top of page
![[REVIEW] Jim Legxacy Turns Years of DIY Graft Into One of the UK’s Most Important Projects This Decade ‘Black British Music (2025)’](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/b163f3_37ff81b8fbd34bfe9353fb20497087f1~mv2.webp/v1/fill/w_291,h_250,al_c,q_30,blur_30,enc_avif,quality_auto/b163f3_37ff81b8fbd34bfe9353fb20497087f1~mv2.webp)
![[REVIEW] Jim Legxacy Turns Years of DIY Graft Into One of the UK’s Most Important Projects This Decade ‘Black British Music (2025)’](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/b163f3_37ff81b8fbd34bfe9353fb20497087f1~mv2.webp/v1/fill/w_450,h_386,al_c,q_90,enc_avif,quality_auto/b163f3_37ff81b8fbd34bfe9353fb20497087f1~mv2.webp)
[REVIEW] Jim Legxacy Turns Years of DIY Graft Into One of the UK’s Most Important Projects This Decade ‘Black British Music (2025)’
Jim Legxacy’s Black British Music isn’t just a mixtape. It’s a generational project, ambitious, personal, and sharp. Built on pain, humour, and heritage, this is a record that captures the state of modern British culture with clarity and nerve.
bottom of page