Kano Reacts To New UK Rappers (Aitch, slowthai, Poundz) | The Cosign - YouTube

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Yo. This is Kano and I’m about to watch some videos and see which one of these UK artists
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gets my cosign.
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I think for like a long time, or for a little while I think, where music was in the UK,
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especially hip-hop, they were kind of looking at America so much that they were emulating
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what Americans were doing.
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For some years now, people have been telling their own stories and putting their own spin
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on it.
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And yeah, we've created our own thing.
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I know this tune.
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I met him the other day for the first time in Birmingham.
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I hear the recognizable sample, but I know that he’s a major part of the new thing
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that’s going on now.
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People are feeling this guy.
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Yeah, he’s not reinventing the wheel, but yeah.
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I like the tune.
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I like this ā€˜cause it’s local.
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You can tell that it’s just the ends that he grew up in and his mates and that.
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That’s how my videos used to be, like all my mates wanted to come and now they’re
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like, that’s shit’s long…
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No one wants to come to the videos nowadays.
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When I hear this, I’m like straightaway, I can tell that he’s from up north.
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And when you come from a place, like outside of London and you can kind of captivate your
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city, because there's not so many of you, like they really root for you.
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You know what I mean? Massive respect to what he's doing and obviously still repping his ends, and
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you can tell that's where he's shooting his videos and what not, so.
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Yeah, big respect to that.
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I like this.
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I wonder what it’s shot on.
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It’s like a square crop.
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I know she's not like singing singing, but I love when people just, are themselves, you
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know what I mean?
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A lot of people don’t like to hear comparisons and shit like that, so I don’t mean to do
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that to her, but yeah.
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That Santigold like Azealia Banks-y kind of, you now what I mean.
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That's the kind of world it feels like it lives in to me.
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Everyone, like artists, we know what’s out there.
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We know what’s working.
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We turn on the radio and we hear what’s working or we see what’s got millions of
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views and what not.
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So to say, ā€œLook, maybe that’s not for me.
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I wanna do my things this way,ā€ is like commendable.
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So yeah, never heard her before and yeah it’s cool.
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This looks like yesterday.
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Like, the visuals are working for me.
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Nah, I’m joking.
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I like that he’s got his little dance thing going on as well.
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People that ain’t afraid to just vibe and not just be so hard all the time.
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But yeah, fun song you know what I mean, young guys, getting it, enjoying life.
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Big them up.
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Yeah I’ve seen this.
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You know when someone’s just like, English.
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Just like, pub, pint, packet of crisps.
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You know what I mean?
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English.
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Yeah this hard.
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This beat is mad.
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I like it because I know already that it was a challenge to spit on.
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I don’t think his flow is off-beat.
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I just think the beat is off-flow.
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It’s like he’s showing you the side of Britain that isn’t necessarily publicized,
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you know what I mean?
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But it’s different to who I'm speaking for.
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It's his own thing.
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So it's nice to hear that perspective.
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Liking the beat already.
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Fuckin’ hell.
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How old are these guys?
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They’re in their 70s.
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That’s impressive, ya know.
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I dunno, they might not have wrote it but even to perform it, you know what I mean?
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Ah!
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He said, ā€œI’m a nut box, put five cans in me grandson’s lunch box.ā€
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Oh man.
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Tune’s alright though.
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Fuckin’ hell.
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Wow.
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Showing me what the next 30 years of my life could look like.
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To be honest, I want to know who’s writing it, if it’s them or not.
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If they ain’t, I'm still impressed, like to be able to perform that, you know what I mean?
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Yeah that's a mad one.
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That's a... yeah.
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Big them up, man.
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I wonder if they do shows.
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They should do shows at funerals or something, ya know?
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What's quite interesting to me is, it's probably the first generation that grew up on artists
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that were from England.
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Yeah first one was Headie One, I liked that tune.
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That’s what really stuck out, just like the vibe.
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Aitch.
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Yeah I liked his vibe and how just down to earth and local it was.
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Shygirl, yeah.
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I liked that as well, she was doing something interesting.
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Next one was Poundz.
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Just a bunch of mates enjoying life.
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Slowthai that was a proper video that, you know what I mean?
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Pete & Bas.
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Yeah that was funny man.
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Of those six videos that you've just shown me, I think the Slowthai one is, is the one
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I can co-sign.
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It was creative, it was interesting, it was slick but then raw, and if that was the first
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thing you saw of him, it would really tell you who he is.
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The future's all right, it's looking all right for us.
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You turn on the radio now, before it used to be like a bunch of mostly American music
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and you might hear the one Dizzee Rascal or whatever, but now it's like, English artists
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are actually flooding it, and that sounds crazy because that's how it should be, but
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it hasn't always been like that.
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In terms of black music, we never got a look in at times, but that's all changed now.
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You think Americans can hear the different accents that we have within our thing or they
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think it's just all English.
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Yeah, it's like, I don’t know, listening to Jay-Z and then listening to Gucci Mane,
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you know what I mean?
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It's like you can tell they're from a different place.