As a new rap exhibition opens in the city, west Yorkshire’s MCs remember how body popping gave way to bleak social commentary – and rap battles in their underpants

“This is mind-blowing – it’s my dream come true,” says Monk, as we walk through Leeds City Museum, where boxes of hip-hop memorabilia are scattered everywhere.

A record shop is being constructed in one corner, a 1990s bedroom studio in the other. Behind me a full-size replica of a graffiti-covered 1980s New York subway train is being finished. The revered Leeds MC and artist LSK hands me a pen and instructs me to tag the train. Bereft of talent or ideas, I hastily scribble my initials in a childlike scrawl. He nods for me to do more, so on gothe names of my wife and my dog.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK police pay ‘lip service’ to protecting women, says father of abuse victim

Exclusive: Les Van Hagen, whose daughter Suzanne was killed by her partner,…

The Traitors US review – pure, evil, shout-at-the-TV brilliance

If you thought the unbearably tense gameshow couldn’t get any more vicious,…

Patients in England to be offered daily pill that can halve migraine frequency

Nice approves first oral treatment with Atogepant that can prevent chronic and…

Toronto shooting: gunman kills five in residential unit

Police in Canada shoot dead suspect after receiving reports of an active…