![]() Twizzle, by contrast, sounds utterly ordinary. They might share a pair of "z"s, but the difference between Twizzle and someone like Dizzee is vast. "I'm so fly I could probably kick a cloud," is the best line, but like many UK attempts at gritty, verite rap, there is an unfortunate, inadvertent comic quality to it. ![]() On Can't Be Life he insists his drug days and stints in chokey are behind him, but again, it all feels strikingly familiar, recalling the litany of woe over an old orchestral soul sample like that on Ghostface Killah's brilliant All That I Got Is You, only the soul sample in this instance isn't the Jackson 5's Maybe Tomorrow but Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes' I Miss You featuring the recently deceased Teddy Pendergrass. Later on the same track he brags about making money and chicks idolising him "like a young Mick Jagger" – highly familiar rap boasts. On LDN Sign there he is, spitting of his haters "fuck 'em" and encouraging fellow Londoners to announce their rough inner-city credentials in a manner that could perhaps be described as provocative verging on incendiary. But he doesn't exactly tear up the plans and invent a whole new lexicon or radical strategy for delivering his messages as far as we can tell. Fighting – or rather, no-fighting – talk. People younger than 17 that have killed 10 people. Now 18, he doesn't want to make a song and dance out of it. ![]() Like the aforementioned south London rapper, Twizzle, from White City, has done time, having been locked up, at 16, in a juvenile facility on drug charges. The background: From Giggs to the Gallaghers, we journalists love a bit of rough, and so Twizzle was always going to be featured here, irrespective of his gifts as a wordsmith and musician.
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