More Fire Crew Explained

More Fire Crew
Background:group_or_band
Origin:Waltham Forest, London, England
Genre:Grime
Years Active:
  • 2000–2005
  • 2021–present[1]
Label:
Associated Acts:
  • Fire Camp
  • Platinum 45
  • New Era
Current Members:

More Fire Crew are an English grime crew from Waltham Forest, whose 2002 single "Oi!" with Platinum 45 was widely recognised as the first grime song to reach the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number eight and produced by Merlin.

Background

While enrolled on a sound engineering training programme, Ozzie B first met Neeko, who was at the time a member of an existing crew called Mad Dog.[2] Together, the pair established More Fire Crew, its name an homage to the album by Jamaican dancehall deejay Capleton which had been released shortly beforehand. The duo were soon joined by Lethal Bizzle, with whom they had attended secondary school, and their friend Seani B, who was a DJ on Amy FM.[2] They initially gained recognition as the hosts of a show on Deja Vu FM, one of London's biggest pirate radio stations at the time.[2]

The group are best known for their 2002 single "Oi!", which reached number eight on the UK Singles Chart, making it the first grime song to achieve chart success.[3] [1] In 2002, their debut studio album More Fire Crew CV was released, and they contributed a track to the album NME & War Child Presents 1 Love which samples Gabrielle's "Dreams" and produced by Sticky.[4] In the same year they were dropped by their record label, with Lethal setting up his own eponymous record label and going on to a successful solo career.[5]

In 2004, Bizzle enlisted in Ozzie B and Neeko among others to feature on his eight-bar rally track "Pow! (Forward)", with the group's three members credited as individuals rather than collectively. The song was another chart success for the trio, reaching number eleven in the UK, but was banned from many clubs at the time due to its controversially violent lyrics. It eventually went on to become what music journalist Dan Hancox described in a Guardian article as the "unofficial soundtrack" to the 2011 student protests against a rise in tuition fees under the incumbent coalition government.[6] However, a falling out between Lethal Bizzle and Neeko related to the song's lyrics culminated in the disbandment of the trio shortly after its release.[7] [2] Lethal Bizzle and Ozzie B formed a successor crew known as Fire Camp, alongside MCs such as 2Face, Knowl£dg£ and Clipson.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Ozzie B, Neeko and Seani B reformed the group for a series of 'More Fire Show' sets streamed on Instagram Live alongside special guests including Pay As U Go's Maxwell D and Aftershock's Bruza. Their comeback single under the More Fire banner, a collaboration with Doller and Fumin entitled "Tek", was released on 1 September 2021 via independent label Rosebank.[1]

Members

Discography

Singles

YearSinglePeak chart positionsAlbum
UK
2002"Oi!"8More Fire Crew C.V.
2003"Back Then"45
"What's the Point?"
2021"Tek"
(with Doller and Fumin)
"—" denotes that the release failed to chart or was not released in that territory

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: More Fire Crew's Ozzie B & Neeko Make Big Return With "Tek" Featuring Doller And Fumin. GRM Daily. September 1, 2021. 1 September 2021. 1 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210901141939/https://grmdaily.com/more-fire-crew-tek-featuring-doller-fumin/. live.
  2. Web site: Ozzie B . 9 December 2006 . 2014-12-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141229050519/http://www.britishhiphop.co.uk/features/interviews/ozzie_b.html . 2014-12-29 . live .
  3. Book: Roberts, David. 2006. British Hit Singles & Albums. 19th. Guinness World Records Limited . London. 1-904994-10-5. 378.
  4. Web site: Various - NME & Warchild Presents 1 Love (CD) at Discogs . Discogs.com . 2014-05-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121104124236/http://www.discogs.com/release/377200 . 2012-11-04 . live .
  5. http://bandwagon.co.uk/band/Lethal+Bizzle
  6. Web site: Pow!: anthem for kettled youth. Hancox, Dan. The Guardian. February 3, 2011. 1 September 2021. 14 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190914212333/https://www.theguardian.com/music/2011/feb/03/pow-forward-lethal-bizzle-protests. live.
  7. Web site: Lethal Bizzle | Rapnews.co.uk UK rap, grime and hiphop culture resource! . Rapnews.co.uk . 2007-03-09 . 2014-05-23 . 12 September 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220912212947/https://rapnews.co.uk/?p=1075 . live .
  8. Web site: 2005-04-07 . More Fire Crew .co.uk . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050407102737/http://www.morefirecrew.co.uk/ . 2005-04-07 . 2019-07-22.