Profil JemSii NayKilla dan TenXi Garam & Madu
- HP Music
- 10 Jan 2025
- 5 menit membaca
Diperbarui: 5 hari yang lalu
From Indonesia with Rhythm: How Jemsii, NayKilla & TenXi Made Gen Z Dance to Garam & Madu
If you're scrolling through TikTok or YouTube in early 2025 and come across young people in Jakarta doing a coordinated dance to a song that blends hip-hop energy with dangdut groove, chances are you’ve stumbled upon Garam & Madu (Sakit Dadaku) — the viral track by Jemsii, NayKilla and TenXi.
It’s not just a catchy hook.
It’s a cultural ripple that shows how Gen Z in Indonesia are redefining music, mixing local roots with global beats.
In this story, we step into each of their worlds: where they came from, what they’re doing… and why their sound matters beyond the surface.
1. Meet Jemsii: The Producer-Songwriter Opening Family Wounds in Harmony
Early project: He was one half of the duo JEJA (with singer Jaz Rowe) in 2021–2022, exploring experimental pop/indie sounds.
What sets him apart
Jemsii isn’t just a vocalist — he writes, produces, and curates texture. For instance, he wrote the single “Parasit” in 2022 which addresses toxic family relationships.
He uses his personal story as raw material. In an article: “Kadang, luka yang nggak kelihatan justru yang paling keras bunyinya waktu dijadikan lagu.” (Sometimes, the unseen wound makes the loudest noise when it’s turned into a song.)
His trajectory tells a young musician’s path: from indie remixes (he won a remix competition with Label Radar in 2020) to mainstream Spotify success with Garam & Madu.
Why he matters
In a music scene often dominated by commercial pop formulas, Jemsii embodies the DIY spirit and emotional honesty that younger audiences crave. He bridges the gap between “I made this in my bedroom” and “My song is now on millions of streams.”
2. Meet NayKilla: The Young Voice of Doubt, Dreams & Dangdut Fusion
Background: Started with cover videos on social media; released singles like “Believe” (2019) and “Dreams” (2021) before hitting mainstream.
Family link: Younger sister of singer Sara Fajira (known for “Lathi”). NayKilla says she learned from her sister the importance of being true to your style:
“Jangan takut jadi kamu sendiri…”
What she brings
She writes her own lyrics, sees songwriting as therapy: “Nulis lagu itu semacam terapi buatku.”
Vocally, she sits between the pop-R&B space and the hip-hop/dangdut hybrid (we’ll talk about the genre in the next section).
Her part in Garam & Madu brings the hook/melody that makes the song stick — which is crucial when you want one foot in the dance floor and the other in emotional resonance.
Why she matters
Because her journey resonates: from cover videos in your bedroom to a “viral” track across Indonesia. That makes her relatable. And for young women in music, she embodies the “writing your own truth” ethos — not just singing someone else’s lyrics.
3. Meet TenXi: The Rapper-Producer Reimagining Dangdut for Gen Z
Role in “Garam & Madu”: Rapper, producer, co-writer of the track.
Musical identity: Pioneer of the so-called “hipdut” genre — a fusion of hip-hop and dangdut.
What defines him
He’s the one who takes local musical heritage (dangdut, kendang rhythm, cengkok) and marries it with global urban sounds (trap beat, rap flow). The result: something both distinctly Indonesian and globally palatable.
His instrumentation on Garam & Madu uses digital kendang, bass trap, vocal hooks that loop — making it “danceable but still has emotional weight.” Narasi Tv+1
He’s serious about leaving behind the notion of “just local music” — “Gue suka musik yang punya perasaan lokal, tapi tetap bisa head-to-head sama musik internasional,” he said. detikcom
Why he matters
Because genre innovation is hot in 2025. Young listeners globally are bored of “same old pop,” and they look for authenticity + novelty. TenXi delivers both — and in doing so, opens a door for Indonesian music on the world stage.
4. Garam & Madu (Sakit Dadaku) — The Song, The Trend, The Phenomenon
Key details
Released: 20 December 2024.
Label: AntiNRML / The Orchard / HP Music.
Genre: Hip-dut (hip-hop + dangdut) / trap/dangdut hybrid.
Achievement: By March 2025, hit 100 million streams on Spotify — reportedly the fastest Indonesian song to reach that milestone.
Why did it blow up?
It tapped TikTok & social media perfectly: The beat is catchy. The hook is memorable (“Sakit dadaku, ku mulai merindu…”). The dance challenge format worked.
It blended genres in a way that felt fresh: dangdut association gives the song local identity; hip-hop/trap gives it global cred.
It spoke to Gen Z emotional terrain: longing, doubt, romantic tension, ambiguity. The title itself — “Salt & Honey (My Chest Hurts)” — suggests that love is bitter-sweet.
What it signals
That Indonesian music can go viral globally even if it’s not English.
That young musicians are comfortable mixing tradition + modernity — not choosing one over the other.
That “niche” no longer means “underground” — it can hit mainstream if you hit the right tone.
5. What This Means for US Listeners & Global Music Fans
If you’re in the United States and exploring global music trends, here’s how this story matters for you:
It reminds us that the next wave of “international breakout” sound might come from places we overlook — not just K-pop or Afrobeats, but micro-genres like hip-dut from Indonesia.
It shows that authenticity wins: the more artists lean into their roots (even if with a twist), the more global listeners resonate.
It provides cross-cultural lessons: imagine a Nashville artist fusing country with trap; TenXi/NayKilla/Jemsii did that with dangdut + hip-hop.
So if you’re a creator, musician, or fan: pay attention. Tools like Spotify, TikTok, YouTube have flattened borders. If the hook is right, anywhere can blow up.
6. What’s Next for Them?
Jemsii: Reportedly working on more productions, continuing his dual role as songwriter/producer.
NayKilla: Released a follow-up single “Kasih Aba-Aba” in April 2025, continuing the momentum. Radar Semarang
TenXi: Already teasing new tracks (e.g., “Curi-Curi”) with the same crew, and continuing to build hip-dut momentum. Radar Semarang
Final Thoughts
Music isn’t just about sound anymore — it’s about story, identity, culture, connection.Jemsii, NayKilla and TenXi illustrate exactly that. They remind us: you can honour tradition, you can push against the formula, and you can still make a track that 100 million people stream.
“If you’re not telling your truth via your beat, someone else will use your silence as their sound.”
Dive into Garam & Madu, enjoy the ride, and recognise that global music is happening now — and it’s happening in languages you might not expect.
Stay curious. Stay open-eared.— HP Music (#HePiTrending)
Hashtags:#GaramAndMadu #TenXi #NayKilla #Jemsii #Hipdut #MusicIndonesia #GenZMusic #GlobalPop #IndonesianMusic #ViralSong
Jika kamu ingin versi artikel Bahasa Indonesia, atau untuk negara lain (contoh: Bahasa Spanyol/LatAm, Bahasa Jepang/Japan, Bahasa Korea/K-pop crossover) — saya bisa bantu buatkan. Mau dibuatkan?






































































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