There’s something raw about bilingual hip-hop when it’s done right. Jeruson, a rapper and producer now based in Los Angeles, isn’t trying to soften his Chennai roots for American audiences. He’s leaning into them, mixing Tamil street slang with English over beats that hit hard enough to translate across any language barrier.
He didn’t start as a rapper. At 15, growing up in Chennai’s 10th grade classrooms, Jeruson was learning beat-making and sound design, watching the city’s underground music scene and absorbing its street culture. He spent years as a producer, remixing tracks and building his technical foundation before COVID pushed him to step in front of the mic. His production background shows in how he structures flows and builds energy across a track.
The early proof came with “Vetti Bandha,” an experimental track that pulled over 103,000 streams on Spotify by blending Chennai’s local Gaana-style lyrics with Baile Funk production. It’s an unconventional fusion that connects because, as Jeruson explains, listeners can feel the vibe and energy even without understanding the language. The beats, melodies, and distorted sounds create emotion on their own.
His connection to Saregama, one of India’s biggest music labels, gave him room to experiment at scale. He remixed tracks connected to major South Indian artists like Anirudh, Hip-Hop Tamizha, Ilaiyaraaja, and A.R. Rahman, earning main artist credits and building name recognition across India’s streaming platforms. Those projects helped him cross 2 million total streams, but they also taught him how to navigate the business side of music. He later worked as an A&R for a Chennai label, scouting underground talent at cyphers and live shows across the city.

What makes Jeruson’s sound distinct isn’t just the language mixing, it’s the production choices. He pulls from Deva’s street-rooted Gaana style for melodic flow, Skrillex’s heavy distortion for aggression, Travis Scott’s atmospheric production for mood, and Kanye’s genre-blending approach for creative direction. The result is melodic street rap with 808s that rattle and distorted textures that give even his softer tracks an edge. Tracks like “Scene Ah Scene Ah” and his festival trap remix of “Kiliye Kiliye” show his range between hard-hitting street energy and melodic hooks that stick.
His latest release, “OUTCOMES” ft JRSN, dropped December 28, 2025 and clocks in at 1:59, packing his heavy bass and distorted production into a compact track. Right now, he’s working with $carce, his Philadelphia-based co-artist and business partner, alongside underground American and Tamil-American rappers and DJs across California, Seattle, New York City, and Philadelphia. These aren’t one-off features. Jeruson’s building long-term collaborations while pursuing an MBA in Los Angeles, combining creative output with business strategy.

He’s approaching these projects with the same mindset he brought to A&R work, thinking about sustainable networks and scalable projects across different regional scenes. It’s not just about making music, it’s about building infrastructure around it.
The best bilingual artists don’t translate their culture for new audiences. They present it as-is and trust listeners to meet them halfway. Jeruson started at 15 in Chennai learning production, moved into A&R work identifying underground talent, built credibility through major label projects, and relocated to Los Angeles to expand internationally. He’s still carrying that street-rooted Tamil energy, just with better beats and a wider network. That’s not compromise. That’s growth.
Follow Jeruson on Instagram and stream his music on Spotify.





























