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Features
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 28 February 2007 |
Ringolero first got into music in 1989 when he was inspired by New York legends such as Big Daddy Kane as well as reggae acts such as Ninjaman. He began writing and penning lyrics before starting life out as a drum’n’bass MC back in 1997 regularly killing the airwaves of London’s top stations Rude FM, Fundamental FM and Breeze FM. |
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 28 February 2007 |
Metis is a UK-based spoken word Hip Hop artist, originally from California, who has performed widely throughout both London and New York. In 2006, Metis first hit the London stage - with feature performances at Poetry in Motion, Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, Tifa Tifa Fashion Show Premier, Rouge Noir, Stratford East Theatre and Camden Arts Gallery; the impact was immediate.
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 28 February 2007 |
Sean Graham trained as a performing artist and dancer at The Brits and Lewisham College. Since 2004 he has been touring nationally and internationally with the Irven Lewis Dance Company. As a freelance-fusion artist he often works utilising dance and spoken word. Sean made his debut as a soloist at Breakin’ Convention ’06.
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 28 February 2007 |
Joshua Idehen is co-founder of the collective known as A Poem Inbetween People, the host and organiser of the spoken word event PoeJazzi, and a spoken word artist himself, performing all over London in prestigious events such as Onetaste, Poetry N Motion, The Cellar, Shortfuse, and the John Betjeman Festival in Cornwall, to name a few.
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Written by Administrator
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Tuesday, 27 February 2007 |
From Jamaican heritage, Steady started breaking as a cheeky kid in the 80s during the first wave of bboys. He is one of the few original artists to have maintained the dance through the years and has helped to revive the scene in the UK, introducing numerous kids to bboying.
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Written by Demian Smith
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Tuesday, 27 February 2007 |
"Jack Flash is an incendiary hip-hop act creating a huge reaction in the UK urban music community. Regarded as northern hip-hop's l'enfant terrible, Flash is a skilled lyricist with an acidic wit – combining biting social comment with eclectic, original beats to generate music that falls outside of standard hip-hop parameters".
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Written by Administrator
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Saturday, 24 February 2007 |
 If Hip Hop is stagnating, the last place on earth where you’d imagine it might resurface is a suburban town know for its architecture and pashmina-wearing students. Yet these clichés are precisely the reason why Oxford has stayed in the shadows so long. Dig just beneath the surface and you’ll find a virtually untapped source of talent, which strives to spread all the elements of Hip Hop. |
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Written by Jemma Capleton
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Saturday, 24 February 2007 |
They say “you learn something new everyday” and it looks like today’s your day! It’s funny, every time I interview an artist I get surprised, simply because most of them say the same thing: “I’m different, I’m coming with something new, something you haven’t heard before” and nine out of ten times it’s the same old crap that you have heard ten times over with enough attitude to sink the Titanic!! |
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Written by Administrator
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Tuesday, 20 February 2007 |
Britishhiphop.co.uk got to speak to one of the main driving forces behind the fantabulous Breakin' Bread record label. After a long chat we got to find out all about the label and how it is run in a very candid and frank exchange. Peep what Skeg had to say to us as the promotion for their excelent new compilation LP gets up a head of steam...
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Written by Michelle Adabra
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Monday, 19 February 2007 |
A matured Lethal B gets honest and open with Britishhiphop.co.uk. Being a successful artist in the UK is hard work. Full stop, but being a successful ‘urban’ artist is even harder. Most acts will rarely achieve chart success and often disappear into the mixtape abyss. Lethal B has managed to overcome both of these obstacles.
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