Photography Joe Maher/BFC via Getty ImagesMusicNewsSkepta apologises and pulls single artwork after Holocaust comparisons‘That was not my intention’: the image featured multiple shaved heads, with the words ‘Gas Me Up’ tattooed across the back of oneShareLink copied ✔️January 10, 2024MusicNewsTextDazed Digital On Monday (January 8) evening, British rapper Skepta announced his upcoming single “Gas Me Up (Diligent)” via Instagram. Posting the single’s cover art to his account, the image showed a close-up of a group of people with buzzcuts, all in similar attire, with the track’s title tattooed across the back of one shaved head. The Gabriel Moses-lensed cover attracted immediate criticism online for seemingly alluding to WWII and the Holocaust. This morning, Skepta removed the image following the criticism, posting an apology to his X account explaining that any allusions to the Holocaust were unintentional. “I’ve been waiting to drop ‘Gas Me Up (Diligent)’ since teasing it April last year,” he began, “worked hard getting the artwork right for my album rollout which is about my parents coming to the UK in the 80s, Skinhead, Football culture and it has been taken offensively by many and I can promise you that was definitely not our plan so I have removed it and I vow to be more mindful going forward.” I’ve been waiting to drop Gas Me Up (Diligent) since teasing it April last year, worked hard getting the artwork right for my album rollout which is about my parents coming to the UK in the 80’s, Skinhead, Football culture and it has been taken offensively by many and I can…— Big Smoke - (@Skepta) January 10, 2024 In a separate tweet, the rapper then went on to say that “I can honestly see how my single artwork without context can be deemed offensive, especially in a time like this but again that was not my intention.” He then posted a moodboard of vintage images from 1980s Britain to “help with context”. Along with multiple images of tattooed shaved heads, the references contained the logo of ska label 2 Tone Records, this image from documentary photographer Scott Houston called ‘Non Racist Skinheads At A Gig in New York City’, and another by English photographer Gavin Watson who’s known for documenting 80s skinhead culture. In the same statement, the rapper also commented that “I don’t feel like I could continue being the artist you all know and love if my art is policed, I have to quit if I can’t express my art as I see it.” Skepta is still set to release “Gas Me Up (Diligent)” on its original date, January 26. The track is the lead single from the rapper’s upcoming sixth studio album Knife & Fork, which he announced on New Year’s Day and is slated for release later this year. I can honestly see how my single artwork without context can be deemed offensive, especially in a time like this but again that was not my intention. But after some thought I don’t feel like I could continue being the artist you all know and love if my art is policed, I have to… pic.twitter.com/59oUOPe8Hp— Big Smoke - (@Skepta) January 10, 2024Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREBjörk calls for the release of musician ‘kidnapped’ by Israeli authoritiesIB Kamara on branching out into musicVanmoofDJ Fuckoff’s guide to living, creating and belonging in Berlin‘Her dumbest album yet’: Are Swifties turning on Taylor Swift?Enter the K-Bass: How SCR revolutionised Korean club culture‘Comic Con meets underground rap’: Photos from Eastern Margins’ day festWho are H.LLS? Get to know London’s anonymous alt-R&B trioTaylor Swift has lost her grip with The Life of a Showgirl ‘Cold Lewisham nights’: Behind the scenes at Jim Legxacy’s debut UK tour All the pettiest pop beefs of 2025Has the algorithm killed music discovery? What went down at Fari Islands Festival