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Dylan Mills MBE, better known as Dizzee Rascal, is a pioneering British rapper, producer and songwriter from Bow, East London. Cutting his teeth on pirate radio in the early 2000s he helped define the grammar of grime—jolting, minimalist beats under rapid-fire, street-level reportage— before taking that sound to the mainstream.
Dizzee’s debut album, Boy in da Corner (2003), is grime’s ground zero: a stark, inventive record that won the Mercury Prize and made him, at 19, the award’s youngest winner. The album’s singles (“I Luv U,” “Fix Up, Look Sharp,” “Jus’ a Rascal”) became calling cards for a new British voice in rap—sonically restless, lyrically hyperlocal, and globally resonant. Two decades on, Boy in da Corner remains a canonical text in UK music. Follow-ups Showtime (2004) and Maths + English (2007) broadened his palette and profile, teeing up a run of era-defining pop-rap singles that made him a fixture at the top of the charts: “Dance Wiv Me” (with Calvin Harris), “Bonkers,” “Holiday,” and “Dirtee Disco” all hit UK No. 1 and anchored the platinum-selling Tongue n’ Cheek (2009). By the early 2010s, the kid from E3 was a household name, invited to perform at the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games. After the glossy crossover of The Fifth (2013), Dizzee pivoted back toward grit and speed with Raskit (2017) and E3 AF (2020), re-centering his barbed delivery and producer’s ear. In October 2020, he was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to music, formal recognition of his cultural impact.
Recent years have been prolific. He returned in 2024 with Don’t Take It Personal—a bullish, hookready album released via his Big Dirtee imprint—and capped the year with the surprise EP I Invented Grime, both underscoring his knack for club-primed beats and needling one-liners. Live, he’s continued to headline festivals and European stages off the back of this material.
Dizzee’s signature is a producer’s sensibility married to a conversational, clipped flow that toggles between menace and mischief. Early on, he fused the jagged minimalism of UK garage and the low-end heft of bassline with raw, diaristic lyrics; later, he proved equally comfortable on festival-sized hooks without losing his piratical bite. His Mercury win didn’t just crown a debut; it legitimised an underground and opened lanes for artists from Stormzy to Dave.
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