Usually, the winner of the Hyundai Mercury Prize is announced at a lavish awards ceremony after a night of performances from all of the nominees. Itâs a big celebration of the last year in music where creativity and art are rewarded over commercial achievements. Like everything else in 2020, though, the show was forced to react and adapt to the current pandemic and find a new way to announce its victor.
- Read more:Â Michael Kiwanuka on his Hyundai Mercury Prize win: “It’s definitely encouraged me to keep dreaming big”
So it was that last night (September 24), Michael Kiwanuka was named as the recipient of this yearâs Hyundai Mercury Prize feet away from The One Showâs lime green sofas. The magazine show is far from the coolest programme on TV â although itâs hard to think of one BBC show that could both naturally unveil the winner and be considered truly edgy â but its peak slot does carry on one of the ceremonyâs traditions â exposing whoever walks away with the trophy to a new, much larger audience than they had before.
This yearâs shortlist was full of albums that would have felt like apt choices for representing 2020. Charli XCXâs âHow Iâm Feeling Nowâ was written in response to the coronavirus pandemic, created entirely during lockdown in LA. Dua Lipaâs âFuture Nostalgiaâ was adopted early on by large swathes of the general public as the quarantine living room disco record of choice, while Kanoâs âHoodies All Summerâ tackled the kind of social and racial injustices that existed well before this summer’s headlines.
It might have been released last November, but Kiwanukaâs self-titled third album is also a presciently fitting winner when it comes to reflecting the events of this year so far. Its relevance takes on many levels, including displaying the kind of self-acceptance we all need in these harsh days. Speaking to NME just after his win, the musician described the record as one that had seen him âgrowing into myself and just accepting myself and who I amâ. When the world is so dark and scary, being kind to yourself is more important than ever. âKiwanukaâ is full of moments where its creator embraces his existence, not least on the album cover itself, which depicts him as a King â regal, proud and thriving.
Most obviously, though, âKiwanukaâ calls out to some of this yearâs most turbulent, tragic moments, namely the continued slaying of Black people at the hands of authority figures and the racial injustices and prejudices that club together to allow these killings to pass by unpunished. âHeroâ addresses the issue directly, albeit from the historical standpoint of civil rights activist and Black Panther Fred Hampton, who was murdered by police in 1969. âPlease donât shoot me down/I loved you like a brother,â he urges over â60s-tinged psych-rock. âItâs on the news again/I guess they killed another.â That last line, in particular, feels all too familiar and has continued to do so, even since the murder of George Floyd led to the renewed focus and attention on the Black Lives Matter movement.
Elsewhere on the record, Kiwanuka uses samples to remind the world both of the ways Black people are perceived by their white neighbours and of the much kinder viewpoint that should be the standard. âAnd for the first time the community was confronted with negroes in places they have never been,â reads out a newsreader on the otherwise-instrumental âAnother Human Beingâ. After the sound of a gunshot, another voice recorded at a peaceful sit-in in segregated restaurants in the â50s follows. This time, their words present âthe idea that here sits beside meâ as âanother human beingâ.
One of the recordâs recurring themes is celebrating your identity and culture, customs and selfhood of those whoâve come before you, regardless of what the world throws at you. Itâs a resilient listen, Kiwanuka refuses to âblame myselfâ on opener âYou Ainât The Problemâs rich soul. On âHero (Intro)â, he references a time when he was told by industry figures a different moniker would bring him more success, asserting: âI wonât change my name/No matter what they call me.â
âKiwanukaâ is an album that uses the warmth and familiarity of sounds spanning jazz, psych, soul and pop to draw us in, before wrapping us up in its messages of humanity and acceptance, strength and courage. It might not be the only Hyundai Mercury Prize shortlisted album to reflect the times weâre going through right now, but it does so in a way thatâs both comforting and urgent, offering support as it encourages you to fight for whatâs right. How often can you say that message is being subtly spread on one of the BBCâs safe, primetime shows?
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