Guvna B's 'Rap Gets Real' on BBC Radio 4


Guvna B's new Radio show is set to air this Tuesday on BBC Radio 4 - Click here for more information. A big thanks to The Guardian, The Independent and The Sunday Times who have all made it pick of the week.

"Rap is changing. High profile UK artists such as Stormzy and Dave are shunning the genre's dominant tropes of hypermasculinity and aggression. Instead they’re putting their battles with mental illness at the forefront of their music. From North America, Drake, J. Cole and Kendrick Lamar are proving it’s ok - and commercially viable - to be vulnerable.

References to mental health in rap lyrics have more than doubled in the last two decades. With black men the demographic most likely to suffer from mental illness – and also the least likely to seek help – the MOBO Award-winning rapper, author and broadcaster Guvna B assesses the extent to which rap now actively tackles this epidemic.

For Guvna B, this is deeply personal. When his Dad passed away a few years ago, he sank into a depression and subsequently suffered a mental breakdown. Looking back now on his childhood and upbringing, with the help of his lifelong best friend Joe, he reflects on possible causes of his breakdown and on the progress he’s made through writing so openly and honestly."... Read More

 





Guvna B's 'Rap Gets Real' on BBC Radio 4


Guvna B's new Radio show is set to air this Tuesday on BBC Radio 4 - Click here for more information. A big thanks to The Guardian, The Independent and The Sunday Times who have all made it pick of the week.

"Rap is changing. High profile UK artists such as Stormzy and Dave are shunning the genre's dominant tropes of hypermasculinity and aggression. Instead they’re putting their battles with mental illness at the forefront of their music. From North America, Drake, J. Cole and Kendrick Lamar are proving it’s ok - and commercially viable - to be vulnerable.

References to mental health in rap lyrics have more than doubled in the last two decades. With black men the demographic most likely to suffer from mental illness – and also the least likely to seek help – the MOBO Award-winning rapper, author and broadcaster Guvna B assesses the extent to which rap now actively tackles this epidemic.

For Guvna B, this is deeply personal. When his Dad passed away a few years ago, he sank into a depression and subsequently suffered a mental breakdown. Looking back now on his childhood and upbringing, with the help of his lifelong best friend Joe, he reflects on possible causes of his breakdown and on the progress he’s made through writing so openly and honestly."... Read More