, she performed a harder rock version of Stevie Nicks’ ‘Edge Of Seventeen’, gave some motivational words of encouragement to the audience, particularly the “magical, powerful and unstoppable” woman, and she also let the crowd know she was drawing a line in the sand in her life.

“I’m so fucking tired of people telling me what to do,” she said.

“Fuck that shit.”

Photographer Steve Thrasher captured these images from her set:

Lilith Czar arrives with the force of an otherworldly thunder, arising in visceral rebirth from an untimely grave of surrender and sacrifice. Her voice is the sound of supernatural determination, summoned with a confessional vulnerability and unapologetic authenticity. The girl who was Juliet Simms – her dreams discouraged and dismissed, her identity confined and controlled – is no more. In her place stands Lilith Czar, a new vessel forged in unbridled willpower and unashamed desire.

Her motivation is simple: if it’s truly “a man’s world”? She wants to be King.

Created from Filth and Dust, the debut album from Lilith Czar, is an evocative invitation into her bold new world. It’s aggressive music with warm accessibility; huge hooks with driving hard rock—the new larger-than-life icon channels the fierce combativeness of Fiona Apple and Stevie Nicks’ seductive witchery. Lilith Czar arms herself with sonic power, theatricality, and confidence. It’s a sound where the pulse of Nine Inch Nails, Halestorm’s songcraft, and the libertine spirit of David Bowie converge, all in service of a ritualistic ache for a more just and equitable world.

Lilith Czar is more than music. Her songs – like “King,” “Bad Love,” and “100 Little Deaths” – are anthems. She sounds both larger than life and hauntingly intimate, baring all in the ballad “Diamonds to Dust” or unleashing hell with the banshee wail of “Feed My Chaos.” As much as Lilith Czar’s music is perfectly suited for modern rock radio, it’s simultaneously timeless. Thanks in no small part to Czar’s rich voice, Created from Filth and Dust wouldn’t sound out of place in any significant rock era.

“I know who I am now, completely,” the singer declares. “I’ve found my purpose, creating art to inspire others to stand up for what they believe, to fight for their dreams, and to never give up.”

She summarizes the Lilith Czar origin story like this: “When you find yourself beaten down by the world, in those times you can either let it destroy you or let it create you.”

Created from filth and dust, destined to be King… Lilith Czar.

Follow Lilith at https://www.lilithczarmusic.com/.

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