The first song I remember hearing
Prince Nico Mbarga â âSweet Motherâ
“If you were born in the â80s, and you don’t know this record as an African person, I don’t know who you are. Whatâs the equivalent? If you were going to play âCome On Eileenâ â itâs the quintessential pub song. This is the quintessential African wedding/house party song. All the mums get in the middle of the dance floor and we celebrate them by dancing around them.”
The first song I fell in love with
Bob Marley â âZimbabweâ
“We were immigrants. My parents would talk about Zimbabwe for years. Even now, we still talk about the wars and the aftereffects. I remember that coming up, my mum was just so happy that a huge international star like Bob Marley had made this record. She’s a big fan. To them that was such a beautiful moment, a beautiful way to speak of our continent. When he performed it he was always in the spirit, and I love it.”
The first album I ever bought
De La Soul â â3 Feet High and Risingââ
“I bought it at my school fair. You know when they used to have those fairs at the end of school into summer and everything was bric-a-brac. It was all like 50p. I had no record player of my own but my mum did â one of those old school grams in a big cabinet. I remember feeling so proud of myself going to my granâs house and putting that vinyl on. I ended up doing a song with De La Soul called âMemory of⊠(us)â. That was very full circle, Iâm so glad that I loved them from being a child.”
The first gig I went to
Busta Rhymes â Kentish Town Forum, mid-’90s
“I was about 17. I remember having a short haircut and I thought I was cute. I went in and by the time I left I had a mini afro because I sweat my hair out! It was incredible. It was Busta and Twista. I went with my friend Tasha and we didnât know what to do with ourselves â we were in the middle as two short, skinny girls and there were mosh pits. We were like, âYeah, get involved!â”
The song that reminds me of home
Nina Simone â âTo Be Young, Gifted And Blackâ
“Mum mum used to sing this to us, and it reminded us that no matter what anyone was gonna say, we could do it. I think that came as a result of her childhood, being told âNoâ and âDonât have that ambitionâ â and she had all the ambition and all the audacity. She was like, âMy kids will never be told noâ. I’m going to make sure that they understand they can do anything. I’m glad she did. She sings it to her grandkids now.”
The song I do at karaoke
Estelle feat. Kanye West â âAmerican Boyâ
“I donât get to choose, it ends up being âAmerican Boyâ. Iâm always just there in the corner crying through my friends and then theyâll put âConquerorâ [Estelleâs 2015 single] on. Iâm like: âFirst of all, Iâve been drinking so Iâm not hitting anybodyâs high notes.â You need to calm down with that, what are yâall doing to me! I try not to sing at karaoke. Itâs weird. Theyâre looking for a performance from me, and Iâm like: âI just ate wings what do you guys want from me?â”
The song I can no longer listen to
Any song by R. Kelly
“I have a visceral reaction to R. Kelly now. Just no. I was a little girl listening to that. Now when I’m listening to records, and you know a little bit about the background that you see, the context is like, âOhâŠâ, and it changes your viewpoint. So I can’t hear anything by R. Kelly.”
The song that makes me want to dance
Stevie Wonder â âDo I Doâ
“Youâre not finding me sitting down, I donât care where I am. I will hear that song in the supermarket and be two-stepping in the aisles. People join in, thatâs the part! Itâs not one of those songs you can stand still to.”
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