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The Gospel of Grime

Jesse Bernard traces the history of black church music, from colonialism to austerity, from gospel to grime. From 2020.

Contemporary black music has always had a boundary pushing relationship with black church traditions.

From gospel singers like Kirk Franklin, to grime artists like Stormzy; who brought the house down at Glastonbury 2019 with an emotional rendition of his song Blinded By Your Grace. In it, he praises God, saying 鈥淟ord, I've been broken / Although I'm not worthy / You fixed me.鈥

Fans love that musicians like Stormzy portray their real life experiences alongside expressions of their faith. Other people claim genres like grime and drill are incompatible with Christianity.

As the once niche scene for religious ministry within UK rap increasingly reaches the mainstream, music and culture journalist Jesse Bernard traces the relationship between secular music and black churches in the UK.

He looks at how colonialism and slavery shaped the role music plays in black Christian faith communities. And with the help of theologians and musicians, he explores why issues of social justice are frequently left unaddressed within the Church.

Jesse examines how long-standing social inequality and the current policy of austerity have impacted both black churches and the music being made by black artists in the UK.

And he asks - is it so controversial for our everyday lives and our spiritual lives to be explored, side by side, in popular music?

Producer: Tej Adeleye

A Somethin' Else Production for 麻豆社 Radio 4, first broadcast in May 2020.

Available now

28 minutes

On radio

Fri 31 Jul 2026 10:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 19 May 2020 11:30
  • Fri 31 Jul 2026 10:30
  • Fri 31 Jul 2026 16:30
  • Sat 1 Aug 2026 00:30

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