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With warmth, kindness and unlimited energy, Kanya King revolutionised Black British culture
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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United Kingdomโ€ขJune 5, 2026

With warmth, kindness and unlimited energy, Kanya King revolutionised Black British culture

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Originally published byThe Guardian

The Mobo founder, who has died aged 57, had an unprecedented vision: to give Black British music a glitzy and joyful awards ceremony. But her impact went well beyond it

โ€ข News: Kanya King, founder of Mobo awards for Black British music, dies aged 57

I first met Kanya King in the mid-1990s, when I was still reeling from the failure of my own attempt to target the Black audience via my newspaper, Black Briton. Kanya came along a couple of years later and showed how it should be done. In framing her awards as โ€œmusic of Black originโ€, she not only connected with the relatively small Black British population, but brought in a whole new audience, too, who acknowledged its oversized influence.

Back then, the word diversity was hardly known. We were in the era of โ€œequal opportunitiesโ€, which was taken seriously only by Labour-run local councils, and labelled โ€œloony leftโ€ by most of the media. Britain had been dominated by more than 15 years of Thatcher-inspired government. Stephen Lawrence had been murdered, but the inquiry that identified โ€œinstitutional racismโ€ was still years away.

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