REVIEW | GHETTS AT SOUTHBANK CENTRE, MASTERY IN MOTION

If Mike Skin­ner brought the crowd to church with hard-won hon­esty, Ghetts turned the South­bank Centre into a cathed­ral of craft. As part of Little Simz’s Melt­down Fest­iv­al, he stepped onto the Roy­al Fest­iv­al Hall stage not just as a grime pion­eer, but as an artist in full com­mand of his voice, his mes­sage, and his moment. This wasn’t just a live show, it was a lyr­ic­al cere­mony, a demon­stra­tion of how UK rap can inhab­it and elev­ate spaces usu­ally reserved for more tra­di­tion­al forms of performance. 

Open­ing with “Con­vo with a Cab­bie,” Ghetts delivered poetry in motion, blend­ing cine­mat­ic detail with emo­tion­al ten­sion. The track’s con­ver­sa­tion­al tone set the evening’s pre­ced­ent, this wasn’t about spec­tacle, but storytelling. “King’s Speech” and “Purple Sky” fol­lowed, dense with double mean­ings and intern­al rhymes, as if Ghetts were build­ing his own can­on in real time. His word­play hit like per­cus­sion, sharp and syn­co­pated, yet nev­er los­ing sight of mes­sage or mood. 

The band behind him was essen­tial, not just dec­or­a­tion. The arrange­ments gave songs like “Atten­tion” and “Traded” a sense of weight and move­ment that deepened their emo­tion­al impact. This wasn’t the grime tem­plate of MC and DJ, it was orches­tra­tion in the truest sense, giv­ing room for Ghetts’ voice to cut through, then sink back, then rise again. On “10,000 Tears” and “Proud Fam­ily,” the com­bin­a­tion of live instru­ment­a­tion and raw vul­ner­ab­il­ity brought the room to still­ness, not in silence, but in awe. 

Through­out the night, Ghetts shif­ted between preach­er, poet and proph­et. In “Fath­er­hood” and “Yes You Are,” he tapped into the intim­ate with remark­able ease, offer­ing reflec­tions that spoke as much to the Black Brit­ish exper­i­ence as to the human con­di­tion. “Spir­itu­al War­fare” brought  that weight into sharp­er focus, blend­ing street real­ism with exist­en­tial ques­tion­ing. There’s a grav­ity to Ghetts’ writ­ing that few can rep­lic­ate, every line feels earned, con­sidered, lived. 

Then came the fire. “Street Polit­ics” bristled with defi­ance and clar­ity, fol­lowed by “Little Bo Peep” which walked the line between myth and mod­ern­ity, a cau­tion­ary tale wrapped in rid­dims. “Petals” and “Own Medi­cine” kept the momentum high, while “Red Wine,” fea­tur­ing Max Valentine, offered a smoky, aching detour. That track in par­tic­u­lar showed how ver­sat­ile Ghetts has become, seduct­ive, mourn­ful, under­stated, yet still precise. 

“Mine” and “Expiry Date” brought the energy back into the per­son­al. These weren’t crowd-pleas­ers in the tra­di­tion­al sense, but deep cuts that hit because they revealed what so much rap tries to hide, doubt, regret, long­ing. And when he closed with “Double Stand­ards,” the mes­sage was clear. This is a man who still has some­thing urgent to say, and knows exactly how to say it. 

What was most strik­ing about this show was how uni­fied the room felt, des­pite its diversity. Ghetts drew in a crowd as eclect­ic as any, grime day-ones, hip hop schol­ars, cas­u­al heads, cul­tur­al eld­ers and young­er fans just wak­ing up to his bril­liance. But in that space, all those divi­sions fell away. 

His per­form­ance showed the uni­fy­ing power of rap at its finest, rooted in lived exper­i­ence, elev­ated by lan­guage, bound togeth­er by rhythm and soul.

As the applause rang out and the lights softened, there was no mis­tak­ing the scale of what had just taken place. Ghetts didn’t just hold his own in a space like South­bank, he trans­formed it. He filled it with East Lon­don grit and gen­er­a­tion­al wis­dom, spir­itu­al reflec­tion and street urgency. He made it his, and in doing so, made it ours. 

Ghetts at South­bank Centre wasn’t simply a per­form­ance, it was a cul­tur­al moment. In a set­ting more accus­tomed to son­atas and scores, he brought cadence, con­vic­tion and craft, affirm­ing that UK rap has its own clas­sic­al can­on in the mak­ing. This was mas­tery in motion, delib­er­ate, defi­ant, and deeply necessary.

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Micky Roots

Micky roots is one of the edit­ors of I am hip hop magazine, a pure hip hop head and visu­al artist he brings his strong know­ledge of hip hop, social con­scious­ness & polit­ic­al con­cern to No Bounds.

About Micky Roots

Micky roots is one of the editors of I am hip hop magazine, a pure hip hop head and visual artist he brings his strong knowledge of hip hop, social consciousness & political concern to No Bounds.