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|  17-05-2021, 10:59 AM | #1 | |||
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			[Soundtrack to murder: For the first time, a gangland 'drill' track is at Number One - spreading a message of hatred and violent revenge being echoed in playgrounds across the country. So why IS the BBC promoting it?] [Stab first then talk...On flight-mode when we walk...Chest or back we’ll rip his face offI’ll put holes in your back.’ The lyrics are brutal and the music is ‘drill’ — a raw and aggressive form of British rap with accompanying videos that feature balaclava-wearing men waving weapons and detailing the bloody reality of life on the streets. For Sharon Kendall, the words of the song Dip First (‘dip’ being slang for ‘stab’), by a drill rapper associated with a gang in the Rayners Lane area of North-West London, the lyrics were heart-wrenchingly close to home. Her 18-year-old son Jason Isaacs was killed near Rayners Lane by teenagers who stabbed him in the back, arms and legs.]  [In Body, Russ Millions (pictured above) and Tion Wayne rap: ‘Free Big A, he’s too militant’ — which online followers of the singers have interpreted to be a reference to a gang member currently in prison on firearm offences] Life In The City. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...umber-One.html | |||
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