Konyikeh Lets Her True Self Shine Through Her Music

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When Konyikeh emerged with her 2023 debut EP ‘Litany’, the world was introduced to a charming, sonorous voice that felt as timeless as it did unique. Quickly, she carved a niche for herself with a sound that mirrors the intersections of her creative journey – teachings from her early classical training moving freely between the R&B, jazz, rap and choral music she absorbed growing up.

It wasn’t long until that mix scored the London-born, Essex-raised singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist her breakthrough moment – a striking COLORS performance of her pensive ballad ‘Girls Like Us’ in 2023 – and earned her opening slots for Sam Smith, Tems, Jalen Ngonda and more. Now, with a reputation as one of Britain’s most compelling rising talents cemented, she earned a spot on the NME 100 last year and has signed with FAMM, the close-knit independent label founded by Jorja Smith.

“I think she’s been able to show people that you don’t have to stay in one box,” Konyikeh says of Smith, sitting on a comfy couch in the FAMM office – an unassuming red-brick home in the middle of Bethnal Green. The sentiment could easily apply to her own artistry. While listeners often place the 26-year-old within soul or R&B, those labels have never fully captured the breadth of her influences.

Instead, her music reflects a lifetime spent collecting sounds from wildly different places and allowing them to sit alongside one another. For a long time, Konyikeh was “scared to tap into” her classical background, but with her pivotal third EP ‘Cinere’, she pulls together the many worlds she’s spent her life moving between. On the record, which was released last month and is named after the Latin phrase “ex cinere” – or “from the ashes” – she goes “back to basics”, burning down all the rules holding her back, returning to the foundation she once tried to outrun.

Konyikeh was eight years old when she successfully auditioned for Guildhall School of Music & Drama after a teacher at her small Catholic primary school spotted her aptitude for the violin. The next decade was spent immersed in orchestras, chamber choirs, music theory and performance, later joining the National Youth Orchestra and National Youth Choir. Classical music became her first language, but never her only one. Outside rehearsal rooms, she was listening to pop on the radio with her mum, falling in love with musical theatre via Andrew Lloyd Webber productions, opera and ballet before eventually soundtracking her teenage years with Afroswing, J Hus and Southern rap. When she says she “grew up on everything”, she really means it.

Stories were also just as important as songs. Growing up, Konyikeh devoured books, recalling childhood obsessions with Jacqueline Wilson, the Cherub series and Malorie Blackman’s Noughts & Crosses. More recently, she’s returned to Carol Ann Duffy’s poetry, admiring its purposeful, emotive punch, which she hopes to channel with her own songwriting for ‘Cinere’: “My songs are relatively short, so I want to make sure every word has an intention behind it.”

Despite spending years immersed in classical music, Konyikeh developed a complicated relationship with her place in that world. “I was known as the violin girl for so long, and I had some resentment towards that,” Konyikeh confesses, revealing that she didn’t play for the FAMM team because she “hated” feeling like she was “showing off”. This self-consciousness followed her into the studio. “I’m used to having sheet music in front of me, and I’m playing what I’m taught, whereas now I have the ability to just play anything that comes into my head. My big fear was, like, ‘What if I make a mistake in the studio, in front of everyone? What’s going to happen?’ It felt so embarrassing.”

Konyikeh wrote her first song at 13 and spent years filling notebooks with poems and stories before recording over YouTube beats, and eventually uploading tracks to SoundCloud during a gap year. Those early songs would later form the foundation of ‘Litany’, a collection that drew from material she’d written between the ages of 13 and 19.

“After feeling so numb, I realised it’s such a luxury to be able to feel emotion”

Among them was ‘Girls Like Us’, a track exploring the pressures Black women often face to assimilate or make themselves smaller in environments where they already stand out. The song resonated deeply with listeners, particularly after its COLORS performance introduced Konyikeh to a wider audience. “It made me sad but glad,” she says about the reception of the heart-stirring performance. “I hate that people relate to this, but thank you for listening.” In a way, the more specific she became, the more universal her music felt.

Yet while her career continued gathering momentum, Konyikeh found herself increasingly disconnected from the music she was making. Looking back on 2024’s ‘Problem With Authority’, she speaks candidly about her emotional state at the time. “I couldn’t feel anything,” she says. “It’s not that I didn’t care, but I was in a very emotionally numb point in my life.” Though listeners connected with the project, she struggled to feel the same certainty herself. The experience became a turning point. It clarified exactly what she wanted from her next release and, perhaps more importantly, what she didn’t. “I wanted to make something that I could really feel and really advocate for.”

That decision became the foundation of ‘Cinere’. Returning from tour with Jalen Ngonda last spring, Konyikeh found herself thinking about live music, instrumentation and the emotional impact they could have on people. Rather than distancing herself further from her classical upbringing, she decided to embrace it completely. Strings became central to the project. Choirs returned. Live instrumentation shaped the arrangements. Konyikeh arranged and performed many of the string parts herself while earning production credits across the record. “I just wanted to go back to what I know and love,” she says. “Live music and instruments and raw emotion.” It required unlearning years of self-consciousness and finally allowing herself to draw from the skills she’d spent a lifetime developing.

The shift extended far beyond the music itself. Konyikeh became deeply involved in every stage of the creative process, from production decisions and mixes to visual concepts, edits and creative direction. “If you speak to FAMM candidly, it was very much my way or the highway,” she laughs. Instead of being rooted in ego, her confidence came from finally trusting her instincts. She’d fiddle with instruments in the studio until a twang was tuned just right for her ears, and would build upon it until she had songs she loved.

Konyikeh
Konyikeh credit: Maria Pearl

That’s how ‘Mercenary’, a track inspired by gqom, amapiano and Arabic scales, came to be. While others around her initially struggled to understand what she was making, Konyikeh never wavered. “‘Mercenary’ made me feel something,” she offers. “After feeling so numb for a lot of 2024 and 2025, I realised it’s such a luxury to be able to feel emotion.” Throughout our conversation, she returns to that word again and again: feeling. It’s what guides her songwriting, production choices and listening habits. Whether she’s talking about Mariah The Scientist, Slayyyter or Mozart, the criteria remain remarkably consistent: “Sounding good and feeling good are the same thing.”

After resisting “the violin girl” tag for years, her classical training now sits proudly at the centre of her music, informing everything from arrangements to production choices. It’s the same confidence that led her to advocate for mixes, visuals and creative decisions throughout the making of ‘Cinere’, and the same confidence she credits with finally giving her faith in herself.

“I realised what my core beliefs are and how I want to do things. That’s why, in 2025, I was like, ‘No, I’m going to run a tight ship, and I’m going to do it my way,’” she says. “I developed a stronger sense of self. I developed a lot of autonomy. I realised I have no one to report to about myself.” It might have taken years for her to arrive at that understanding, but ‘Cinere’ shines for it, allowing the things she once tried to keep separate to exist together.

Konyikeh’s ‘Cinere’ EP is out now via FAMM. 

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AL99 sees the future in new Aisha Hall featuring single “Addictive Visions”

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AL99 (pronounced “Al nine-nine”) is an artist, producer and multi-instrumentalist on a mission to do more than just make music for people to listen to. He wants people to get inspired and motivated by it. He wants to be an example for young people and show them that being authentic leads to success. His latest track, “Addictive Visions" features Aisha Hall of Yapp City Music/Ghostface of Wu Tang, and demonstrates his desire for new experiences by achieving his goals through not only his music but all of his entrepreneurial endeavors. 

Written in 2025, “Addictive Visions” is a laidback rap track with an entrancing melody where AL99 and Aisha Hall bring different flows but both discuss what they want and what they’re trying to achieve. AL’s flow is more relaxed but still confident as he slides from his verse to the hook. Meanwhile, Aisha Hall brings her confidence to the forefront with her verse which packs a punch but keeps the relaxed atmosphere of the track intact.

“I’m trying to see things I’ve never seen before. I’m trying to go places I’ve never been before. And I want to do that through the music path I’m on.” he said. 

AL99 wants to lead by example through the authenticity in his music. And with that authenticity, comes diversity in the booth and in the boardroom. He’s earned degrees in Audio Production and Music Business and releases music through his company, TPC (To Progress the Culture) Music Production, whom he has a distribution deal with via Universal Music Group/Bungalo. He wants people to see that he’s an example of how to navigate the music world on your own terms by making the business decisions that are best for your music and everyone else on your team.

The diversity continues on the music side too with AL99 being a fan of music of all kinds and wanting young people to be inspired to live their truth and be themselves. As a multi-instrumentalist he plays the guitar, drums, and keyboard, giving himself a wide-ranging musical ear. This comes in handy not only when he produces his music but when he mixes and sometimes masters it too.

AL sees himself as a voice for those who may not have one because he himself was once the child that was interested in things that were not as popular with his peers. With age came the confidence to fully embrace these interests and now he’s built a career on musical diversity. 

“I’m trying to bring something new to the industry. I feel like today people are more open to that in the rap world because people are starting to stray away from what we’ve been seeing for years. They’re embracing the new creative ways people are doing things and I’m a part of that.” he said. 

With AL99 pursuing multiple paths that branch out from his music, motivation to keep moving forward is key. Motivation comes from his love of music and his love for sharing his journey in real time while people witness it with him. He feels as he grows in life his audience is growing along with him and they’re navigating life together. And the through line for this is his aforementioned authenticity and accountability. 

AL99 has big plans for the future which include expanding his TPC brand and making movies since he already takes a cinematically intentional approach to his music. In addition to more music, he’s also got something special and unique planned to truly illustrate his story but listeners will have to stay tuned to see more about that.

“Addictive Visions” by AL99 featuring Aisha Hall is available on streaming services now. 

You can see more of AL99’s authenticity and journey by keeping up with him on these platforms.

LinkTree | Apple Music | Spotify | YouTube | Instagram | Twitter | TikTok

The Starlight PR Team thanks AL 99 for taking the time to speak with us. 

Tap in and stream “Addictive Visions” now!

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