Kanya King, founder of Mobo awards for Black British music, dies aged 57

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Kanya King, founder of Mobo awards for Black British music, dies aged 57

Entrepreneur died of colon cancer, with Mobo Organisation hailing her as ‘one of the most fearless champions’ in the music industry Kanya King, the entrepreneur and tireless champion of Black British music who founded the Mobo awards, has died aged 57 from colon cancer. The news was announced by the Mobo Organisation, who said she died on Wednesday “after a courageous and characteristically determined battle” with her illness. Continue reading...

Entrepreneur died of colon cancer, with Mobo Organisation hailing her as ‘one of the most fearless champions’ in the music industry

Kanya King, the entrepreneur and tireless champion of Black British music who founded the Mobo awards, has died aged 57 from colon cancer.

The news was announced by the Mobo Organisation, which said she died on Wednesday “after a courageous and characteristically determined battle” with her illness.

“The music world has lost one of its most fearless champions,” the statement continues. “What Kanya created was never simply an awards ceremony. It was an act of cultural justice. Mobo did not just celebrate Black music; it legitimised it, amplified it, and demonstrated its commercial and creative power to a world that had too often chosen not to see it.”

Born to a Ghanaian father and Irish mother in Kilburn, north London, King was working as a TV researcher when she set about filling a gap in the marketplace: an awards ceremony that would celebrate the Black British musicians who were sometimes overlooked by other industry events.

She remortgaged her house to raise the money for the first Mobo awards, held in 1996, eventually turning it into an arena-filling event that has celebrated artists such as Stormzy, Dave and Olivia Dean in recent years.

King scored an early coup by persuading Carlton Television (then London franchise holder for ITV) to air the inaugural ceremony on TV, putting award winners including Goldie and Gabrielle in front of a sizeable audience.

In 1998, the Mobos began screening on Channel 4, and championed the best in the British pop, drum’n’bass, soul and more, then folded in UK garage talent like Craig David as the genre took off at the turn of the century. It also celebrated the best of the grime scene, including a 2005 best single win for Lethal Bizzle’s Pow! (Forward), at a time when the genre was often overlooked or even demonised elsewhere.

The Mobos were sometimes criticised for spotlighting white artists such as Ed Sheeran and Jessie J, while jazz and rock artists complained that there were no awards to accommodate their styles. There was also a hiatus in 2018 and 2019. But King ensured the Mobos adapted, with a greater emphasis on Black artists in the nominations and the addition of broader genre categories like drill and electronic.

Unlike the Brit awards and Mercury prize, which until recently were always held in London, the Mobos were held in cities across the UK including Glasgow, Newcastle, Coventry and Sheffield.

In a 2020 interview with the Guardian, King described her work as a “lab

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