Category: Uncategorized

  • What Does It Take To Go All The Way?

    What does it really take to make it? 

    We wouldn’t be surprised if certain artists in our city reach a global audience and become superstars. We have individuals that exceed expectations, drop after drop. However, when everyone is trying to reach the same goal, what is really preventing the spotlight shining on our city?

    The issue will never be a lack of work rate but more so a lack of exposure. What exactly does one have to do to have that viral moment? Let’s start with a few examples as list is endless:

    Santan Dave took the spotlight with his originality, intellectual lyricism, incredible story telling and his honesty. His light has never dimmed as he is always true to himself. 

    Potter Payper is another great example as again, his music is a true reflection of his life experiences, he try to be somebody else and has gained a tremendous amount of respect from the culture whilst contributing by the boat load. 

    Let’s go slightly more local and to some of you, maybe a little controversial, Ardee. Ardee, works closely and produces all of his hits with JoJo down at Redroom Studio. He has bathed in success by understanding what people want to hear, his amount of viral tracks that have blown up on TikTok have been unreal. There is something major that sets him apart from the rest, a reason why Ardee has taken off. Ardee has released tracks, I’m talking mainly about his cover over Eminem’s “Mockingbird” that really shows us all who he is, what he has been through and the raw talent that Ardee has in the locker, brutal honesty. 

    There is a clear pattern going on based on originality. The most well respected artists in our city have shown honestly, versatility and they can make tracks that resonate with their listeners on the deepest of levels. 

    So to answer the question, open yourself up and share who you are, share your life stories, your best memories, your personal experiences as they are the real reasons why the vast majority of people listing to what ever genre you perform connect the most with. Build that bond with your audience that gives them the feeling as though you’re talking to them, helping them through a tough time, like they are just like you. 

  • The Importance Of Connecting With Those Around You

    In Southampton, creativity is everywhere. In bedrooms, in parks, in studios above shops, in those late night conversations outside corner the local hotspots. The city is packed with creative energy!

    Street culture isn’t meant to be quiet. Some people stay low without meaning to. They think they need to be more ready or you could even say more established. Some don’t realise how needed they are within this city and how their attitudes have the ability to inspire a whole generation but when voices stay hidden, the culture loses depth.

    Connection changes everything for example, when a producer links with a poet, the sound evolves in a very special way, When a skater connects with a filmmaker, moments become memories. When designers, DJs, rappers, photographers and even muralists build together, the city levels up quickly and gains instant attention. 

    Not only are we talking about showing up but we’re talking about networking. Think about it, we all have a passion for creativity and want the best for everyone in the city, with something so meaningful in mind, what’s the harm in sending a message if you believe that a creative connection could be there?

    Street culture was born from community and continues to be fuelled from it, that will never stop unless we do! Share spaces, share stories, share risks, because when we isolate, we shrink and when we connect, we expand.

    There are people in this city who shape the scene but without realising, there are a many who could shift the whole scene if they stepped forward. We’re referring to the quiet creatives. The late night writers that don’t have the confidence to make their presence known and even the younger creatives practicing their craft in their room. One conversation could unlock something bigger than they imagined.

    Southampton has the potential to be louder, sharper, harder to ignore. But that only happens if we move as a collective.

  • Fighting To Be Seen

    When a lot of us wonder why we don’t get the credit we deserve for our efforts to ensure Southampton’s creative scene is put on the map, there is a question that needs to be addressed. The question isn’t whether the city has creatives, it’s how they push past the invisible ceiling that keeps them local, overlooked and boxed in by postcode and expectation.

    Breaking barriers rarely starts with permission, it starts with friction. It starts with making work that feels slightly uncomfortable, slightly too honest, maybe even work that risks being misunderstood but you’re being honest to yourself! Originality doesn’t come from recreating and adjusting what already works to tailor to your personality, it comes from digging into what only you can say, your accent, your life experience, the environment you were shaped in and the failures you don’t post.

    A lot of creatives get stuck chasing what’s already validated, the sound that’s trending, the visual style that’s getting shared, the format that feels safe. In reality, the new viral trends are 9/10 something original which is why it is so widely shared. The work that cuts through usually ignores the unwritten rules, it’s rough around the edges, sometimes badly mixed or imperfectly framed, but it’s alive. It’s raw and real which in the world we are living in now, people relate to that more.

    Exposure is not magic, it’s repetitive labour. It’s showing up when nobody’s watching, posting when engagement is dead, emailing venues that don’t reply and becoming what may feel like a master of rejection. It is extremely rare to have everything handed on a plate to you without putting in all the gruelling work behind the scenes that nobody will understand. 

    Southampton creatives don’t need to sound like London, or mimic any other city or culture that they can’t claim, or even be anyone but themselves for that matter. The power is in specificity and it grows when you stop apologising for where you’re from and start owning it.

    Community matters more than competition, scenes grow from shouting each other out, event nights, exhibitions and collectives. As a city we have the most incredible community!Building our own culture is faster, messier, and more powerful than trying to fit into someone else’s.

    Let’s be honest, for a lot of artists in this city, they’re way too talented and deserve global recognition. 

    Like each others posts, share each others videos, collaborate on posts, tag your favourite creatives in the comment sections of similar/related posts! 

    It’s time to make some real noise.

  • C.O.R – City Of Reapers

    City Of Reapers, is a culture-led brand influenced by streetwear, cars, training, and the everyday things that we are genuinely into. It’s our way of showcasing life in the city and how we choose to live it, ambition, pressure, and making the most of what’s in front of you. We draw inspiration from the beauty and chaos of coming up in the places that shape you.

    The brand is for anyone it resonates with. If you relate to it, it’s for you, simple. It speaks to creatives, hustlers, and people building something of their own, pushing toward their full potential.

    From the start, the focus has been on quality and clean design, mixed with darker visuals and real emotion. It’s less about trends and more about energy, identity, and creating pieces that feel personal, the kind of thing you see and instantly think, yeah, that’s my flavour.

    If we had to sum it up: Tough Luxury.

    Lastly, a tough quote that we’ve taken to…

     ‘MFS wanna be diamonds but always run from pressure’

    Running isn’t an option. so get up and make motion .

  • What Does This City Need?

    Southampton is bursting with talent, with artists, designers, musicians, writers, filmmakers, makers, grafters, people building something out of nothing every single day, and yet it feels like we’ve hit a wall, like we’re running full speed into a system that refuses to move with us. This city loves to brand itself as creative, progressive, full of potential, but where is the real support when it actually matters.

    Creatives here are expected to survive on passion alone, to self fund, to self promote, to self sacrifice, while institutions clap from a distance and call it “community spirit”. Where is the funding for creatives who are already proving themselves, who are already doing the work, who just need backing instead of barriers. Grants are scarce, opaque, inaccessible, or funnelled into the same safe initiatives that look good on paper but do nothing to shift the culture on the ground.

    And where are the spaces. Not pop up gestures, not temporary boxes with expiry dates, but real, affordable, long term spaces where creatives can join forces, collaborate, experiment, rehearse, fail, grow, and actually build something sustainable. Studios are priced out, venues disappear, empty buildings sit unused while artists are told to be “resourceful”. Resourceful with what, exactly.

    Young people in this city are overflowing with ability, vision, and ambition, more than capable of succeeding far beyond Southampton, and they know it. They’re told to dream big, but given no ladder, no map, no safety net. The message becomes clear very quickly, if you want to thrive, you’ll have to leave. That isn’t a lack of talent problem, it’s a lack of belief, investment, and courage from the people in power.

    Creativity isn’t a luxury, it’s infrastructure. It shapes identity, it drives economy, it gives people purpose, it keeps cities alive. Right now Southampton’s creatives are holding this city together with unpaid labour, late nights, borrowed spaces, and sheer willpower, while decision makers talk about regeneration without listening to the people already regenerating it from the inside out.

    This isn’t about handouts, it’s about recognition, trust, and real partnership. Until funding is accessible, spaces are protected, and young creatives are actively supported instead of politely ignored, Southampton will continue to lose the very people who could redefine it. And one day we’ll look around at a quieter, blander city and wonder where all the energy went, when the truth is, it was pushed out.