
At age 9, K'naan was doing what most American kids
were doing. He was hanging out on his neighborhood
street corner, MC'ing for his friends, dropping Nas
and Rakim verses, dreaming of a day when he would posses
the lyrical skills and the rhythmic flow of his hip
hop heroes. However, K'naan was very different
from those American kids. In fact, he wasn't even an
American at all, but African. He wasn't on the streets
of New York or Detroit, but on the dusty streets of
Mogadishu Somali. Although he was rapping verses from
Nas and Rakim and all the other great American MC's,
he could not speak English.
As hip-hop passes the quarter century mark, it has
evolved in ways no one could have imagined. It has
gone from underground to mainstream, from black to
multi-racial, from American to international. It has
reached the very furthest corners of the world and
planted its seeds in the souls of kids from every country.
K'naan is a child of that generation, the first generation
of true hip-hop children who have grown out of a very
foreign soil.
K'naan has "a sound that fuses Bob Marley, conscious
American hip hop, and brilliant protest poetry". He
creates urgent "music with a message" because
his whole existence depends on it. Since releasing
his critically acclaimed 2005 debut, K’Naan has
collaborated and toured with Dead Prez, Mos Def, Nelly
Furtado, Talib Kweli, Pharaohe Monch, The Roots, Damian
Marley, and many more.
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