Tonalidad: G minor
Verse 1
C
My time in the UK is kind of mad
Em
C
because, alright,
I'll start from the start
The first
Em
Time I went I was like 7 but then I went for a wedding,
C
Em
my aunt's wedding but like I
C
Remember like having grown up in
Sierra
Leone having multiple siblings in the
UK
Like growing up I had like this
picture in my head of what the
UK was like and
G
What was mad is being in
Leone up till then like 7, in
Sierra
Leone the
Em
Coolest thing was to go to the beach so in
my head like when they talk about the
C
UK, all I thought was it's all sandy like,
Em
it's like sand everywhere, blue sky you know and water
Here and there. I remember when they talk about the underground,
Am
C
auntie and I used to talk
About underground all the time. I'm like oh it must
Em
be like a tractor on the sand and it digs
Under the ground
So obviously I got the shock of my life when
C
I went when I was seven. I was like
Em
Oh it's just normal like wet grey block brick houses
D
C
you know cold as hell all right the first
Intimidating thing was the plane i was like what that shit
Em
looks like a building but anyway yeah
So when i was nine that was the second time i went
C
and we actually stayed and i started
Em
They had these passenger boats,
it was called the
Elder
D
C
Dempster line, and the boat we went
On was called the
Enviore
Em
Desmond and used to go to the prowl of
the boat, that's the prowl that makes the talk
And look down, that's the scariest thing in the world,
C
because you see it kind of goes
Down underneath, and you just see the water passing,
Em
and you just have this compulsion
Want to dive in, it's really weird
D
C
Mum did, fairly actively actually, offer
us opportunities to go to
Nigeria and did say
Em
Like around, especially I remember around 2009 time I stopped,
senior school co- ops
C
You know, she visited
Nigeria a few times after my dad divorced
and was like, yeah you
Can come to
Nigeria
Em
And we were just like, no thanks
Asus4
And we just didn't really see it as an option that we were excited about,
you know, at that
D
Time
C
Maybe with her dominance in
London, know
South
London
Catford, you know
Caribbean
Em
Culture is probably more popping at that time,
C
less of a cultural confidence in being
African
And stuff
Like from the beginning,
I would always just say I was
Em
Sardinian, but it's something that
I actually picked up from my dad because
D
C
when we used to be on holiday in
Europe or wherever
Em
Whenever someone would say where are you from to him,
he would never say the
UK, and he
Was born in the
UK and has a
C
British passport and went to school in the
UK, but he would
Never say that, he'd be like
West
Africa is
Sierra
Leone
Em
And for me, being somebody
that's obviously from
Africa
Originally parents from
C
Africa, born and living in
London
That generation gap between
me and my parents
Em
Makes my re lationship to
Africa very difficult, I found
C
I never really was able to talk to
my parents about that
I never really understood
their story
Obviously, my parents moved from
Em
Sierra
Leone during the war and stuff
So there's a lot to it that I don't know
D
And I wanted to connect
So, a couple of years ago, my auntie
Em
Howard passed away
My mum's sister
And during that time,
C
my mum was going through a lot of stuff
So me and her got a lot closer
Every time she would come into
the room and just hear her cry
Em
I'd just go into comfort mode
And through that, we started
talking
She started to open up about
D
C
her story a bit more
And it just
What I remember seeing her have in that
conversation
Was just being emotional
Em
Yeah, I was inspired
C
I was inspired by her story and I just thought to myself that all the time people,
especially young kids growing up in
London, who have
Em
African parents, you grow up hating your parents because you think they're strict on you, they think there's hate,
D
C
that they're not in touch with your culture because you grew up in a world where they're from
Africa
So, for me, I wanted to make sure that people
Em
understood how important their parents were
Because my parents moved from
C
Africa at absolute treacherous times,
bro
Just to give me the better opportunity
Em
I think if that generational conversation
D
C
was had between parents of
African descent
And children who have been born in
Africa, people would be much more
Em
able to reconnect with
Africa
You know what saying?
Obviously there's the
C
Western representation of
Africa which has its issues
And it me away from
Africa
Em
As op posed to looking back to
Africa and seeing it as beautiful
G
I mean, this place, everybody likes
Spots
C
You know what I'm saying?
We all love
Spots, you know?
Em
And I think that's what brings us together
I think it was nice
C
I don't know, it makes me feel like,
Em
D
it's a bit like when a kid in school kind of like
C
Does this thing like, you know,
Em
they do like that extra effort to kind of like, you know
Be part of something. I don't know, I just, I feel,
C
I feel quite, kind of, I don't know
They like accepted me in a weird way,
Em
D
G
C
like I wasn't half way yet, like
Em
How's it going?
Fine
Yo man, what's up?
What's
Em
Come
D
C
Come on
Jimmy!
Em
Where do you live?
Where do you live?
Main
Street
Main
Street what?
I don't know
Main
Em
Street?
Which girl's house?
Em
D
Which girl's house?
Are you
Sierra
Leonean?
Em
Yeah, my baba in the salon
My mama in
Como
England
In the hopper
In the hopper?
Yeah
D
C
You know the man that they call
Sim
C
Tussim
Tussim?
Tussim!
You know
Tussim?
You know
Tussim?
Yeah
Copyright
Australian
Broadcasting
Outro 1
Corporation
C
Em
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