Key Points
- He says he sings for the devil, not God. He calls that choice a simple business line.
- He earlier dismissed a false report of his death. He asked blogs to stop pushing such claims.
- He referenced a podcast where he discussed his faith stance. Fans debate the message and possible intent today.
Nigerian singer Terry G (Gabriel Oche Amanyi) has stirred fresh talk. He says he serves the devil for success.

He posted the claim on his page before removing it. Later he denied a rumour that he had died. See our earlier note on Terry G cryptic Instagram plea for context.
Faith claim and podcast context
In a podcast clip, he framed his songs as secular work. He said secular singers praise the devil and not God. He stressed the words were plain, not hidden signs.
He added he has fallen short of God’s glory. He said people like him often avoid marriage or gospel music. He said the stance is his personal path.
Reactions and recent timeline
His denial of the death rumour came with a plea. He asked blogs to stop pushing claims about his health. He said he was fine and still working.
The singer has made bold lines in recent months. In September, he rejected retirement and embraced an “upcoming” tag. Read more in Terry G rejects retirement stance from our earlier report.
Some fans took the latest line as stark industry talk. Others read it as a literal claim about his faith.
Comments under reposts showed split views on intent and tone. A few urged caution while sharing such charged claims. Many asked for more context from the full podcast.
So far, no major colleague has issued a firm reply. Some observers expect more takes as new clips surface.
At the time, the post about his death drew fast checks. He told followers he was healthy and safe. He urged people to stop trending false updates.
The singer’s team has not posted a formal note. The police have not commented on any linked claims. We will update this page if either side responds.
His public tone has shifted between defiance and reflection this year. The latest claim keeps that loud, direct style in view. For now, the debate sits with fans and viewers





