Latest Release
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- 31 DEC 2024
- 17 Songs
- CAN'T RUSH GREATNESS · 2025
- Alpha Omega (Remix) [feat. Skepta & Lex Luger] - Single · 2024
- Alpha Omega - Single · 2024
- Alpha Omega - Single · 2024
- Grime Scene Saviours (feat. D Double E, Frisco, Flirta D, Skepta, Bruza, JME, Jendor, Novelist, Jamakabi & Flowdan) - Single · 2024
- Why Lie? - Single · 2024
- Miss Independent - Single · 2024
- Miss Independent - Single · 2024
- Tony Montana - Single · 2024
- Gas Me Up (Diligent) - Single · 2024
Essential Albums
- Konnichiwa is Skepta's most fiery album to date. And with five years separating it from his last LP, it's both a meditation on fame and braggadocio masterclass. Yet the MC's take-no-prisoners approach still packs dark, percussive rhymes and rattling intensity into tracks like “Crime Riddim” and “It Ain’t Safe". He’s suspicious of success on the Pharrell-featuring “Numbers” and alternately sensitive about it on “Text Me Back”. But he spits like gunfire on “Shutdown", a grime anthem full of classic hip-hop chutzpah where Skepta raps, "They tried to steal my vision/This ain’t a culture/It’s my religion".
Albums
- 2016
- 2012
Artist Playlists
- With blood, sweat and raw talent, he pushes grime to new heights.
- At this point, Skepta needs no introduction. Scope his huge influence here.
Live Albums
Compilations
More To Hear
- Skepta talks Ignorance Is Bliss, relationships, and fatherhood.
- "Redrum" feat. Key is World Record, plus Freya Ridings.
- UK Represent artist Fredo talks influences, music from Khalid.
- Julie plays Summer Walker's brand new EP. Plus Skepta and Rosie Lowe are breaking.
More To See
- 31:38
About Skepta
Before Skepta became one of the biggest rappers on the planet, he was a grinding dynamo making his way through the murky London rap scene. From his earliest projects, though, he made it clear he had the skill set to break through and transcend national borders, helping to bring UK drill to a worldwide audience. With dashes of grime and R&B tossed in for fun, Skepta’s first albums showcased an inimitable grasp of flow and a consistent wit. Take “Reflecting”, the opening track from his 2009 album, Microphone Champion. He quips: “I would hate me, too/If I had the same MySpace views as you/If I saw Skepta go from sitting on the wall/To sitting in a white V6 coupe.” His biggest record of the 2010s, Konnichiwa, put him on Drake’s radar, and signalled both a career shift for him and a universal embrace of UK drill as rap’s next great frontier. By this time, he is Mr. Worldwide, but showcases how important his roots are to him on 2020’s Insomnia, a collaborative album with fellow Tottenham rappers Chip and Young Adz of DBE. The story is told simply enough on “Golden Brown” when Skepta offers up in his honey-sweet voice: “Yeah, the boys are back in town.” Despite linking up with the homies, though, the women come first (as they always seem to with Skepta). After shouting out his crew, he makes sure to get his priorities straight: “She’s addicted to the melanin/Golden brown, golden brown.” Just four years later, though, the priorities shift on the Flo Milli-assisted “Why Lie?” where Skepta conjures scenes much tamer and domestic in scope: “Netflix, watchin’ a movie” and “Delivery at the door.”
- FROM
- Tottenham, London, England
- BORN
- 19 September 1982
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap