Firstly they are two people. And no one is not seedhe and the other aint maut. They’re a rap duo consists of Encore ABJ (Abhijay Negi) and Calm (Sidhant Sharma). Both of them belonging from delhi.
They rap. Simple.
Okay ik youre not here for that. Lol :p
they represent Indian hip hop. winning a lot of hearts in both underground and mainstream of Indian hip hop or desi hip hop (dhh) as you might know. They’re key part of india’s growing dhh scene.
Seedhe Maut ke bina kya jeevan hain?
They basically write covering a mix of personal struggles, stories, ambition, street life, and social issues. With insane wordplay and rhythmic beats alongside their dramatic change in flows make it more exciting to listen to. They use double meanings, puns, and slick rhymes that make you replay bars to catch everything. They’re dramatic switch ups make it more interesting to listen to. Their flows change mid-verse, keeping things unpredictable. One second they’re smooth, next second they’re spitting fire. Their mix of Hindi & English makes their lyrics relatable yet complex. You’ll hear Delhi slang, deep storytelling, and international vibes—all in one track. They usually work with Sez on the Beat, whose production is a mix of booming 808s, heavy bass, and wild samples. Their beats slap in clubs AND headphones. They rap super fast without losing clarity.
hasty flows, insane rhyme schemes, and wild switch-ups—they rap like they’re in a video game on pro mode. Their Hinglish bars hit both street kids and hip-hop heads. They don’t just flex—they talk about hustle, struggles, mental health, and the system. And cmon who doesn’t like it when it’s a relatable and real and RAW. Whether you’re grinding, raging, or overthinking life, their songs are a hit. They’re such a blend.
Calm = deep, serious, poetic bars.
Encore ABJ = raw, aggressive, and technical flows.
Together, they bring balance—like a rap yin-yang.
When you hear a Seedhe Maut song, the production alone makes you wanna turn up. No Bollywood sellout moves, just pure hip-hop. Mosh pits, jumping crowds, full-on rage mode—Seedhe Maut concerts feel like rap battle meets rock show. They turn ANY stage into a riot. They’re proving that Indian hip-hop isn’t just some commercial Bollywood rap. Fans from all over vibe with them, even if they don’t understand Hindi.
Two Delhi boys—Encore ABJ and Calm—both obsessed with rap, both lowkey menaces with a mic, cross each other in the underground scene.
They link up, vibe clicks instantly, and BOOM—Seedhe fucking Maut is born.
Before they teamed up, both were already killing it in their own lanes. ABJ had the rapid-fire bars, Calm had the chill-but-deadly delivery. Together? OP duo unlocked.
They dropped “2 Ka Pahada” (2017)—basically a warning shot to the scene. People took notice. Then came “Bayaan” (2018) with Azadi Records, and that’s when they really started cooking.
Their music wasn’t just flexing and fast flows—it was real talk. They rapped about Delhi’s streets, politics, struggles, dreams, all while seamlessly switching between Hindi & English. And with Sez on the Beat backing them, their sound was getting crisper, harder, meaner.
By the time “Nayaab” (2022) dropped, they weren’t just “up next.” They were THE guys.
Every track? Slapped. Every verse? relatable. Every beat? Hit different.
From grinding in cyphers to headlining festivals, from being just underground rap nerds to having a die-hard fanbase, they proved one thing—Indian rap ain’t just gully, it’s god-tier.