Treble Clef
Tickets for Treble Bday event Out Now!!
This is a milestone moment. Grime & a love for music have taken me from the boroughs of Newham & Waltham Forest to being featured in a Nike advert with great creatives & sporting Legends. I am forever grateful for the craft and the people who hold Ghetto Kyote in such high regard. Bless up every time, mi 🦁's Dem 👊🏿🙏🏿 #KyoteXRtw

This is a milestone moment. Grime & a love for music have taken me from the boroughs of Newham & Waltham Forest to being featured in a Nike advert with great creatives & sporting Legends. I am forever grateful for the craft and the people who hold Ghetto Kyote in such high regard. Bless up every time, mi 🦁's Dem 👊🏿🙏🏿 #KyoteXRtw
This is a milestone moment. Grime & a love for music have taken me from the boroughs of Newham & Waltham Forest to being featured in a Nike advert with great creatives & sporting Legends. I am forever grateful for the craft and the people who hold Ghetto Kyote in such high regard. Bless up every time, mi 🦁's Dem 👊🏿🙏🏿 #KyoteXRtw

This is a milestone moment. Grime & a love for music have taken me from the boroughs of Newham & Waltham Forest to being featured in a Nike advert with great creatives & sporting Legends. I am forever grateful for the craft and the people who hold Ghetto Kyote in such high regard. Bless up every time, mi 🦁's Dem 👊🏿🙏🏿 #KyoteXRtw
Yo Trumpet Boom is 10 years old today released on 15th December 2015. How time does fly. Though I'd just post it we a few clips of freestyles. #trumpetboom#10years #grimeclassic
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.
Treble Clef: Ghetto Kyote
How many Grime instrumentals can effortlessly double as soulful when sang on yet shell down dances, radio sets and freestyles with an MC?
Many have assumed the track was produced by Kamakaze, but that was actually the name of the crew Treble Clef belonged to. Kamikaze Crew consisted of Treble Clef, Sir Spyro, Nemesis, Skips, Off-Key, Beastie, B Don, Killa K and B Marvel — a collective heavily inspired by So Solid Crew.
Treble Clef made the beat in 2003, just after finishing school at 16. Produced on a Packard Bell PC using Cubase VST, the instrumental quickly began circulating on pirate radio. Its soulful, melodic quality makes perfect sense once you know Clef’s musical background. A skilled multi-instrumentalist. With piano, saxophone and bass under his belt, he brought a level of musicianship rarely seen in grime production at the time.
The track was officially released under Kamikaze Crew in 2005, alongside a four-track remix EP. A year later came the vocal versions: Katie Pearl’s stunning rendition, which remains Treble Clef’s personal favourite interpretation, and Kano’s iconic version—his favourite of all time.
As with any classic of this calibre, countless remakes and remixes followed, both official and bootleg. Kano later re-vocalled IMP Batch’s remix, “I’m Back,” while 2007 saw Deverlish’s rework — most notably vocalled by Dagenham’s Devlin.
The instrumental has also found success beyond the Grime scene, particularly in fashion. It was selected by Virgil Abloh (RIP) for Louis Vuitton’s 2019 runway show, and later by Clint for the Corteiz x Nike collaboration — a campaign heavily inspired by Grime culture, featuring Tempa T in the advert and shot by renowned photographer Simon Wheatley.
ID’s in comments.

Off The Shelf Ep w/ @deejillz is out on all digital platforms now features from @elfmusician & @logan_olm go hit it up deya mi lions dem 👊🏿🦁👊🏿🦁
Big Fred Perry has featured myself and other Grime Gs in an ad. We're sporting their tracksuits and polo's on a Mode London inside the ride set, which is up now on youtube. What a way to kick off 2024 they've also used one of my instrumentals "Ooh" which is an added blessing. Big up everyone who was involved in making this happen. #grime #radio #fredperry #modelondon #insideTheRide
@kyoteguy presents ‘Inside the Ride’ in collaboration with @FredPerry, he’s joined by @jbeatzmusic, @jetsss___ & @mrfuriousdj on the decks whilst @bruzaonline & @logan_olmtouch the mic
Hold tight @garmsandsets for documenting the set 📸
Watch the full set on Youtube (link in bio)
🦁 @bruzaonline with top tier audience interaction live Kyote intro with band 🥁 #kyote20
Live rendition of LIKE ME performed by the one and only swerington Logan 🦁. Another take from the bday gig again big up to everyone that came down on the night. Watch out for more shows like this from me in 2024. #insidetheride
Big thank you to everyone who came down for event last week. It was a success and pleasure to see and perform for you all. Here's one of the stand-out performances of the night by @joefireffd over a live rendition of "Survive." I'll defo be doing another show like this again, so watch this space. Again, thank you all big up all the band @eargasmic_screams 🥁 @rory_hrvy 🎸 @markobarto 🎸guys did an amazing job.

Another year earthday settings. Love to everyone for your messages. If you're about tonight come a celebrate with me my bday in the Manor. Bless up 🙏🏿🙏🏿🥳🎉🎂

Tomorrow I celebrate my birthday & 20 years of Kyote with a few music pals on deck, mic, & instruments. It's due to be a live show & I want to see as many of you there possible. Billing up a badboi vibe.
Doors open @ 9pm
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