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Zero is the stage name of Christian Williamson. He works as a producer and DJ across drum and bass and jungle, with strong roots in UK bassline, garage and related styles such as liquid funk, ragga and grime. He is currently based in Croatia. Williamson grew up in Woking, Surrey and studied Music Technology at the University of Sussex in Brighton. He began releasing music as Zero around 2017. His edit "Enter the Dragon" — built on DJ Pied Piper & The Masters of Ceremonies' "Do You Really Like It" — and a string of subsequent releases accumulated millions of streams and raised his profile. He has released the mixtape Feel So Free and singles including "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". He has toured and performed DJ sets internationally. As a producer Zero moves between tempos and UK-derived forms. His catalogue shows a through-line from garage and bassline edits into faster drum and bass and jungle-leaning tracks. The "Enter the Dragon" edit demonstrates his approach to reworking a familiar vocal hook for club use, while tracks like "Watch The Skank" pair MC-led grime/ragga vocal energy (Tempa T) with heavier low end and sharper percussion. On the production side Zero favours edit-based arrangements and vocal recontextualisation. Across his singles and the Feel So Free mixtape he stitches chopped vocal phrases and edited hooks onto tightened rhythmic beds. His bass design tends toward pronounced sub presence and weightful low mids to translate on systems; percussion treatment leans on syncopation and swung garage grooves when working in bassline/UKG territory, and tighter, quicker break edits when he pushes into DnB/jungle tempos. Those choices show on his commercial edits that drove streaming traction and on DJ mixes meant for club playback. As a DJ Zero programmes across a wide palette: bassline and bass house rollers sit beside garage edits, while jungle and liquid cuts provide higher-tempo peaks. His Feel So Free mixtape functions as an example of that programming — blends of originals, edits and club-facing singles rather than longform ambient sets. Onstage he presents a hybrid DJ/producer role: playing his own edits and releases, slotting in contemporary garage and grime cuts, and using transitions that favor rhythmic continuity between bassline/UKG and drum & bass segments. Career highlights that are verifiable in public sources include the 2017-era rise marked by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the Feel So Free mixtape, and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". Those releases, plus the millions of streams credited to his edit-led output, underpinned international touring and DJ bookings. Public information about Zero’s stated influences is limited, but his material directly references UK garage lineage (the DJ Pied Piper rework) and a working relationship with Tempa T ties him into grime/ragga circles. Beyond those concrete links, most available documentation highlights his edit-driven approach, cross-tempo programming and the specific releases named above. Zero’s public catalogue is anchored by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the mixtape Feel So Free and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking", and he continues to perform DJ sets internationally from his base in Croatia.
Zero is the stage name of Christian Williamson. He works as a producer and DJ across drum and bass and jungle, with strong roots in UK bassline, garage and related styles such as liquid funk, ragga and grime. He is currently based in Croatia.
Williamson grew up in Woking, Surrey and studied Music Technology at the University of Sussex in Brighton. He began releasing music as Zero around 2017. His edit "Enter the Dragon" — built on DJ Pied Piper & The Masters of Ceremonies' "Do You Really Like It" — and a string of subsequent releases accumulated millions of streams and raised his profile. He has released the mixtape Feel So Free and singles including "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". He has toured and performed DJ sets internationally.
As a producer Zero moves between tempos and UK-derived forms. His catalogue shows a through-line from garage and bassline edits into faster drum and bass and jungle-leaning tracks. The "Enter the Dragon" edit demonstrates his approach to reworking a familiar vocal hook for club use, while tracks like "Watch The Skank" pair MC-led grime/ragga vocal energy (Tempa T) with heavier low end and sharper percussion.
On the production side Zero favours edit-based arrangements and vocal recontextualisation. Across his singles and the Feel So Free mixtape he stitches chopped vocal phrases and edited hooks onto tightened rhythmic beds. His bass design tends toward pronounced sub presence and weightful low mids to translate on systems; percussion treatment leans on syncopation and swung garage grooves when working in bassline/UKG territory, and tighter, quicker break edits when he pushes into DnB/jungle tempos. Those choices show on his commercial edits that drove streaming traction and on DJ mixes meant for club playback.
As a DJ Zero programmes across a wide palette: bassline and bass house rollers sit beside garage edits, while jungle and liquid cuts provide higher-tempo peaks. His Feel So Free mixtape functions as an example of that programming — blends of originals, edits and club-facing singles rather than longform ambient sets. Onstage he presents a hybrid DJ/producer role: playing his own edits and releases, slotting in contemporary garage and grime cuts, and using transitions that favor rhythmic continuity between bassline/UKG and drum & bass segments.
Career highlights that are verifiable in public sources include the 2017-era rise marked by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the Feel So Free mixtape, and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". Those releases, plus the millions of streams credited to his edit-led output, underpinned international touring and DJ bookings.
Public information about Zero’s stated influences is limited, but his material directly references UK garage lineage (the DJ Pied Piper rework) and a working relationship with Tempa T ties him into grime/ragga circles. Beyond those concrete links, most available documentation highlights his edit-driven approach, cross-tempo programming and the specific releases named above.
Zero’s public catalogue is anchored by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the mixtape Feel So Free and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking", and he continues to perform DJ sets internationally from his base in Croatia.
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Zero is the stage name of Christian Williamson. He works as a producer and DJ across drum and bass and jungle, with strong roots in UK bassline, garage and related styles such as liquid funk, ragga and grime. He is currently based in Croatia. Williamson grew up in Woking, Surrey and studied Music Technology at the University of Sussex in Brighton. He began releasing music as Zero around 2017. His edit "Enter the Dragon" — built on DJ Pied Piper & The Masters of Ceremonies' "Do You Really Like It" — and a string of subsequent releases accumulated millions of streams and raised his profile. He has released the mixtape Feel So Free and singles including "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". He has toured and performed DJ sets internationally. As a producer Zero moves between tempos and UK-derived forms. His catalogue shows a through-line from garage and bassline edits into faster drum and bass and jungle-leaning tracks. The "Enter the Dragon" edit demonstrates his approach to reworking a familiar vocal hook for club use, while tracks like "Watch The Skank" pair MC-led grime/ragga vocal energy (Tempa T) with heavier low end and sharper percussion. On the production side Zero favours edit-based arrangements and vocal recontextualisation. Across his singles and the Feel So Free mixtape he stitches chopped vocal phrases and edited hooks onto tightened rhythmic beds. His bass design tends toward pronounced sub presence and weightful low mids to translate on systems; percussion treatment leans on syncopation and swung garage grooves when working in bassline/UKG territory, and tighter, quicker break edits when he pushes into DnB/jungle tempos. Those choices show on his commercial edits that drove streaming traction and on DJ mixes meant for club playback. As a DJ Zero programmes across a wide palette: bassline and bass house rollers sit beside garage edits, while jungle and liquid cuts provide higher-tempo peaks. His Feel So Free mixtape functions as an example of that programming — blends of originals, edits and club-facing singles rather than longform ambient sets. Onstage he presents a hybrid DJ/producer role: playing his own edits and releases, slotting in contemporary garage and grime cuts, and using transitions that favor rhythmic continuity between bassline/UKG and drum & bass segments. Career highlights that are verifiable in public sources include the 2017-era rise marked by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the Feel So Free mixtape, and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking". Those releases, plus the millions of streams credited to his edit-led output, underpinned international touring and DJ bookings. Public information about Zero’s stated influences is limited, but his material directly references UK garage lineage (the DJ Pied Piper rework) and a working relationship with Tempa T ties him into grime/ragga circles. Beyond those concrete links, most available documentation highlights his edit-driven approach, cross-tempo programming and the specific releases named above. Zero’s public catalogue is anchored by the "Enter the Dragon" edit, the mixtape Feel So Free and the singles "Boozy", "Watch The Skank" (with Tempa T) and "Sorry 4 Skanking", and he continues to perform DJ sets internationally from his base in Croatia.
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