Between the Lines is a play borne out of collaboration between myself and Jammz as co-writers, Maggie Norris the director, and perhaps most crucially, the members of The Big House.
Set in a pirate radio station in Hackney, the play spans the last 15 years, exploring the birth of grime music, one of Britain’s most celebrated and influential subcultures. We use this microcosm to examine themes of censorship, the right to exist and freedom of expression.
We started with the music – looking at how the songs blaring from speakers and out of car windows of young people in certain areas of London changed over the years from garage to grime to drill. The lyrical content went from partying and status, to gang culture and slew tracks, to direct provocation and explicit intent of violent crime.
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In recent years, drill rappers Skengdo x Am received a two-year suspended prison sentence for performing their song Attempted live after a court order banned them from doing so. This felt so wrong to us. Art is an expression of experience, why is the art being censored, while the problematic experiences these young people are facing aren’t being addressed? It’s a ‘band aid’ approach rather than addressing the root course of the problems within our society which these young people are rapping about.
Further to this, even the association with the music can have serious implications. Just this week The Guardian published an article alleging, “Rap and drill music was used as evidence against 250 defendants.” They specifically reference one joint enterprise case where, “12 people were charged with murder despite there being only one principal offender suspect.” This was due to a gang narrative being formed around one drill music video as part of the prosecution, “even though none of the 12 rapped in the video nor had any role in producing it. These defendants appeared as extras.”