| Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer | |
|---|---|
Mr B Playing at a wedding in Oxfordshire |
|
| Background information | |
| Origin | United Kingdom |
| Occupations | Singer, songwriter |
| Website | Mr.B The Gentleman Rhymer on MySpace |
Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer (real name Jim Burke[1]) is a parodist who performs "chap hop" — hip-hop delivered in a Received Pronunciation accent. Mr. B raps, or "rhymes", about high society, pipe smoking and cricket while playing the banjolele. The character is described as having grown up in Cheam and attending Sutton Grammar School for Boys.[2]
Contents |
Background [edit]
Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer is an alter ego of Jim Burke, a rapper with the Britpop group Collapsed Lung.[3] Mr. B The Gentleman Rhymer started performing in late 2007, playing at cabaret clubs, and venues across the UK including the Glastonbury Festival and club NME in Paris, and performed as part of the 2010 Edinburgh Fringe Festival.[4] He has performed on radio including the Steve Lamacq show and "Introducing with Tom Robinson" for the BBC. He has also been named as a 'Band of the Month' on the Kooba Radio podcast.[5]
His debut album "Flattery Not Included" was released in 2008 for the Grot Music label, which includes the track "Chap-Hop History" which is a Received Pronunciation reworking of some well known hip-hop classics. Its accompanying video has received numerous views on YouTube. Another track from the album, "Timothy", is about the unique vocal style of BBC Radio's Tim Westwood. Perhaps his best known track, "Straight Out Of Surrey", is a parody of N.W.A's "Straight Outta Compton" and purports to be "the extent of [his] cricket knowledge."
Mr B. has appeared as a guest on the Zero Day album by MC Frontalot, playing the banjolele and providing additional vocals on the track "Better At Rapping".[6]
Until recently, he was engaged in a feud with "chap-hop" artist Professor Elemental.[7] However, Professor Elemental had a short appearance in Mr. B's music video for the song "Like a Chap", of which Professor Elemental said "Much as I hate to admit it, I bloody love that video and am jolly glad [Mr. B] let me gate crash."[8] The "feud" was settled on Professor Elemental's 2012 album Father Of Invention on the track "The Duel," on which Mr. B appeared.
Discography [edit]
- Flattery Not Included (2008)
- I Say (2010)
- O.G. Original Gentleman (2011) (Digital release)
- The Tweed Album (2012)
References [edit]
- ^ Collins, Robert (2009-08-30), The golden age of novelty rock continues, UK: The Sunday Times, retrieved 2010-07-05.
- ^ Henderson, Jamie (2010-07-10), Cheam rapper set to take Fringe by storm, UK: The Sutton Guardian, retrieved 2010-07-30.
- ^ Pegg, Warren (2008-06-03), Mr B The Gentleman Rhymer, The Hope, Brighton, June 5, UK: The Argos, retrieved 2010-07-06.
- ^ Mr B The Gentleman Rhymer, Wychwood festival, 2010-04-26, retrieved 2010-07-06 Unknown parameter
|section=ignored (help). - ^ Mr B The Gentleman Rhymer, Kooba Radio, 2011-07-01, retrieved 2011-08-01 Unknown parameter
|section=ignored (help). - ^ MC Frontalot, Zero Day, Album Lyrics and Credits Retrieved 2010-07-06
- ^ Frances Robinson, In 'Chap-Hop,' Gentlemen Rappers Bust Rhymes About Tea, Cricket, Wall Street Journal, April 4, 2011, accessed April 5, 2011.
- ^ Alborough, Paul (October 22, 2012), https://twitter.com/prof_elemental/status/260089495276376064, retrieved October 22, 2012 Missing or empty
|title=(help).
External links [edit]
- Mr.B The Gentleman Rhymer's homepage
- Mr.B The Gentleman Rhymer on MySpace
- Mr. B on BBC Radio's Steve Lamacq show
- Sunday Times article featuring Mr.B
- "Chap-Hop History" on YouTube
- Fringe interview from Edinburgh Spotlight
- Mr.B The Gentleman Rhymer session in the Rob da Bank show
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