Released: November 20, 2020

Featuring: Akala

Songwriter: Fanatix (UK) Loski

Producer: Fanatix (UK)

[Intro: Akala]
Let's remember we've got a couple of centuries
Of this type of violent youth crime
In predominantly white communities in Britain
The overwhelming majority of murders have not been committed by teenage black boys
In 2017 there were 117 or 16 murders, 21 of which were of teenage black boys
In 2018 there were 134, 24 of teenagers in general
When you think that blackness is the most important thing to emphasise about thеse young men
Almost half of the young pеople in prison in Britain, regardless of ethnicity, were in care as children
Almost half of young people in prison in Britain were expelled from school as children
When we offer blackness as an explanatory factor
As if we don't need to know anything else
Because let's look at it in the other sense
Where young black boys overachieve, is race offered as an explanatory factor?
For example, British Ghanaian and Nigerian boys on free school meals, so, the poorest sector academically outperform
And are more likely to go to university than similarly poor white mix-race and black English kids
Whose grandparents came from the Caribbean
The four youngest children in Britain to ever take GCSEs are all black
Ramarni Wilfred, a young black boy from east London has a higher IQ than Einstein
Young black men are more disproportionally represented in professional football than any other area of British life
With all of the consequences and implications that has for their contributions to the tax base et cetera
So it's almost as if a black person does something negative, the entire so-called black community is to blame
A black person does something positive and they suddenly regain their humanity and their right to be viewed as an individual
I started carrying a knife when I was maybe 15
I don't say that my own personality is in no way responsible
Most of the young black boys I grew up with didn't carry knives
I made bad decisions, but those bad decisions were made in a context
And unlike a lot of the rest of my friends, because I had good GCSEs, because I had self-confidence, because I had this pan-African support
When I decided to stop making bad decisions I had the equipment to progress

Loski

Loski, also known as Drilloski Loose, is a member of Kennington, South London crew Harlem Spartans along with drill icons such as MizOrMac and Bis. He started making music at a young age and went by the name YNizzy, taken from his dad – who used to make music under the name TY Nizzy. He then joined Harlem and changed his name to Loski. His breakthrough tune, “Hazards”, was released in 2016. He was then sent to jail for firearms possession and came out in June 2017 and released major tracks such as “Teddy Bruckshot” and “Money & Beef”.

In 2018, Loski released hit tracks such as “Cool Kid” and “Forrest Gump”, which received over 5 and 10 million views on YouTube respectively, helping to cement him as an artist in the UK scene. His debut album, Call Me Loose, was released at the end of 2018 and showed him branching out into other genres. In 2019 he released his second album Mad Move, featuring “Hazards 2.0” and “No Cap” with DigDat.

Loski was arrested in April 2019 on charges of gun possession and was only released in February 2020, pending a retrial. He soon released “Allegedly” in March and in July dropped “On Me” with MizOrMac. In October 2020 he released Music, Trial & A Drill Story with features from icons like [Stormzy}(/artists/Stormzy]), dancehall artist Popcaan and Afrobeats star Davido and just as diverse a range of sounds.

From the album
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