Skip to main content

One to watch: Surya Sen

The north London rapper’s playful blend of hip-hop and house is part of a new wave of British Asian talent

Surya Sen was a key figure in India’s independence movement in the 1930s who led uprisings against British rule. Fast-forward a century and his namesake – a north London-based musician who prefers to remain anonymous – feels like a radical presence in UK music: a British-Bengali producer/rapper whose bumping and pristinely constructed club music finds the sweet spot between hip-hop and house, spanning purring, deep Detroit flavours, frisky French touch, slick garage and sampledelic boom-bap.

Last year’s CU Later set out his stall – the playful pop sensibility of California’s Channel Tres, but with Sen’s low-pitched, distinctly London vocals – and got him signed to Skint Records, which has been re-establishing itself as a hub of dynamic dance talent since its 90s big beat days. Then came recent single Jessica, a hip-house come-on that sounds like Masters at Work cruising around Enfield on a Saturday night, while Sen brings the confidence of a grime MC as he raps about “peng” girls and Hennessy. Next up is two-punch single release Here We Go Again/So I Just, ahead of his debut mixtape pencilled for March 2022 – lemon-fresh house tracks with Chemical Brothers samples and sultry vocals that belong on primetime Radio 1.

Surya Sen’s double A-side single Here We Go Again/ So I Just is out on 4 November on Skint

Continue reading...

from Culture | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3jQe3Ik

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pop's coolest choreographer Marion Motin: 'I want to touch your soul'

The woman who got Christine and the Queens and Dua Lipa moving talks about her switch to Rambert and partying on tour with Madonna ‘I’m a lazy girl,” says Marion Motin, laughing at herself. The French choreographer is sitting back in her chair, smiling, dressed in a baggy tracksuit and mismatched earrings. She is laid-back, sure. But lazy? I don’t believe her. This is a woman who created all the choreography for Christine and the Queens’ Chaleur Humaine tour in just 10 days. Who got through the notoriously gruelling audition process to dance on tour with Madonna. Who founded her own all-female hip-hop crew, Swaggers, 10 years ago, to show that women can win dance battles too (and they did). Continue reading... from Culture | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2JbolC5

Knives Out review – Daniel Craig goes Columbo in Cluedo whodunnit

Craig grills an all-star lineup of suspects when a wealthy novelist is found dead in Rian Johnson’s sharp, country-house murder mystery R ian Johnson unsheathes an entertainingly nasty, if insubstantial detective mystery with his new film, Knives Out. Back in 2005, his debut movie Brick (a high-school thriller) paid tribute to the hardboiled noir genre. Now he does the same thing for cosy crime, although there is nothing that cosy about it. Knives Out has a country house full of frowning suspects, deadpan servants and smirking ne’er-do-wells and an amusing performance from Daniel Craig as Benoît Blanc, the brilliant amateur sleuth from Louisiana who annoys the hell out of one and all by smiling enigmatically, occasionally plinking a jarring high note on the piano during the drawing-room interrogation and pronouncing in his southern burr: “Ah suh-spect far-wuhl play!” Continue reading... from Culture | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2L0NKO4

A little rain must fall: the tragic secret of a musical movie masterpiece

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, a life-enhancing 60s sensation, is about to enrapture a new generation of filmgoers Voguish director Damien Chazelle’s pick for “the greatest movie ever made” isn’t his masterwork La La Land, or even Citizen Kane. It’s The Umbrellas of Cherbourg. Chazelle claims to have watched this New Wave classic more than 200 times, and regards his own not-quite-Oscar-winning 2016 musical as a crypto-remake of Jacques Demy ’s entirely sung-through phenomenon. It wasn’t love at first sight. Initially, Demy’s film, with its strange operatic style, “threw me for a loop,” says Chazelle. On its debut in 1964, it provoked a similarly perplexed response. Yet it went on to win the Palme d’Or and five Oscar nominations; it pulled in more than a million filmgoers in France alone, and became an enduring obsession for those, like Chazelle, who have fallen under its spell. Continue reading... from Culture | The Guardian https://ift.tt/37GLogV