DRELA plots Kenyan collaborations after breakout success of โ€œDem Deadโ€

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Tonny Ndungu

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  • With his latest single, โ€œDem Dead,โ€ the artist is turning heads, shaking dance floors, and preparing to light up Nairobi with his first-ever Kenyan performance.

DRELA plots Kenyan collaborations after breakout success of โ€œDem Deadโ€


The global music scene has a knack for birthing stars who feel less like overnight sensations and more like inevitable forces. Enter DRELA โ€” a fresh Afrofusion voice whose name is quickly moving from underground buzz to international conversation.

With his latest single, โ€œDem Dead,โ€ the artist is turning heads, shaking dance floors, and preparing to light up Nairobi with his first-ever Kenyan performance.

For DRELA, โ€œDem Deadโ€ isnโ€™t just another party anthem. Itโ€™s a manifesto. โ€œโ€˜Dem Deadโ€™ came from a place of pure energy and excitement,โ€ he says, his voice brimming with conviction.

โ€œI wanted to create something that makes people move but also reminds them to rise above doubt and negativity. The message is simple: stay alive in your spirit, no matter who tries to bring you down.โ€

That duality โ€” of celebration and resilience โ€” is DRELAโ€™s trademark.

His sound is a fearless blend of Afro, dancehall, and R&B, stitched together with emotional storytelling that cuts through the noise of a crowded industry.

He describes it as embracing his roots while pushing them onto a global stage. In other words, Afrofusion with teeth.

But DRELA isnโ€™t just about the music โ€” heโ€™s about the experience.

His press kit paints the picture of an artist who thrives on immersion: bold visuals, live shows that feel like spiritual journeys, and a style that pairs sophistication with raw honesty. Vulnerability meets swagger in his world, and the result is something both relatable and transportive.

Thatโ€™s exactly what Kenyan fans can expect when he takes the stage for the first time. โ€œKenyan fans can expect a show thatโ€™s not just about sound, but about feeling,โ€ he promises. โ€œI like to make my performances a journey โ€” full of energy, intimacy, and vibes that leave people talking long after the music stops.โ€

Kenyaโ€™s influence on him runs deep. โ€œKenya has always inspired me musically. The energy of the people, the way they vibe with music โ€” itโ€™s real and powerful. Iโ€™m excited to connect with that energy live and give them a piece of my world too.โ€

And heโ€™s got his eyes on collaborations with some of the countryโ€™s heavy hitters: Redsan, Bien, Khaligraph Jones, Wyre, and Nyashinski.

โ€œEach of them represents a different strength in Kenyaโ€™s sound. A collaboration with any of them would be fire.โ€

Cross-cultural creativity is, in fact, where DRELA sees the future heading.

โ€œAfrica is the heartbeat of music, and connecting with different African markets keeps that heartbeat alive worldwide. I see myself as one of the voices carrying Afrofusion to new spaces, bridging cultures through sound.โ€

And heโ€™s not slowing down. Beyond โ€œDem Dead,โ€ DRELA has new projects in the works, including โ€œJekomoโ€ with Nigerian artist Durella and a single titled โ€œBank Alert.โ€

More releases, more shows, more momentum โ€” he insists this is just the beginning.


If his trajectory so far is any indication, โ€œthe beginningโ€ is already something electric. DRELA isnโ€™t just breaking in โ€” heโ€™s breaking through, armed with sound, vision, and a live show built to leave audiences buzzing long after the lights dim.

ยฉCitizen Digital, Kenya

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