If you ask most Kenyans who Njerae is, you’ll get mixed answers.
Some will say, “Isn’t she the one who sings that Beg For It song?”
Others will say, “Wait, is that the chick from Sauti Academy?”
A few will say, “She’s dope. Very underrated.”
But for those who’ve actually taken the time to sit with her music, the answer’s different: she’s one of the most honest voices in Kenya’s music scene right now.
Not the loudest. Not the flashiest. But honest? Absolutely.
She Didn’t Come Up the Usual Way
Njerae, whose full name is Njeri Mwengi, didn’t go through the usual Kenyan school system. No 8-4-4 stories of KCSE trauma. Instead, she did the International Baccalaureate (IB), where she scored 54 out of 63. Not bad at all. Especially considering she’s now making music full-time.
She also studied Psychology and Performing Arts — two things that, when you listen to her lyrics, make perfect sense. Her songs don’t sound like someone trying to copy what’s hot. They sound like someone trying to say something clearly, even if it hurts a bit.
“I use psychology in my music,” she once said. And if you listen to Unintentional, her debut album from 2022, you get what she means. The songs are slow, layered, a little sad—but sharp. You can feel the thinking behind them.
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She Didn’t Chase Fame — She Waited for the Right Moment
A lot of artists try to blow up as fast as possible. Drop a viral TikTok. Pay for playlist slots. Move fast. Njerae didn’t do that.
She spent nearly a decade writing music privately before releasing anything seriously. She called it “releasing music to myself.” That line alone tells you what kind of artist she is. Quiet. Intentional. Patient.
In 2022, she finally dropped Unintentional. It wasn’t a massive hit, but the people who heard it didn’t forget it. Some even called it “a handbook for heartbreak.”
She didn’t stop. In 2023 and 2024, she followed up with tracks like OTD, Valhalla, and a collaboration-heavy EP Out with the Old in 2024. It had features from Watendawili, Mbithi, Lisa Oduor-Noah, and Maali — all names you’ll recognize if you’re into the Kenyan alt scene.
First Paycheck? KSh 6,000. First Job? Also Music.
Njerae’s first ever paycheck came from a gig — she got KSh 6,000. And she never looked back. No side hustles. No backup plan. Just music.
It’s rare. Most Kenyan artists are doing music and five other things to survive. But she’s been committed from the start.
Even now, as her star rises, she’s not flexing. She once joked that her M-Pesa balance was about 6K, but said, “It’s enough.” That kind of honesty is rare. No filters. No pretending she’s richer or busier than she really is.
A Little Weird, A Lot Human
She’s also a little bit odd in the best way.
Her favorite food? Potatoes. Anything with potatoes.
Least favorite? Beans. Ndengu.
Most-used emoji? The blushing smiley 😊
Biggest lie recently? She was late and told someone she wasn’t.
Most embarrassing search in her history? Herself.
She Googles herself sometimes. You probably would too.
And when it comes to her relationship, she keeps it quiet. Just said it’s “classified,” but called her boyfriend her best friend. That’s enough.
No Flashy Persona — Just Showing Up As She Is
Njerae doesn’t care much for trends. She’s not trying to sound American. She’s not trying to jump on the next amapiano beat just to go viral.
She’s fully aware some people think her music is “too slow” or “too white.” She’s heard that before. But she doesn’t bend.
“I will not dim my light for anything,” she said. “Not even because I’m a woman.”
That right there — that’s why people connect with her. She’s not making music to please anyone. She’s making it because that’s what’s in her. And if you get it, great. If you don’t, that’s okay too.
Recognition Took Time — But It Came
In August 2024, she signed with Universal Music Group East Africa. Then in early 2025, she was selected as one of Apple Music’s Africa Rising artists — a major spotlight, especially since she was only the second East African to get picked, after Nikita Kering.
And in June 2025, she was named the Spotify EQUAL Africa ambassador. That was a big moment. She said it made her feel like she was “on top of the world.”
Still, she hasn’t changed much. She drives a Toyota, but her dream car is a Mercedes GLE. She’s a Manchester United fan. She texts her sister a lot. She still treats music as something serious, not something she’s rushing through.
Why Njerae’s Story Matters
Let’s be real: in Kenya’s music scene, most artists are trying to be loud, flashy, viral. It’s competitive. People are chasing hits.
Then you have someone like Njerae — moving slow, writing sad songs, cooking potatoes, Googling herself when she can’t sleep. That’s why her story matters.
She’s proof that you don’t have to play the game to make it. You can be honest, soft-spoken, and smart — and still build something that lasts.
So no, she’s not the next Nikita, or Karun, or Xenia, or Fena. She’s just Njerae.
And that’s more than enough.

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