L.A. Salami's journey of self-discovery goes far beyond music. Lookman Adekunle Salami was born in Peckham to a Nigerian mother and an absent father. Due to various circumstances, he spent the early years of his childhood in foster care and felt like an outsider for a long time. "I always felt somehow cut off from my culture," he says. "If I had grown up with my mother, I would probably be speaking Yoruba now. Creativity was an instinctive outlet for Lookman, but he was never confined to one particular medium. Growing up, he wanted to combine everything: visual art, music, the written word - everything. "My first love was actually movies," he says. Spielberg became my hero and I wanted to be a movie director. Over time, he found himself drawn to poetry and music. "I started making music seriously after listening to Bob Dylan, because I wasn't a good singer. I realized it's not about how well you sing - it's about how honest you are and how much of your truth you can put into a melody." Since expanding his palette and loosening the definitions he applies to his own music, Lookman has looked to modern rap titans like Kanye West, Drake and Kendrick Lamar - especially the former's willingness to experiment. "That's why rock 'n' roll died: because all the great rock 'n' roll artists stopped being crazy and trying things out. This has given Lookman's music a new level of raw, instinctive beauty, often alternating between singing and a more spoken word-meets-rap performance.
presented by One More I Have
This content has been machine translated.Price information:
plus fees
Terms and Conditions for lotteries
Gemeinsam Events erleben
Events werden noch schöner wenn wir sie teilen! Deshalb kannst du dich jetzt mit Friends und anderen Usern vernetzen um Events gemeinsam zu besuchen. Loslegen