Music / First LookKojey Radical wanders a dystopian London in his new videoThe London-based musician and spoken word poet debuts a striking visual for his powerful new single ‘Gallons’ShareLink copied ✔️October 20, 2016MusicFirst LookTextSelim Bulut Kojey Radical is a London-based musician, spoken word poet, and visual artist with a striking aesthetic vision and deft, poignant lyrics. His new song “Gallons”, produced by Greatness Jones and featuring UK rapper PW, addresses issues of class and race. “‘Gallons’ is the kind of record I want played very loudly at my funeral,” says Radical, “It’s how I feel every time I see my brothers get stopped and searched or when I hear about another person of colour amount to nothing more than commemorative hashtag. ‘Gallons’ is a uniting of class, it’s a celebration of struggle. The conversation doesn’t die when you kill us. Seeds of positivity will ensure that the beauty in all our differences will come together and grow for future generations.” Radical started writing poetry four years ago, and began to turn it into music a year later. While lyrics are always important to Radical, “Gallons” shines a light on his distinctive flow, emphasising not just his words but the way he says them. Still, don’t call him a ‘UK rapper’ just yet. “I don’t rap,” he says, “I write poems, the music comes later.” Radical’s artistic practise extends to PUSHCRAYONS, an arts collective and creative media agency that he started alongside Craig Most Popular Human. “It houses many different spectrums of talent,” says Radical, “For us it was less about who and more about what we’re creating.” Radical and Craig Most Popular Human both headed up the creative direction of the “Gallons” video, which was directed by long-term collaborator THE REST. The clip, a JFC Worldwide Production, depicts Radical in a version of London that looks both at once contemporary yet also futuristic and dystopian. “We approached the shoot for ‘Gallons’ in the same manner that we shot ‘Bambu’, to channel that same energy and be less calculated and structured, a bit more down to earth than the last two,” says THE REST. The video ends with a more uplifting shot of Radical with his nephew. “As cliché as it sounds, life and the everyday things we encounter play a big part in shaping what I choose to write about,” Radical says, “The conversations we have in private, the thoughts we share out loud. The way we walk, talk and see the world as an entire generation provides an endless amounts of inspiration.” Watch the video below. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe 10 best songs about cheating Madruga, the UK dance festival with no backstageThe 5 best tracks from April 2026‘The stage is my ring’: Natanya is bringing WWE energy to popDid this 90s art film actually inspire Beyoncé’s ‘Hold Up’ music video?Kneecap, Erika de Casier, Smerz and more call to boycott Eurovision Ethel Cain’s Coachella stage was a ‘graveyard of American industry’TOMORA are the dance-pop superduo out to ‘connect unexpected people’If Geese are a psy-op, so is everything elseA deep dive into the fan-led SOPHIE archive projectThe secret history of Black British musicSilvana Estrada: ‘Bad Bunny is my hero, but Latin America is a continent’ Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy