Saskatoon StarPhoenix

A Fresh take on hip hop

Young rapper finds success at age of eight

- ELIAS BIRYABAREM­A

KAMPALA Ugandan rapper Fresh Kid has racked up hundreds of thousands of hits on Youtube, won a U.S. music award and emerged victorious from a tussle with the government — all before his eighth birthday.

The rapper, whose real name is Patrick Ssenyonjo, has become a household name in Uganda, a country mired in poverty and corruption, for singing about his parents’ struggles to provide for him and his four siblings.

“Don’t send me back to the village where there’s no help/ I remember a time when money was scarce/ Getting fees and food was so difficult,” he sings in his hit single Bambi, which means please in the Luganda language and has had more than 200,000 Youtube views.

Fresh Kid discovered his talent while growing up in Luwero, a coffee-growing area 60 kilometres north of the capital Kampala.

“He could listen to a song on radio and immediatel­y memorize it and start singing it,” said his father, Paul Mutabaazi, 40, an illiterate manicurist.

One day a singer he idolized held a show near their home. Fresh Kid asked to perform as a warm-up act, earning 500,000 shillings (US$136) for his efforts — a month’s salary for a teacher in Uganda.

Mutabaazi approached a talent spotter who started booking performanc­es and producing his songs.

Ironically, the boy’s career really took off when Uganda’s minister for children’s affairs sought to bar him last year from singing under laws prohibitin­g child labour.

The spat generated national headlines, with Ugandans criticizin­g the minister for blocking the rapper’s rise.

Fresh Kid then wrote Bambi, his plea to be allowed to sing. It became ubiquitous on the radio and in bars, and won the best internatio­nal video from the U.s.-based Carolina Music Video Awards.

“Children should work hard. If you have a talent, use it,” Fresh Kid told Reuters.

Eventually his parents, his manager and the government struck a deal.

Fresh Kid now lives in Kampala with his family in an apartment he bought and he attends an elite school on a full bursary. His father has opened a beauty salon in Kampala.

Outside Bad Man Records studio on Kampala’s outskirts, the young rapper is just another kid playing with his friends, albeit with an Nba-branded silver chain dangling over his purple track suit. Inside the studio, he is all focus. He can record a song in under an hour with barely any rehearsing, his producers say.

“He has a very strong memory,” said Aggrey Akena, one of his producers. “His vocals are very amazing.”

 ?? ABUBAKER LUBOWA/REUTERS ?? Uganda’s Fresh Kid is turning heads around the world.
ABUBAKER LUBOWA/REUTERS Uganda’s Fresh Kid is turning heads around the world.

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