George the Poet on being a Black radical, music and the war on Blackness

George the Poet on being a Black radical, music and the war on Blackness

By Annie Macmanus

George Mpanga, aka George the Poet, is a voice for change but, is it enough to just be a successful Black man in the war on Blackness? From his humble beginnings in North London with Ugandan parents, to graduating from Cambridge University as well as visiting Uganda, George knows a thing or two about the big changes that can shape your life’s direction.


George is best known for his work as a spoken word artist, rapper and podcaster with the multi award-winning podcast ‘Have You Heard George’s Podcast?’. He is also a PHD researcher, recently became a father and is now an author with his recent memoir "Track Record: Me, Music, and the War on Blackness." It is essential reading. 


In this deeply personal and engrossing conversation, Annie and George unpack the complexities of his identity as a Black entertainer, his shift from Black liberal to Black radical and why, for him, radical thinking is essential to bring about systemic change, the power of honesty, their shared experience of imperialism (Annie of course from an Irish perspective), falling in love, and Black music and the restrictions he felt on his own creativity in the industry. From challenging the status quo of capitalism to advocating for equality and justice, George leaves us with a message of hope and empowerment, oh, and his favourite Nas lyric.


Find out more about George here: https://www.georgethepoet.com/


Order George's book 'Track Record: Me, Music, and the War on Blackness' here: https://lnk.to/TrackRecord


GET IN TOUCH

Contact us at changespod@gmail.com with your emails and voice notes.


Changes is a deaf friendly podcast, transcripts can be accessed here: https://www.anniemacmanus.com/changes


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