ZerryDL: From Phone Recordings to Afro Pluto Stardom
ZerryDL: From Phone Recordings to Afro Pluto Stardom

Before the hits, sold-out shows and growing influence of Afro Pluto, ZerryDL was a teenager recording songs on his phone and betting on a future only he could see. “I started recording music on my phone, because I couldn’t afford studio sessions,” he tells Guardian Music.

There’s something magical about starting with what you have. Right now. Right away. It’s worked for several successful people across the world, especially Nigerian rapper ZerryDL. Since 2023, he’s been recognised as one of the country’s most prolific emerging storytelling rappers and hitmakers. A member of the Uzama household, alongside Shallipopi and Famous Pluto, he’s also a major force in the evolution of the ‘Beninpiano’ wave, the Amapiano-tinged pop fusion soundtracking Nigerian nightlife.

Early Beginnings in Benin City

Raised in Benin City, ZerryDL was already freestyling over beats his brother downloaded from local websites by age 11, piecing words together on his phone long before he nursed any full-blown career ambition. “I was like 11 years old. I think 2015. I was still young. I was still schooling, so I didn’t understand it at first, but I just tried. The first time I ever did a freestyle, it was on a beat my brother downloaded from these local websites. I used to have these beats on my phone, just trying to put words together, trying to create a song. But I used to do only one verse of a song. I didn’t really believe that it was real until I started trying. I did one song then, but I didn’t go to any studio. I was just recording on my phone. So that’s where it all started.”

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By high school, the hobby had grown into a small music group with friends, while family expectations pulled him toward medicine. “There was pressure back home because my parents always wanted me to do medicine, to go into science and do medicine. But actually, that wasn’t my calling. I didn’t want to do that. One time, when it was time for me to pick either going into science or the arts, I didn’t even tell them I was going for the arts.”

Finding His Voice Through Freestyle

ZerryDL attended CFA Primary school in Benin City. “When I moved to another school for my JSS1, that’s when I started taking rap seriously. In primary school, the only thing I was doing was writing bars at home. But when I got to JSS1, I started seeing people, and I started telling my friends in school that I could rap. When I got to JSS2, some new students came in, and they were also rapping. So, I created a music group called Jazz Music. We were just doing it low-key.”

Shallipopi later joined the same school. “When Shallipopi got to JSS3 or SS1, that’s when he came to the school. We were doing the music together, though, but we weren’t in the same class. We were just doing it from home. People knew that we were brothers and we were doing music, but in school, we just had this music class in school that we used to go and learn how to play instruments.”

His breakthrough eventually arrived at the crossroads of pursuing university admission and committing fully to music. “I started getting to know a lot of people and talking with them. I came from the trenches. Back then, when you saw anybody older than you or a group of people gathering, you could just tell them you knew how to freestyle, and you would start rapping for them. I didn’t have money for studio sessions, so I used my phone to record. I first had a button phone, and the only thing I could do with that was make calls or play games. When I got an Android phone, I downloaded apps like Tune Me and Voloco. That was what I used to record my music. I also discovered Audiomack later that year. That was when I started uploading my music for free, sharing links with people I knew and people on my WhatsApp. Sometimes, I just shared the links to random people, and some of them used to cuss me out. I did not pay for my first-ever studio session. It was through somebody I met when I was about to go to university.”

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When asked about choosing between school and music, he said: “I knew the one I was going to pick. I knew the one that was going to change my life, and that was music. I had already passed all my exams. I wrote JAMB, WAEC, and NECO, and passed all of them. I was trying to go into study Mass Communication because it is a social science course, and they didn’t believe the arts were paying. But that was when I started trending, so I just decided to leave.”

Building the Afro Pluto Sound

ZerryDL describes the Afro Pluto sound as natural. “It came from back home. If you go to Benin City, anybody can freestyle as long as they hear a fast beat. You can freestyle. It is like we used to talk on beats. It is something everybody does. This one started on TikTok. I used to have Amapiano playing in the background, and I would just sing funny stuff. People used to tell me, ‘Drop this one. Why don’t you want to drop this one? Why are you taking it as just a freestyle?’ I didn’t want to drop it because I thought it wasn’t serious. One time, I did this freestyle on Amapiano, and a popular blog posted about me. Then a popular producer sent me a DM that I should drop the song. So I said, ‘Okay, I would drop the song if I had the chance.’ That was when I recorded ‘Puff & Pass.’ From the roots, it is something we just do effortlessly.”

Personal Songs and Storytelling

When asked about a song that feels most personal, he points to “Pressure” from his first EP. “If you listen to my first EP, there is one song called ‘Pressure.’ I think it was the last track on the EP. That is a personal song. I wrote that song when I was down and depressed in Benin. When I came to Lagos, I recorded it, and I told my management back then that I needed to put this song on the project. They didn’t really want me to put it there, but the song made it. I recorded it the same day I recorded ‘Puff & Pass.’ The song had been on my phone for a long time, but I just wanted the opportunity to record it. So, when I came to Lagos and had the chance to have a studio session, I recorded it.”

He doesn’t mind being labelled a hitmaker or storyteller. “They can see me as anything they want to see me as. Sometimes I just want to impart knowledge, and sometimes I just want to make people dance. I want to give people morality. So, it depends on the song. People call me a storyteller. People can call me anything.”

Working with Siblings and Future Vision

Working with Shallipopi and Famous Pluto comes naturally. “It is very natural. It is a no-stress type of thing. Sometimes we are not in the studio together. Maybe Famous or Shalli can send me a song and say, ‘I want you on this song.’ We might not even be in the studio together, but when I hear the song, I already know what to do. So, it is not hard at all. The chemistry is different because we are blood brothers. We understand ourselves. So, working with them is easy.”

Offstage, ZerryDL is a sports enthusiast. “I’m just this crazy, funny guy that everybody misunderstands sometimes. In my personal life, I like having fun. I like playing basketball because I’m like 6’4. I like playing lawn tennis and table tennis. I like going outside and experimenting. I like adventure stuff, even if I can’t really go outside like that sometimes. I don’t like boring times. I want every day to be productive, so I just like doing stuff. I’m a sports guy. If the music didn’t work out, maybe sport would have worked out.”

His long-term goal is to inspire. “I’m here to inspire a lot of people. My lifestyle, my personality, my music, how I talk, how I dress, my influence. All my influence will be crazy. If I’m not doing music anymore, I want to be a leader. In the long run, I want them to remember me for something. I want to be different. Being myself is being different, because there is nobody like me, and there is nobody like you, too. The more I’m being different and doing my thing, maybe I’m going to set a record one day. If I stop doing music, people are going to remember me for something, even if it is not music-wise. I just want to do something.”