āMy mum and my grandma raised me to be someone who can handle everything with some level of poise and get past outrageous behaviour,” says rising rapper Che Lingo. “That being said, sometimes I still need five minutes to have a word with myself. Like, āIām about to have an interview with Idris Elbaā, you know? I know weāre all human and no man is better than another, but itās still amazing.ā
The hotly-tipped South West London rapper has certainly had a lot of those ‘pinch-me’ moments ā not least by kicking off 2020 by signing to 7Wallace, the label co-run by Hollywood giant, songwriter, producer and DJ Idris Elba. Since then, they’ve become close pals, and share more than a thing or two in common.
āYou can always imagine yourself in those moments where you’re doing something thatās a pinnacle to you and you need those five minutes, I get that all the time,” says Elba. “You need that moment of meditation to measure where you could have been to where you are now.ā
Surreal as it may seem, just before coronavirus took hold and the world went into lockdown, we went down to Elba’s 7Wallace studios in London so that he and his new signee could grill each other about life, music, inspiration, famous fans, karaoke and much more. Check it out here, along with the exclusive first look at the video for Lingo’s new single ‘Spaghetti’.
When was the first time you met each other?
Che: āFor me, that was an element of being starstruck. I was starstruck because this person was in front of me that Iāve only ever seen on television screens throughout my whole life. But, the energy you gave me back was not āthe starā. You were like, āYo bro!ā From that, it was just easy and it settled all the anxiety. After I got over being starstruck, you gave me the energy and it just mellowed me out. I just wanted to play you the music.ā
Idris: āWhen I met you, I had been listening to his music a lot up until that point. Rachel who co-runs my 7Wallace label was sending me all your Soundcloud stuff, so I had a little bit of a Che universe before I met you. I love lyrics, so when I met you I was like, āWoah, my guy sounds exactly how he speaks!ā There are some rappers that put on a voice and its a performance only on record, then in real life theyāre quite subdued ā but youāre just as articulate as you are on record.ā

Do you have famous any fans?
Che: āYes! I know we were talking to Jude Law about coming to a show at some point. He was a deeper fan of another band we know and we were playing the same show. I met him before the show, told him I was a big fan, and he was really cool, knew the stuff and said he was going to try and make another gig. More recently, Mo The Comedian, Wiley, plus me and Stormzy follow each other. I would like to assume he only follows people that heās fans of when it comes to musicians.ā
Idris: āThatās cool. Judeās so random but heās a good pal. Stormzy has a really good ear for stuff. Iāve met a bunch of people that Iāve been fans of but didnāt realise they were fans of me. Iām not gonna name-drop, because that would be too embarrassing, but I just know that feeling of going, āWow, you know me!āā
What motivates you as a musician?
Idris: āIām really coming to terms with being called a musician, if Iām honest. That aside, what motivates me is the pure and unadulterated love for music. I love my relationship with sonics because I really listen and feel music. I listen to every component of every song. Itās a gift that keeps giving. Iām an actor so I typically say other peoplesā words, live the imagination of someone else and turn them into a character. When Iām making music or Iām part of a project, that comes from me ā itās not someone elseās thing thatās applied to me. I love words and I love storytelling. Thatās the bond of peace between everyone.Ā Thatās what I love about your music Che, because you paint pictures for me.ā
Che: āThank you! I started in creativity with drawing anime characters that I printed off the internet I was 10 or 11. My friends and I were into Dragonball-Z and whatever, so we just did that religiously every day, put them in folders and brought them to school. Youād always trace and never draw. Itās about trying to manifest whatās in front of you. Thatās matured, grown and transmuted itself into music for me. If I canāt see it in my head, then I wonāt release it. Itās a very edifying feeling to be in a place where youāve made your song, you can see it in your head, and then you shoot a video. Thereās nothing more gratifying than bringing that vision to life.ā
What’s your favourite track by one another?
Che: āItās hard because what you did on āNew Breedā [by James BKS and featuring Little Simz and Q-Tip] was lovely. Same for what you did on āBoastyā [with Wiley, Sean Paul and Stefflon Don]. Between them, I donāt know which I prefer to listen to more. Theyāre my favourite verses that Iāve heard from you.ā
Idris: āAs much as I love making music, I donāt love talking about it. There are so many restrictions that I put on it myself. Unlike you, I donāt write to make social change. I write purely for the fun and gratification. Iām a bedroom DJ and producer. Itās interesting that you say āNew Breedā or āBoastyā, because theyāre both songs that came out this year and are the most commercial of anything Iāve done. āBoastyā is interesting because it emulates a forgotten time of reggae. To be part of that with Stefflon Don on the rise, The Godfather Wiley and Sean Paul to revitalise that moment and make it into an international hit was amazing. Iām sat there going, āHow did this happen?ā I was in my bedroom putting that record together and saying, āI could imagine Wiley on thisā.”
Idris: āAs for your music, Iām going to say āBlack Onesā ā not just because I got to help you work it out, but because I think itās a powerful, powerful record. You and Ghetts rapping together is amazing. The line, āblack ones on my feetā makes me imagine you wearing Nike Air Force 1s. Is that what youāre talking about?ā
Che: āYeah, itās that plus the struggles of someone who knows that theyāre not necessarily in the greatest situation long-term or destructive short-term. Itās saying, āYou donāt know what Iām going throughā. Itās either for the media or people who donāt live it to tell you what youāre going through every day, but they donāt know. Iām so connected to my area and the majority of people in the āMy Blockā video are from when I was young, but with āBlack Ones itās about putting on those black trainers to go outside and try to surviveā.ā
Who is your favourite artist of all time?Ā
Che: āIād have to say Kendrick Lamar. I first heard āRigor Mortisā and immediately thought āI could do that, I could give someone this feeling that Iām gettingā. It was very exciting. I was already rapping and had started on grime, but as I grew older grime didnāt really validate who I was as a person. I didnāt want to go all the way into R&B because Iām not a singer, but hip-hop was a good middle point.ā
Idris: āLike Bob Marley falls under the genre of reggae, heās also just Bob ā you know? Itās the same for Kendrick and hip-hop ā heās just Kendrick. That makes me think about some of the influences that have a duality. You sound like Che Lingo and donāt sound like anyone else. Itās not grime, itās not rap ā itās just you.”

What is your karaoke song?
Che: āThis has stressed me out. Oh my days. Thereās got to be one song that blows everyone out of the water, but I donāt know what it is. I was going to say āRigor Mortisā, but isnāt that. Mine would be Frank Oceanās āSuper Rich Kidsā or āGolden Girlā with Tyler, The Creator. Frankās inside my heart, man.
Idris: āI donāt do karaoke, but I have done before. I tend to like the crooners. The Franks and the Dean Martins. Probably Frank Sinatra āThatās Lifeā.
Watch the video at the top of the page as the pair also talk to us about fighting for justice, working in retail, and the dream new acts they’d love to sign to their label 7Wallace.
‘Spaghetti’ by Che Lingo is out now.Ā
The post Friends Like These: Rising rapper Che Lingo talks life and music with his label boss Idris Elba appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.