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Akala (rapper)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Akala
Akala in 2014
Akala in 2014
Background information
Birth nameKingslee James McLean Daley
Born (1983-12-01) 1 December 1983 (age 40) [1]
Crawley, West Sussex, England [1]
OriginKentish Town, London, England
GenresBritish hip hop
Occupation(s)Activist, educator, poet, journalist, author, songwriter and rapper
Years active2004–present
LabelsImmovable Ltd (Illa State Records)
Websiteakalamusic.com

Kingslee James McLean Daley (born 1 December 1983),[1] known professionally as Akala, is a British rapper, journalist, author, activist and poet from Kentish Town, London. In 2006, he was voted the Best Hip Hop Act at the MOBO Awards[2] and has been included on the annual Powerlist of the 100 most influential Black British people in the UK, most recently making the 2021 edition.[3][4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Akala - Shakespeare (Official Music Video)
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  • AKALA - FIND NO ENEMY (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)

Transcription

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. If I could request the resetting of the clock, it's on at four minutes at the moment, I presume from the one before... Fantastic! Okay! So, my name is Akala, I'm from the Hip Hop Shakespeare Company. And before we get into the philosophy of our work, what that means, what the intention is behind it, I'm going to challenge you guys to a little bit of a pop quiz. And we've done this pop quiz quite a few times, we'll talk about it after we do it. I'm gonna simply tell you some quotes. One line quotes, taken either from some of my favorite hip hop songs, or some of my favorite Shakespearean plays or sonnets. And you're gonna tell me by show of hands, whether you think it's hip hop or Shakespeare. (Laughter) Does that make sense? Okay. So the first one we'll go for is: "To destroy the beauty from which one came." "To destroy the beauty from which one came." If you think that's hip hop, raise your hands please. If that's Shakespeare, raise your hands please. Brilliant, okay, that's 70 percent towards Shakespeare. It's from a gentleman known as Sean Carter, better known as Jay-Z, from a track called "Can I live?" We'll go for another one. "Maybe it's hatred I spew, maybe it's food for the spirit." "Maybe it's hatred I spew, maybe it's food for the spirit." Hip hop? Shakespeare? Getting overwhelmingly towards Shakespeare. Interesting. Anyone heard of a gentleman known as Eminem? (Laughter) He's not Shakespeare. That's from a track Eminem did with Jay-Z actually, called "Renegade." We'll go for a couple more. "Men would rather use their broken weapons than their bare hands." "Men would rather use their broken weapons than their bare hands." Hip hop? Shakespeare? Pretty even spread with a Shakespearean lean. That one is from Shakespeare, it's from a play known as "Othello." We go for: "I was not born under a rhyming planet." "I was not born under a rhyming planet." Hip hop? Shakespeare? That one is Shakespeare. It's from "Much Ado about Nothing." We go for two more. We go for: "The most benevolent king communicates through your dreams." "The most benevolent king communicates through your dreams." Hip hop? Shakespeare? Ah, fifty-fifty there. A gentleman known as the RZA who's the head of the Wu-Tang Clan. We're gonna be revisiting the Wu-Tang later, we'll be talking about him a lot. He's one of the main exponents of hip hop philosophy, someone, or a collective, that had a huge influence on me. But we'll revisit them. Last quote of the day. Let's go for... "Socrates, philosophies and hypotheses can't define." "Socrates, philosophies and hypotheses can't define." Hip hop? Shakespeare? Overwhelmingly towards hip hop. And that one, that is hip hop. That's Wu-Tang again, that's from a man named Inspectah Deck. Interestingly, that quote comes from a single, or track, known as "Triumph" from the album "Wu-Tang Forever." "Wu-Tang Forever" was the first hip-hop album to go number one in this country. So that was what made hip hop cross over with this kind of lyricism, but we're gonna revisit that a little later and revisit the Wu-Tang, as I said. So, as you can see, it wasn't as clear-cut as many of us may have thought. The language used, the subjects spoken about, various things make it very, very difficult once the context is taken away, once our perception is taken away, and we have to look at just the raw language of the two art forms. And don't worry, we've done that exercise over 400 times, and as of yet, no-one has got them all right. Not even some of the most senior professors at some of the most respected Shakespearean institutions in the country, I shan't name names. (Laughter) But needless to say: it's challenged a lot of people's perceptions and we extend from that, we look at some of the other parallels between hip hop and Shakespeare, at some of the other things they share. One of the main things that is shared between the two is of course rhythm. Iambic pentameter -- dee-dum, dee-dum, dee-dum, dee-dum, dee-dum. Five sets, two beats, it's actually a wonderful rhythm to use in hip hop music and translates in a way that even artists writing today find difficult. What do I mean by that? It's very difficult to take, even as an MC, who is a professional MC, a lyric written over a grime beat, grime is a 140 bpm. Very, very fast tempo. And then take that same lyric and put it on a... what we consider to be a traditional hip hop beat, 70-80 bpm. A very, very difficult skill. Even writing now, with the music to hand. Yet, the iambic pentameter allows us to do just that. I'll show you what I mean rather than tell you. So listen up. Cue music please. (Music) What you're about to hear, some of you may know of it, some of you may not. It's Shakespeare's most famous poem, Sonnet 18. I haven't adopted it to make it fit to the rhythm, but just listen close. Okay. Yo. "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer's lease hath all too short a date: Sometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd; But thy eternal summer shall not fade Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st; Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade, When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st: So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this and this gives life to thee. So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this and this gives life to thee." (Applause) Now as you can see, it sits right there in the rhythm. It's right in the pocket of the beat. Now we're gonna try a completely different style of beat, different tempo of beat. You're gonna see the same lyric, because of this consistent rhythm, can fit. Let's try. (Music) "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer's lease hath all too short a date: Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd; But thy eternal summer shall not fade Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st; Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade, When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st: So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this and this gives life to thee. So long as men can breathe or eyes can see, So long lives this and this gives life to thee." (Applause) What I'd like you all to do is just put your hand on your heart for a second. Now... If you feel your heart, hopefully, your heart should be beating in sets of two, one off, one on, dee-dum, or an iamb, as we call it. If it isn't, I do suggest you consult a doctor as soon as possible. But because of that -- you can take your hands off your hearts now -- But because of that, that's why this rhythm is so intrinsic, where, really, music is imitating the rhythm of life, the sounds of life. The heartbeat of life. And so, this rhythm, iambic pentameter, even though being such a simple rhythm, is intrinsic to so many forms of music. Other places in the world, they have different sorts of rhythms. Like the West-African rhythms, it's on the three, people speak in triplets, essentially. Well, we found that this rhythm really acts as a mnemonic device, for young people to remember the lyrics. But also, really, as a way to understand some of what is being said. The rhythm helps us understand it. It helps us to communicate feeling. And of course, in hip hop, tonality, the way you say what you're saying, the mood with which what you're saying, the rhythm with which what you're saying, is as important as what you're actually saying. But revisiting the philosophies and the perceptions or conceptions of these two art forms, these two things we think we know so much about, we'll start with Shakespeare. Over the course of the past three or four years, having worked with hundreds, thousands of young people now, at hundreds of workshops, we found out very interesting things about people's perception of Shakespeare. Who they think he was, what the inherited beliefs of the time in which he lived, the people he was surrounded by, his background, are. Some of them are of course, just as with hip hop, complete nonsense. This idea for example that Shakespeare spoke, as people say to us, posh, or the Queen's English. Received pronunciation. Well, received pronunciation we know wasn't invented well after 100 years after Shakespeare died. He'd never heard what we think of today as the Queen's English. When he was alive, people spoke a bit more like a mix between people from Yorkshire and Cornwall. So for example, the word "hours" was pronounced "urrs." "Urrs and urrs and urrs." Or: "mood" and "blood" ... rhyme! "mu:dd" and "blu:dd" was the way in which people would pronounce those words. The times in which he lived, you know, the chasm between rich and poor being larger than it is today, though we seem to be doing our best to recreate that chasm. But... you know, he was living in very tumultuous, very violent times and we really receive almost a sanitized vision of that violence, you know, coloring our view of the past. We know over ninety percent of Shakespeare's audience couldn't read or write. So how is it that in the 21st century in Britain that he's come to be viewed as almost the poster child for [elitism], and even within that now we're getting a debate: Did he even write his own plays? Because of course, this comes down to who's allowed to be the custodian of knowledge and who isn't. Shakespeare was someone who didn't go [to uni]. He wasn't Oxbridge. He's seen -- by some -- they need to see him that way -- as someone who's not entitled to be a custodian of knowledge. So we have to find an explanation for his intelligence rather than just accepting his intelligence as an actual fact. Which brings me on to hip hop. Many people have opinions of hip hop -- of course, the media's had some very loud opinions of hip hop. But I've found again over this working with thousands of people, and these hundreds of workshops, and interactions with these institutions, many people who have an opinion of hip hop know absolutely nothing about it. Zero. Zip. What do I mean by that? So... the very words "hip hop," the "hip" in that word comes from the Wolof word "hipi," Wolof is a Senegalese language, it means "to open one's eyes and see" as a term of enlightenment. The word "hop" from the English signifying movement, thus "hip hop" means "intelligent movement." Hip hop contains five elements as codified by its founding fathers in New York City. It contains five elements. DJing, MCing, break dancing, graffiti art and the fifth element, which is the one I want to talk about today: Knowledge. An element we don't see so much in the television or the radio, perhaps. But of course the representations of that culture today are not owned by the people who founded that culture. But when it's understood, if we go back to the medieval West-African empires of Mali, Songhai, Gao, ancient Ghana, you have a character that the Malians refer to as a griot. These griots still exist today, well, who was the griot? The griot was a rhythmic, oral poet, singer, musician, custodian of the history, of the spiritual tradition, etc. etc. etc., of those empires, of that culture. When we start to understand how those musical oral cultural traditions manifested in many complex ways, in the Americas, and helped influence jazz, blues, funk, up to hip hop, we get a much greater sense of what the founding fathers, Afrika Bambaataa, Kool DJ Herc and Grandmaster Flash were trying to do when they codified this culture in this way, and understood in that context, of course, hip hop becomes a very different proposition to a way in which much of the time it has been represented, when we understand what was going on in New York City in the late seventies, early eighties. People coming out of a post-civil rights era, aesthetic influence by the literature of Amiri Baraka or James Baldwin, influenced by the persona of a Muhammed Ali, influenced by the funk of a James Brown. James Brown the drummer, incidentally, is the most-sampled drummer in history. His famous loop becomes the basis of all hip hop music. And that is the only intellectually honest context in which to place hip hop as a culture. And that's kind of what I grew up in. That's what I was massively influenced by. And it became, really... Up until the mid-nineties, it was still normal for the most commercially successful rappers to boast about how clever they were. To talk about kicking science, dropping knowledge, spreading mathematics, while simultaneously talking about what life was like in the projects of New York City. There was no contradiction between both of those elements, and again, it was about who was custodian of the knowledge. Who was choosing to pick up that baton and run with it? And one of the things that was so inspirational about hip hop was that people who were told they were not supposed to do that, without trying to be anything they weren't, without dressing any different, without speaking any differently, they decided, they made the decision: "We're going to become custodians of this knowledge. We're gonna educate ourselves and we're gonna transmit this knowledge through the music." The main exponents of that in my life, the main influence on me, was this group I already told you about, the Wu-Tang Clan. When "Wu-Tang Forever" came out, when I was in school, it was the first album that united people that listened to all different sorts of music. And up to then, hip hop, still, in London, really only appealed to a particular segment of the people, in my school, anyway. And then "Wu-Tang Forever" came out, and all of a sudden, kids who listened to Heavy Metal, kids who were into Blur and Oasis, everybody was united around this one sort of album. And what was it about? It was this openly proud, intelligent discourse that was so undeniable that really appealed, in my opinion, and pulled everybody in. And I'm gonna show you an example of a poem, well, what I would call a poem, but some people would call it rap, by the lead member of this group, a gentleman known as the RZA. I spoke about him earlier. He actually produced the music for the film "Kill Bill" as well, so some people may know him better in that capacity. There was a poem he wrote called "Twelve Jewels," and this will give you just a sense, as someone, as I said, who was one of the most successful MCs of his time, how normal it was to be so boastful about one's intellect. It's a piece called "Twelve Jewels," you can look it up on the internet. I'm only gonna share a little bit. It goes like this: "In pre-existence of the mathematical, biochemical equations, the manifestations of rock, plant, air, fire and water, without their basic formations, solids, liquids and gases, that cause the land masses and the space catalysts and all matter that exists and this dense third dimension must observe a physical comprehension. It takes a nerve to be struck. Wisdom is the wise poet spoken to wake up the dumb who've been sleeping. The fourth dimension is time. It goes inside the mind. When the shackles energize up through the back of your spine. So observe as my Chi energy strikes a vital nerve. One swerve with the tongue pierces like a sword through the lung. Have you not heard that words kill as fast as bullets? When you load negative thoughts from the chamber of your brain, and your mouth pulls the trigger that propels wickedness straight from hell. From the pits of your stomach where negativity dwells." That's just a little piece of the RZA's "Twelve Jewels." But it's interesting. Because when you understand that kind of lyricism, you realize that hip hop carries that same power as with Shakespeare. You know, the transmute philosophy, as with any great art, to question the world around us. And this brings us, really, to the conclusion about what the work we do with the Hip Hop Shakespeare Company from theater productions to education productions to hopefully film and TV, which we're working on at the moment. What it's all about it's about who is going to be custodian of the knowledge? And in the 21st century, particularly moving towards post-industrial societies, where we don't need masses of workers, we're not training masses of workers to go and work in factories anymore, these are big questions. What is the purpose of education today? What are we teaching young people? What are we training the next generation to do and form? Are we training each individual human being in a society where, increasingly, the success or failure of a society is going to be dependent on the mind, or ideas, of the people within that society? Are we training people to aspire to be the best they can be? To reach their full potential? Wherever they're born in that society or are we still working in the old, stratified ways of thinking that people have stations and places they need to be, or are we encouraging people to think as big as possible? Because maybe, I don't know who in Shakespeare's life encouraged him to become a custodian of the knowledge, but if he was not able to do that, we'd be missing his section of work, similarly with hip hop. So really, that's what we want to think about. Education, who does it belong to, who doesn't it belong to. And using these seemingly disparate art forms, these two seemingly disparate worlds, and putting them together, to show ourselves a unity in human culture, a unity in the ideas that humans pursue, in activities humans pursue. And to inspire people towards their own form of artistic, literary, cultural and societal accents. I'm gonna share with you a little bit... one final piece. It's a bit more... I don't want to say "fun," but a bit more of a game and a challenge. It came out of a radio, "Freestyles" on Radio 1 Extra, about two and a half, three years ago. And as a bit of a joke, the DJ said to me, "Here's a list of 27 Shakespeare plays, attempt to fit them in a freestyle." Luckily, we did it, I don't know how, we had about ten minutes, though, so it wasn't a true freestyle in the truest sense, but we did it as a track that we then, subsequently, put on the album, so the first part contains 27 Shakespeare plays, the next parts contains 16 of Shakespeare's most famous quotes interwoven. It's entitled "Comedy, Tragedy, History," you can look it up on the web, and it goes like this. I'm just gonna do it here, let's see how it goes. "Dat boy Akala's a diamond fella. All you little boys are a comedy of errors. You bellow but you fellows get played like the cello. I'm doing my thing, you're jealous like Othello. Who're you? What're you gonna do? Little boys get Tamed like the Shrew. You're mid-summer dreamin', Your tunes aren't appealing. I'm Capulet, you're Montague, I ain't feeling. I am the Julius Caesar, hear me? The Merchant Of Venice couldn't sell your CD. As to me, All's Well That Ends Well. Your boy's like Macbeth, you're going to Hell. Measure for Measure, I am the best here, You're Merry Wives of Windsor, not King Lear. I don't know about Timon, I know he was at Athens. When I come back like Hamlet you pay for your action. Dat boy Akala, I do it As You Like It. You're Much Ado About Nothing, All you do is bite it. I'm too tight, I don't need 12 Nights. All you little Tempests get murked on the mic. Of course I'm the one with the force. You're history just like Henry IV. I'm fire, things look dire. Better run like Pericles Prince Of Tyre. Off the scale, cold as a Winter's Tale Titus Andronicus was bound to fail." That's 27 plays. (Laughter) (Applause) Listen up. And there is one final bit, this contains 16 of Shakespeare's most famous quotes. "Wise is the man that knows he's a fool Tempt not a desperate man with a jewel. Why take from Peter to go and pay Paul? Some rise by sin and by virtue fall. What have you made if you gain the whole world. But sell your own soul for the price of a pearl? The world is my oyster and I am starving. I want much more than a penny or a farthing. I told no joke, I hope you're not laughing. Poet or pauper which do you class him? Speak eloquent, though I am resident to the gritty inner city, surely irrelevant. Call it urban, call it street. A rose by any other name, smell just as sweet Spit so hard, but I'm smart as the Bard. Come through with a Union Jack, full of yard. Akala, Akala, wherefore art thou? [I rap] Shakespeare and the secret's out now. Chance never did crown me, this is destiny. You still talk but it still perplexes me. Devour cowards, thousands per hour. Don't you know the king's name is a tower? You should never speak it, it is not a secret. I teach thesis, like ancient Greece's Or Egyptology, never no apology. In my mind's eye, I see things properly. Stopping me, nah you could never possibly. I bear a charmed life, most probably. For certain I speak daggers in a phrase. I'll put an end to your dancing days. No matter what you say it will never work. Wrens can't make prey where eagles don't perch. I'm the worst with the words 'cause I curse all my verbs. I'm the first with a verse to rehearse with a nurse. There's a hearse for the first jerk who turn berserk. Off with his head, 'cos it must not work. Ramp with Akala, that's true madness. And there's no method in it, just sadness. I speak with the daggers and the hammers of a passion when I'm rappin' I attack 'em. In a military fashion the pattern of my rappin' chattin couldn't ever map it. And I run more rings round things than Saturn. Verses split big kids wigs when I'm rappin'. That boy Akala, the rap Shakespeare. Didn't want to listen, when I said last year. Rich like a gem in a Ethiopia's ear. Tell them again for them who never hear." It's a pleasure. (Applause)

Early life and education

Daley was born in Crawley, West Sussex,[1] in 1983 to a Scottish mother and Jamaican father who separated before he was born, and grew up with his mother in Kentish Town, north London.[5][6] He has recalled the day he realised that his mother was white,[7] and was embarrassed by her whiteness.[8] His mother had educated him about black history and introduced him to radical black thinkers, yet there would always remain a racial dimension to those relationships.[9] Daley's older sister is rapper Ms. Dynamite.

His stepfather was a stage manager at the Hackney Empire theatre, and he often visited it before his teens.[10] His mother enrolled him in a pan-African Saturday school, about which he states "I benefited massively from a specifically black community-led self-education tradition that we don't talk about very much because it doesn't fit with the image [of black families]".[11] When accepting honorary degrees, he thanked "the entire Caribbean pan-African community that helped me through school and encouraged an intellectual curiosity and self development from a very young age."[12]

At age six, Daley's state primary school put him in a special needs group for pupils with learning difficulties and English as a second language.[10] He attended Acland Burghley School for secondary education. Daley saw a friend attacked with a meat cleaver to the skull when he was 12, and carried a knife himself for a period.[11] He went on to achieve ten GCSEs and took maths a year early. He has said he "was in the top 1 per cent of GCSEs in the country. [I] got 100 per cent in [my] English exam."[11] As a teenager, Daley focused on football, being on the schoolboy books of both West Ham United and AFC Wimbledon, and dropped out of college.[10] He is a fan of Arsenal.[13] Daley did not attend university, but has said he often envies those who do.[14]

Daley has two honorary degrees in recognition of his educational work. On 23 June 2018, he received an honorary doctorate from Oxford Brookes University as a Doctor of Art.[15] On 31 July 2018, he also received an honorary degree from Brighton University.[16]

Musical career

2003–2009: Early years and breakthrough

Akala (right) in 2009.

Daley got his stage name from Acala, a Buddhist term for "immovable",[17] and started releasing music in 2003 from his own independent music label, Illa State Records. He released his first mixtape, The War Mixtape, in 2004.[18]

In 2006, he released his first album, It's Not a Rumour. This proved to be his breakthrough album, containing the single "Shakespeare" (a reference to his self-proclaimed title "The Black Shakespeare") which made the BBC Radio 1 playlist.[19] His work was recognised with the MOBO Award for Best Hip Hop Act.[20] Additionally in 2006, a mixtape, A Little Darker, was released under the name "Illa State", featuring Akala and his sister, Ms. Dynamite, as well as cameo appearances by many other artists.[21]

Daley appeared for a live session on BBC Radio 1Xtra where he was challenged to come up with a rap containing as many Shakespeare play titles as he could manage, he wrote and performed a minute-long rap containing 27 different Shakespeare play titles in under half an hour and later recorded these lyrics in the studio and turned it into the single "Comedy Tragedy History".[22]

In 2007, Daley released his second album, Freedom Lasso, containing the "Comedy Tragedy History" track. The song "Love in my Eyes" heavily sampled Siouxsie and the Banshees' song "Love in a void" with the voice of Siouxsie Sioux.[23] In 2008, The War Mixtape Vol. 2 was released, along with an EP of acoustic remixes.[24]

2010–present: Doublethink, Knowledge Is Power, and beyond

Akala at the Hull Jazz Festival 2015.

Daley's third studio album, DoubleThink, was released in 2010, and holds a strong theme of George Orwell's popular novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.[25] DoubleThink contains tracks such as "Find No Enemy" and "Yours and My Children" detailing some of the sights he saw on his trip to Brazil.[26] In November 2010, Daley headlined a live performance at the British Library, to launch the "Evolving English" exhibition and featured performances by British poet Zena Edwards, comedian Doc Brown and British rapper Lowkey which also included Daley taking part in a hip hop panel discussion alongside Saul Williams, U.S professor MK Asante and Lowkey.[27][28] Daley appeared on Charlie Sloth's show on Radio 1Xtra on 18 July 2011, performing "Fire in the Booth", and after the great reception it received he returned again in May 2012 and provided "Part 2".[29]

In May 2012, Daley released a two-part mixtape, Knowledge Is Power, containing "Fire in the Booth", and followed the release with a promotional tour in the autumn of 2012.[citation needed] In March 2013, Daley announced via his social media feeds that his fourth album would be released in May 2013, pushing back the future EP The Ruin of Empires to later in 2013.[citation needed] His fourth album, The Thieves Banquet, was released on 27 May 2013, including the songs "Malcolm Said It", "Maangamizi" and "Lose Myself" (feat. Josh Osho).[30]

Live performances

Akala performing at Blissfields 2015.

In 2007, Daley was the first hip hop artist to perform his own headline concert in Vietnam.[31] He has performed at various U.K. festivals, including V Festival, Wireless, Glastonbury, Reading and Leeds Festivals, Parklife, Secret Garden Party and Isle of Wight, and has supported artists such as Christina Aguilera,[32] MIA,[33] Richard Ashcroft,[34] Audiobullys,[35] DJ Shadow,[36] The Gotan Project[37] and Scratch Perverts on their U.K/European tours.[38]

In 2008, Daley featured at the South by Southwest music festival in Texas[39] and in 2010 he toured the UK with Nas and Damian Marley on the "Distant Relatives" tour, which included the British rapper Ty.[40]

In November 2010, Daley embarked on his own headline tour of the UK, with 20 dates overall.[41] He was present at the "One Love:No Borders Hip Hop" event held in Birmingham, England in April 2011, with Iron Braydz from London, Lowkey, Logic and other up-and-coming UK artists.[42] In August 2012, he performed at the Outlook Festival[43] and in November 2012, he performed at the second edition of NH7 Weekender music festival in Pune, India.[44]

Writing

Natives

In May 2018, Daley published Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire. The book is part biography, and part polemic on race and class. The overall ideological framework of the book is a pragmatic, socialist-oriented Pan-Africanism that claims to seek the liberation of all humanity from oppression and exploitation. At the same time, Daley highlights what he believes are shared problems faced by African communities worldwide in what he describes as a global system of imperialism.[45]

Daley attributes his escape from poverty not to personal exceptionalism but to the vagaries and chaotic injustice of race, class and privilege.[46] Daley asserts that Britain is not a meritocracy where the barriers of race and class can be simply overcome through hard work and perseverance. He explains his success as the absurd and unexpected consequence of an unequal system that allows the rise of a few while leaving behind the many, no matter how brilliant they are. He claims several times in the book that some of his friends could have been academics or scientists if the obstacles of what he terms 'structural racism' and 'class oppression' had not been there.[47]

Visions

In 2016[48] Akala published a graphic novel/comic book called Visions. Akala's own comic deals with his interests, and references. It is a semi-autobiographical journey into magical realism, which begins with him smashing a television with a teapot, then takes us through altered states of consciousness, reincarnation, hallucinations, and themes of indigenous spiritualities and ancestral memory.

Hip and Hop: You Can Do Anything

Community organising is core to Daley’s Akala characters identity and his attention is turned to raising a new generation of free-thinkers, activists and creatives. He has a children's book out, that introduces school kids to hip-hop, titled Hip and Hop: You Can Do Anything.

Political views

In June 2016, Daley supported Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn after mass resignations from his cabinet and a leadership challenge. He tweeted: "The way these dickhead Labour MP's [sic] are snaking @jeremycorbyn eediat ting."[49]

In May 2017, he endorsed Corbyn in the 2017 UK general election. He wrote in The Guardian: "So why will I be voting now? Jeremy Corbyn. It's not that I am naïve enough to believe that one man (who is, of course, powerless without the people that support him) can fundamentally alter the nature of British politics, or that I think that if Labour wins that the UK will suddenly reflect his personal political convictions, or even that I believe that the prime minister actually runs the country. However, for the first time in my adult life, and perhaps for the first time in British history, someone I would consider to be a fundamentally decent human being has a chance of being elected."[50]

In November 2019, along with 34 other musicians, Daley signed a letter endorsing Corbyn in the 2019 UK general election with a call to end austerity.[51][52]

Lectures, speeches and interviews

Lectures

Daley has given guest lectures at East 15 Acting School, University of Essex, Manchester Metropolitan University,[53] Sydney University,[54] Sheffield Hallam University,[55] Cardiff University, and the International Slavery Museum,[56] as well as a workshop on songwriting at the School of Oriental and African Studies.[57] He has also spoken at the Oxford Union.[58] He has also been involved in campaigns to "decolonise" the curriculum including giving a talk at the University of Leicester.[59]

Institutionalised racism

Daley is a believer in institutionalised racism: "My analysis of institutionalised racism is not 'oh, this is an excuse to fail' – quite the opposite. The earlier you're aware of the hurdles, the easier they are to jump over."[11]

Activism

The Hip-hop Shakespeare Company

Founded in 2009 by Daley, The Hip-hop Shakespeare Company (THSC) is a music theatre production company aimed at exploring the social, cultural and linguistic parallels between the works of William Shakespeare and that of modern day hip-hop artists.

Discography

Albums

Album Information
It's Not a Rumour
  • Released: 1 May 2006
  • Singles: "Roll Wid Us" "Bullshit" "The Edge" "Shakespeare"
Freedom Lasso
  • Released: 1 October 2007
  • Singles: "Bit By Bit" "Freedom Lasso" "Electro Livin" "Comedy Tragedy History"
DoubleThink
  • Released: 3 May 2010
  • Singles: "XXL" "Yours and My Children" "Find No Enemy"
The Thieves Banquet
  • Released: 27 May 2013
  • Singles: "Lose Myself" "Malcolm Said It"
Knowledge Is Power II[60]
  • Released: 30 March 2015
  • Singles: "Mr. Fire in the Booth" "Murder Runs the Globe"

Compilation

Album Information
10 Years of Akala[61]
  • Released: 23 September 2016
  • Singles: "Giants"

EPs

EP Information
Acoustic Remixes - EP[62]
  • Released: 13 October 2008
Visions - EP[63]
  • Released: 28 July 2017

Mixtapes

Mixtape Information
The War Mixtape
  • Released: 1 August 2004
  • Singles: "Welcome to England" "War"
A Little Darker (with Ms. Dynamite)
  • Released: 4 September 2006
The War Mixtape Vol. 2
  • Released: 22 September 2008
Knowledge Is Power Volume 1
  • Released: 28 May 2012

Singles

  • "Welcome to England" (2003)
  • "War" (2004)
  • "Roll Wid Us" (2005) – UK No. 72[64]
  • "Bullshit" (2005)
  • "The Edge" (featuring Niara) (2006)
  • "Dat Boy Akala" (featuring Low Deep) (2006)
  • "Shakespeare" (2006)
  • "Doin' Nuffin" / "Hold Your Head Up" (2006)
  • "Bit By Bit" (2007)
  • "Freedom Lasso" (2007)
  • "Where I'm From" (2007)
  • "Comedy Tragedy History" (2008)
  • "XXL" (2010)
  • "Yours and My Children" (2010)
  • "Find No Enemy" (2011)
  • "Lose Myself" (featuring Josh Osho) (2013)
  • "Mr. Fire in the Booth" (2015)
  • "Giants" (featuring Kabaka Pyramid & Marshall) (2016)

Songs used in other media

  • The song "Roll Wid Us", was used in the 2006 British film Kidulthood.
  • The song "The Edge", from It's Not A Rumour, was used in the NBA 2K10 video game.
  • The song "Shakespeare" was used on a Channel 4 advert for their Street Summer.

References

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External links

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