To listen to Dünya Keranesi is to voluntarily check yourself into a mental hospital for an hour. It is uncomfortable. It is claustrophobic. But oddly, it is also liberating.
In the track "Bayram" (The Holiday), he contrasts the joy of the world with his internal void. He describes people celebrating while he feels like a ghost at the feast. This isn't teenage angst; it is the exhaustion of an adult who has seen the machinery of life up close. He realizes that the "madhouse" is actually a theater, and everyone is acting sane.
"Aklımın sınırlarında gezerken, dünyanın keranesinde bir deli buldum. Aynaya baktım, o bendim." ("While walking the borders of my mind, I found a madman in the world's asylum. I looked in the mirror; it was me.") Sagopa Kajmer Dnya Keranesi
The recurring theme of Dünya Keranesi is the inversion of sanity. In typical Sagopa fashion, he doesn't claim to be the sane one. Instead, he positions himself as the observer who has realized that the "normal" world is a collective delusion.
Sagopa argues that the entire globe has become that corner. To listen to Dünya Keranesi is to voluntarily
The aesthetic is "decay." The pianos are slightly out of tune. The drums are muffled, as if played in the next room of an abandoned hospital. This is intentional. The sonic texture represents the "Kerane"—the crumbling corner of the mind. Tracks like "Karanlık Oda" (The Dark Room) don’t just use silence as a break; they use silence as a character. The absence of sound feels like the walls closing in.
In the pantheon of Turkish hip-hop, there are artists, legends, and then there is Sagopa Kajmer. While the genre often oscillates between bravado, street tales, and melodic romance, Sagopa has carved a niche that is uniquely his own: the melancholic philosopher of the microphone. With the release of “Dünya Keranesi” (The Madhouse of the World / The World’s Absurdity) in 2019, he didn’t just drop an album; he delivered a 71-minute-long psychological autopsy of modern existence. The title itself is a masterstroke. "Kerane" (from Arabic/Persian roots) refers to a corner, a fringe, or a madhouse—a place where the unwanted, the broken, and the insane are tucked away. But oddly, it is also liberating
In tracks like "Yalnızlık Kolajı" (The Collage of Loneliness), he raps about the fragmented self. He suggests that the modern human is not a whole person but a collage—pieces of social media personas, economic pressures, broken relationships, and forgotten dreams. The "Madhouse" is not a building; it is the cognitive dissonance we all live in. We chase money knowing it won’t save us; we fall in love knowing it will end; we smile while drowning. To Sagopa, realizing this absurdity is the first step toward going "crazy" by society’s standards.