East London is home to me. To be specific: Hackney. I grew up in Clapton, went to the local Lee Valley Ice skating rink, and played football for over a decade at the iconic Hackney Marshes – even today I feed my inner football champion at Mabley. East London has its own energy, and Newham holds a special place in my heart, too. I’ve spent 20 years DJing and producing electronic music, and it all started in Newham.
Stratford’s Westfield now marks the location of an iconic piece of underground music history – It was once the location of the legendary pirate radio station, Deja Vu FM. Run on top of a nightclub called EQ on Waterden Road, the area looked very different to what it does today, but the station was a prominent platform for so many of today’s music stars like Kano, Ghetts and Tinchy Stryder, who were all educated at schools in the borough.
I myself studied at Newham Sixth Form College in Plaistow, where I made friends for life with people from across a range of different communities. Back then, I didn’t consider, or perhaps fully understand the power of those informal and serendipitous relationships, not just within the college but also around the borough and in the community generally.
My formative years in Newham and Hackney typified something essential to the unique harmony that thrives in neighbouring communities where diaspora and diversity play a central role. At its core is a creative fusion, where Bengali friends know a few cheeky Yoruba words, and white English boys understand the steps to the latest Ghanaian dances. These connections, through movement, language, music and food build trust, and play an undervalued role in dispelling harmful myths and preconceived ideas. Experiences like these in my early days around here shaped my creativity, my work ethic, and even my approach to how I parent my three sons.
I started my first DJ residency in the borough at what was then a branch of pub chain Yates’s on Stratford Broadway, (now The Abbey Tap). The people I engaged with back then have all played a part in shaping my career. Over that time I felt nourished by the rich melting pot here in East London, which somehow felt more pronounced than anywhere else in the capital. To say my understanding of that connective bridge of cultural awareness has informed my career success would be an understatement. Although I’ve been to many places and pushed my creative limits, mainly through music, I’ve gravitated back to Newham, where I now work to build bridges of a different kind – across continents.
Today I work at the British Council, the UK’s international cultural relations organisation, which has its headquarters in E20. Our mission is to build trust, peace and prosperity between the UK and other countries through arts and culture, education and English language teaching. We’ve been doing that for 90 years.