ONEFOUR: Against All Odds (2023)

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ONEFOUR: Against All Odds (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

Onefour are

Australia's first drill rappers.

The genre is defined in part

by lyrics laden with graphic descriptions

of v*olence, including g*ng warfare.

They say

that, uh, children as young as 13

are joining these so-called gangs

that are modeling themselves

on violent US rap culture.

We're saying

that the music that they're promoting

is inciting v*olence.

The public would expect us

to shut that down.

Stay out of sight, out of mind,

while we get the cops

on that side of the building, just so...

We've gotta stay here, stay out of sight,

just in case they jeopardize the show.

I don't know how comfortable

I'd feel having a child of mine

going to one of these concerts

'cause I'm scared there'll be conflict.

Yeah, there'll be conflict.

The Onefour boys,

they are amazing songwriters.

You hear it, and, um,

and you believe it, you know.

They've made the biggest cultural impact

on the scene in Australia

and haven't been able to perform here.

Onefour have become

the biggest hip-hop group in this country,

but the police won't let them

perform to their fans.

Every single gig they do

just gets shut down.

This story is crazy.

They're like the N.W.A. from this country.

Pretty much, yeah.

The way police handled

that situation was f*cking ridiculous.

We pray, Father, this time

that the show will not be disrupted

by any means whatsoever.

I feel like we've come so far,

but if we can't do the show, it's over.

We have intelligence

that there is a likelihood of conflict.

There's no way there'll be

a performance here in New South Wales,

and I'll do everything I can to stop it.

Uh-huh

- Hey

- Hey

In the beginning

- There was only me and the g*ng

- True

Introduced this country to drillin'

All of a sudden, they wanna bang

All of a sudden they all wanna rap

Deal, sing, and loot

All of a sudden they all wanna trap

Drill, ching, and sh**t

Trap, drill, ching, and sh**t

In the beginning

- It was only me and the g*ng

- g*ng

Introduced this country to drillin'

All of a sudden, they all wanna...

All of a sudden they all wanna trap

Drill, ching, and sh**t

All of a sudden, they all wanna trap

Drill ching, and sh**t

Trap, drill, ching, and sh**t

In the beginning

- It was only me and the g*ng

- g*ng

Introduced this country to drillin'

All of a sudden, they all wanna...

They wanna trap, drill, ching, sh**t

All of a sudden, they all wanna trap

Drill, ching, and sh**t

Trap, drill, ching, and sh**t

I never thought of music

as something that, you know,

I would end up taking as a career.

We didn't see it

as people like us can do music.

It wasn't an option.

We grew up in Mount Druitt.

It's a suburb on the outskirts

of Western Sydney.

There's a really big

Islander community out there.

And we're Samoan.

I've known most of the boys all my life.

I grew up with them.

We were just normal kids, always playing

with other the kids in the street.

Just leave it there.

We come from the church. Don't know

how the f*ck we ended up like this.

We didn't really know it at the time,

but Mount Druitt back then was, like...

...it was hectic.

It has that stigma around it,

a place that no one really cares about.

Growing up in Mount Druitt,

there was only,

like, three options for Islanders.

Either footie, the factory,

or a life of crime.

In high school,

they had this Islander class

where they'd try to give advice.

He was telling us,

"Youse are all going to jail."

"Like, every single one of youse."

I remember, like,

the first time I ever watched the news,

it was one of the lads from church

just got his head caved in

from another group of boys, yeah.

After that, any time I watched the news,

it was always about Mount Druitt,

and if they ever spoke about Mount Druitt,

it was just negative.

Mount Druitt. It's also Sydney,

just not the one in the tourist brochures.

You don't wanna go

to Mount Druitt after dark.

No, you... you really don't.

Community groups are pleading for help,

with young people scared to go outside.

For us to feel safe,

it was just to build this bond

where we can, like,

go around the streets and that,

and it was like,

"You got my back, I got your back."

The whole reason the boys started

chilling together was...

was one of our mates

ended up getting jumped, like, real bad.

And then the boys come back,

and they were just like,

"What are we gonna do?" You know?

Like, "We can't just sit here."

And so after that,

we started walking around deep.

If someone was to cross us,

boom, jump straight into it.

Everyone had their Rambos ready

and their blades and sh*t.

But we've always seen it

as a family from the jump,

so when they labeled us a g*ng, we...

we already knew

how they were trying to portray us.

We've always had run-ins with police.

They just look at us as, like, criminals.

They used to bash us.

That's what they used to do.

I got a g*n, mate.

Stay back.

I got a g*n.

This was a time in our lives

where we were always getting into trouble,

going off the rails a bit.

But then we, um...

discovered Street Uni.

We didn't realize at that time

how important it would be.

Esky was the youth leader

just taking care of us headaches.

Street University is a youth center.

It's the place where they can belong

and feel safe

outside of the streets

that surround us in Mount Druitt.

We provide resources and programs

that young people

wouldn't usually get involved with,

and one of the ways that we engaged them

was through the recording studio.

When they introduced us

to the little studio they had,

we were stuck on it.

It was, like, a free recording studio,

so it was perfect for us,

'cause at the time,

we didn't have any money.

We got into it straightaway.

We loved it.

Like, "sh*t, we could do

something like that."

I really felt grateful that they had

something to channel their energy into

other than the mischief

they were getting up to.

So I was like, "Man, if you guys are...

if that's your thing,

it's gonna keep you out of trouble,

keep you busy

so you're not on the streets,

I'm good with that."

Mwah!

J Emz was definitely the leader.

He would turn to his group and be like,

"All right, you guys sit there."

"You sit behind the desk."

"I'm just gonna jump on the mic,

and we're gonna start."

Spenny...

I heard of Spenny before I met him.

He was known as the guy that was in front

when it came to, like, the brawls.

I think Spenny,

he was just always that hard case.

The only way he knew

how to solve something was fight.

YP, that's my younger brother,

my blood brother.

He was always the youngest in the crew.

They were like,

"Yo, yo, Esky, listen to this,"

and they would show me one of the songs,

so I'm listening to it,

and I'm like, "Whose voice is that?"

J Emz is like, "That's my brother, YP."

And I was like,

"Wow, bro, a family of musicians."

If I was to describe Cell, yeah, it'll be...

He's a loose cannon, yeah. He's just...

You know, he had it rough growing up.

See, Celly, he always had talent

in rap. He loved rapping.

He wanted to use his rap skills

to paint a picture of what it's like

to grow up in Housing Commission.

So Lekks,

he used to work at Street Uni.

Yeah, he was just like that older bro

that helped us out in the studio

when we started locking in.

Lekks was always a rap-head.

He... He... He loved his music, you know?

I remember the first time

he showed me Harlem Spartans,

which was the drill group

that he was being influenced by.

Lekks goes, "This is the future

of Australian hip-hop right here."

Ah, drill music. Yeah.

Fun for the whole family.

I guess it's a style of rap music.

Emerged out of Chicago

in the early part of the last decade,

throughout the 2010s.

It was kind of like a shock

to the hip-hop scene.

It was just very abrasive and very raw.

A more violent, gritty kind of hip-hop

with pretty explicit lyrics referring

to what life on the streets was like.

A lot of references

to stabbings, to sh**t.

It became part

of the international hip-hop mainstream

when it crossed over into the UK,

particularly into London and South London.

What Onefour gravitated towards

was, like, the UK version of drill.

Drill is dark, and it's scary.

It's like a horror movie almost.

And I think drill really did

speak to them when they heard it,

'cause that's exactly

what they were going through.

We loved it. Like, "sh*t,

we could do something like that."

So when we started experimenting,

we started making drill.

Ready to do suttin'

Every single one say F-T-P

f*ck you pigs, release my Gs

We're Mount Druitt's real recipe

Before Onefour was even a group,

they were known in the area as a...

I hate using the word "g*ng,"

but that's...

that's what they were known for.

Gotta say something...

In the early Onefour tracks,

that they were really talking about

the v*olence in the streets.

Spenny, one day,

he attended my music workshops.

We were gonna go around in a circle

and just share what we wrote.

And as he was sharing,

some of the boys from Onefour

walked past the door and was like,

"Spenny, we gotta go.

There's something going down."

And Spenny looks at me,

and he's like, "Oh, sorry, man."

I'm like, "Nah, it's all good."

And Spenny, like, you know,

dropped the notepad,

and then he left out the door.

It's like this yin and yang.

You have the street,

and then you have the music.

A version of postcode wars

happens all over the world,

from South Central LA

to, you know, Brixton.

It's young people

who find small communities,

and they'll defend that at any cost,

even when it gets tested

by an opposing neighborhood.

There's always been drama

with, you know, certain areas.

I don't know how it started

and all the history behind it.

I just guess growing up around it,

we got sucked into it.

Got to a point

where you couldn't escape it at all.

When I was involved,

uh, in that world,

I experienced multiple deaths.

Um...

g*ng murders, essentially.

All young people in their twenties.

It turned my life around,

and, uh, now I work as a journalist.

v*olence becomes the means for you

to achieve a status in these areas.

Like, the only way you can create

an identity for yourself

is through v*olence.

Well, police have just completed

a citywide crackdown

on violent crime and weapons possession.

There has been ongoing conflict

between two rival gangs,

primarily involving Pacific Islanders.

Rest assured that every single day,

there are men and women

in this organization

who are doing their best

to fight those involved in conflict

for the purpose of making

our streets and communities safe.

In this case, Onefour falls under

the banner of "Mounty County,"

which is the 2770 postcode

in Greater Western Sydney,

and they were at w*r

with the Inner West Brotherhood

or the 21 District.

Tryna come around, shoulda told 'em

Seventy, sixty...

In drill tracks, a big part

of the music is you also diss as well.

Check yourself, how you act...

I never wanted to rap

until I seen it as a way

where I can diss people I didn't like.

When I went in the studio,

it was just literally just me,

like, passionate and knowing, yeah,

I'm gonna offend these guys with this sh*t

because, like, you know,

they got one of our friends.

After that,

it was like they crossed a line.

And it sounds crazy, but that's literally

why I loved making my music.

I loved hurting, like, their feelings.

With drill music,

that's all you made, was diss tracks.

With that kind of platform of making music

and being able to tell your story

coupled with social media,

you know, it's like, that's a shitstorm.

I was worried

that some of the songs

were obviously gonna exacerbate

the v*olence in the area.

One time, there was this incident

at the train station.

Word got around that people

from another postcode were coming down,

so there was gonna be a massive brawl.

At that brawl,

a Molotov was thrown in that tunnel.

We... said this needs to stop.

Big high hopes, right,

um, to try and stop something

that's been happening for decades.

There's always gonna be conflict.

There's always gonna be drama.

We were just doing whatever we wanted,

and trouble was like a normal thing.

After that, something ended up happening,

and I ended up going to jail.

We ended up just getting into

an altercation with another group of boys,

and it just escalated.

It was pretty bad.

J Emz went to jail.

Without him there,

maybe four or five months later,

YP started to fall into trouble as well.

That night at the pub...

Um...

That... that night

was a k*ller night for us.

I don't blame any of the other boys.

I don't put it on them. He...

He did the...

His actions are his actions, but...

Ah.

We just went

to one of the boys' birthdays.

These Aussie lads

were just, like, talking out of school.

They were being very rude and r*cist.

Lekks is helpless.

You know, he can't do nothing.

So we just... we just jumped.

Wasn't a question, you know?

I practically did what I felt was right

at the time and just...

Yeah.

Could've been a lot different.

We could've went and spoke to 'em,

but that was just

the way we... we handled it.

We didn't know how to talk back then.

I just remember feeling,

like, my heart sink.

It was really disappointing

because they were

just starting to turn their lives around,

and then this happens.

They're back in trouble

with the police again.

Me, Cell, and my other coeys,

yeah, we all made bail that night,

and I was like, "We're gonna b*at this.

Don't worry, Mum. We're straight."

YP, Celly, and Lekks

were waiting for sentencing.

While they were waiting,

the music started to pick up.

What you know about hopping the fences?

What you know about dodging the fences?

What you know about being a soldier

And holding your own...

We were in the studio,

like, every day.

We ended up making "What You Know."

About being a soldier

And holding your own...

Oh yeah, we got a bit

of radio play on that song.

On Triple J.

There's the Hip-Hop Show, Hauie's show.

I was following the progression

of the group,

and they started promoting

their new single.

Streets, feds come question me about...

The musicianship of Onefour

really sets them apart.

Not only their abilities

and their... their mind for music

but also them being

the first of their sound in Australia.

I was like,

"Okay, these guys have got it."

I reached out and said,

"Look, I understand the history

that you guys have with law,

but if you really want music

to be your way of getting out of that,

then let's connect."

Hau's the man.

Without him, to be honest,

like, there would be no Onefour, you know?

He started waking us up,

and that's when

we started telling ourselves,

"sh*t, we could actually

make something out of this."

I direct, uh, a label

which is a joint venture with Sony.

Um... I'm someone that pushes

and empowers people of my community,

whether that community

is Pacific Islander,

whether that community is hip-hop.

And one of the main things

I asked them was,

"Outside of the legal troubles,

what is holding you back from success?"

J Emz, he said, "Oh, we don't have

a professional place to record."

"Okay, so if I can get you a studio,

would you come?"

And J Emz said, "Name the place,

time, day, we'll be there."

We thought,

"sh*t, we're about to be stars."

This is the first time

going into a proper studio.

Going into that studio

and being part of Sony

was, like probably

the best time ever, like, doing music

because it was, like, the first time

I was introduced to the music industry.

Seeing all those, you know, big names

and those big faces on... on... on the wall

made me feel like this is where I wanna be

for the rest of my life

and what I wanna do.

I said,

"You come here, we're working."

"What you do outside the studio,

is up to you. I can't control that."

"No drinking, no dr*gs, no drama."

"You come in here,

record music, write, and that's it."

That whole thing was hard, bro. Hard.

So every Saturday,

we're in there.

Just get work done and get out.

And Hau was always on our back,

telling us, "Make sure you're writing,"

and that's when we started making

our best music.

One of the first sessions, I was like,

"All right, boys,

what's the first song we're gonna do?"

I'm sure it was YP who said, "Oh yeah,

got a song called 'Shanks and Shivs.'"

"Oh sh*t! What's this song about?"

"Well, it's about a couple of knives."

Nah, yeah, I remember

our first studio session with Hauie.

I wasn't, like,

trying to put on a facade or nothin'.

I just wanted to go in there

and rap my sh*t.

Hip-hop has always been a vehicle

for minorities and the oppressed.

Drill music in particular,

it's not so much about being technical.

It's just about telling the story

as authentically and as raw as you can,

and I think

that's why drill's so effective.

You know, what you see is what you get,

and there's no bullshit around it.

It's nuts, but that's just

part of the music, you know?

That's part of why it's so dangerous

because it's real.

When everything started to grow,

the music started to grow,

we started to realize, "sh*t, like,

we need someone

that knows this business side of things."

And I knew that Ricky was the man

to... to continue on.

I knew it would be difficult.

I never knew how difficult.

Rick used to come sit

in sessions with us all the time.

He used to just do his own thing

and mind his own business in the corner,

but he always had advice.

I really admired

the loyalty that they had to each other,

the way that they took care of each other,

and I was like,

"I wanna be a part of that."

I remember speaking to the guys, saying,

"This could actually be

a thing for you, like."

"You're doing something

that hasn't been done before."

And they were kinda oblivious to it.

They were like, "No, like,

this is different.

This is a different kinda situation."

At the time,

I was, yeah, working with Laroi.

I thought that he would be the type of kid

who'd wanna show them things,

just be curious to connect with them.

Laroi wasn't as big as he is now.

He was, um, just another

normal kid from Redfern.

I had seen, like, a video of them rapping

on... on Facebook or something like that.

Right away, instantly knew they have

something special about them.

We learned a lot

from sitting in studio sessions with him.

He'd get in there, do his thing,

and we used to be shocked.

Like, "Holy sh*t! This kid's a genius."

It was all kinda new to them,

I think,

and the coolest part was seeing the growth

and the constant growth of their process.

And then, by the end of, like,

spending a couple months with them,

I'm like,

"Oh, these c**ts are next level."

If you weren't convinced

by "Shanks and Shivs,"

you were convinced with "The Message."

So we knew, like,

to be able to impact the music scene,

we'd have to do something

no one's done before.

That was the first track

that we just closed all filters,

and we just went ahead, you know?

We thought, "This is gonna get attention

from police, public eye."

Well, I just said,

"Yeah, let's get that out right now."

And we just said,

"f*ck it. Just drop it." You know?

"The Message" came out,

and that's the one that really blew up.

"Oh, Mum, guess what?

It's up to 500!"

"Yay. 500 people listened to your song."

"Hey, Mum! 500,000!"

"Oh my God! Who in the world's

listening to your rubbish?" Like...

That was our first song

to hit a million views.

It was f*cking game over.

Like, doin' millions of views

in three days,

that was largely unheard of.

It was so organic,

so grassroots, so independent.

A word-of-mouth

and social-media, just, expl*si*n.

They were just like, "Oh my God."

"People really like what we're doing.

A million views is bananas."

I'd never seen this happen before

in Australia.

I think what... what surprised me the most

was the international reaction.

The reactors are the ones

that really blew it up for Onefour.

First time we found out

what reactions were.

We didn't know people were doing that

to music videos.

They must be doing some bad things

with that disclaimer.

First off, there's been

a lot of buzz around this song,

so I wanna see what it's about. Let's go.

Bro, he just named, like,

50,000 people that need to be free.

The song opened

with a f*ckin' call from jail.

Like, what the f*ck?

- Are you seeing where they outside?

- Bro!

They outside the courthouse, like.

- Say what?

- Look.

Mount Druitt Courthouse, and they're

doing this outside the courthouse.

Proper, fam.

I think

it's the most provocative thing

in recent contemporary Australian art.

Such a "f*ck you" to everything

that had shaped these guys.

He said, "Hey, I'mma pull mine.

I'mma let you pull yours."

"We gon' show who gon' die first."

Keep me away from these n*gg*s, bro.

This is so funny.

You boys just bitch and hide

Come out and ride...

Like, accent-wise,

the accent's actually good.

It started as a novelty,

but then when I realized,

"Oh wow, these guys actually can rap."

The world hadn't yet seen

people of color

rapping in an Australian accent.

They didn't even know a lot of us existed.

They both got one ponytail.

Bro, I think that's a...

um, from the Rocksides, fam.

Oh, them man there.

You know what I'm talkin' about?

What's it called? Samoan.

The perceptions

of what they thought Australians were

were Neighbours, Home and Away.

Lara Bingle. Steve Irwin.

Tall, blond surfer guys.

And Onefour don't look

like any of those c**ts.

They definitely changed the perception

of what Australia looks like,

sounds like, and what happens here.

Ooh, now that I'm down for the k*ll...

- Yo, brother.

- Nah, go on, like...

Need to take it easy

otherwise I'm gonna lose it.

Bro, this video is lit as f*ck.

These man turn up for the video.

The top artists in the UK

started, like, giving us our props.

Probably the first was Skepta.

Shout out Onefour. All the Gs.

Dave, he posted us on his story.

These were artists

at the top of their game,

and they're posting about Onefour.

Getting all that love

from overseas was crazy.

We took numerous trips round there

But, lad, that's suttin' I can't discuss

No way...

I think YP's line was so iconic

because it was just a succinct summation

of what the group was about.

"Onefour. We're from here.

You're from there. We don't like you."

Them big lads, they're made for this

Ohhh!

Trust me, mothers

Dem boys ain't ready

Oh my days.

That is actually... No. No. No.

f*ck off, man.

f*ck off, man.

Oh yeah, that's f*cking cold.

There's certain lines in that world

that they were part of

that you really don't cross.

Especially when someone's d*ed,

you know, you don't really

provoke them in that way.

It's pretty,

some would say, disrespectful,

but they said it,

recorded it, and spit it on a verse.

So that line refers to the stabbing death

of a member of an opposing g*ng

called 21 District.

One of the members

gets stabbed, is k*lled,

and that leaves them with 20 members.

With that line,

everything was about to change

for Onefour.

I'm both disgusted by it...

But if art is meant

to make you feel something,

you succeeded

in the point of art right there.

But I also thought, like,

people are gonna hate this line.

It's gonna be so controversial.

It was shocking, it was confronting,

but it was exciting, man.

Fifty guys in balaclavas

talking about sharp objects.

You know, they had a buzz about 'em.

They followed "The Message"

with "Spot the Difference"

and just leveled up some more.

When you saw that,

you knew it was a new dawn

of hip-hop in Australia.

I was like, "This is a f*cking fly story.

We should cover these guys."

And it was a wild sh**t.

They were on the phone,

calling people, calling people.

They're, like, these guys come.

These guys come.

Oh, that was the best day.

One of the best days of my life, bro.

It was goin' off its head, you know?

Had the whole area out, man.

We were in this car park,

and more flares keep getting popped,

and cars are doing burnouts,

and suddenly, they're like,

"Let's lock the f*cking road down!"

The cops couldn't do nothing because

you had, like, three, four hundred kids

storming the streets of Mount Druitt,

literally reclaiming the streets,

taking over.

It was unlike

any sh**t I've been on

because there were people that felt

like they were being heard and seen

for the first time.

We're seeing the bright lights,

and we're seeing kids,

and they're, like, following us around

at the shops,

trying to take photos and that.

It just felt like genuine hometown love.

Can't imagine what it would

feel like to be a kid in Mount Druitt,

to see your area

splashed on the screen like that

and the whole world

suddenly pay attention.

That gives me goosebumps,

thinking about that.

Suddenly, you know,

be like, "I've got these dreams,

and now I can realize them

because the guys across the road did."

Like spot the difference

My crew's still...

2019 was and still is undoubtedly

ruled by my next guests in the studio.

Onefour, the f*cking hottest sh*t

on the scene right now.

A YouTube phenomenon.

They've forged their way

into Australian music history

with their unapologetic writing,

their raw energy,

and the pride they have in their area.

We started meeting

with a lot of magazines.

Rolling Stones and all that, GQ.

How would you describe yourself now?

What is your, like, identity?

Are you rappers? Are you musicians?

We're f*ckin' musicians.

Shut the f*ck up.

We're good at what we do too, you know?

Force a shiv on these opps...

Every c**t in Australia

wanted to make drill music after that.

Like, everybody.

And on that night...

He's got a little Australian

f*cking dance going there.

The Mounty Bop,

you guys have helped popularize.

It's going big on TikTok and all that.

Like, who's that opp on the block?

It's unprecedented

in the history of Australian music

to have that kind of impact.

Oh, I felt like a superstar.

Yeah, it felt good

because it just changed our mindset

and the way we looked at life.

And then after that,

Dave toured Australia.

He asked for Onefour to support him

on the Sydney and Melbourne legs.

It was about to come together for them.

I'm not brave enough to be a cop,

tough enough to be a gangster,

or smart enough to be a lawyer,

so I became a crime reporter.

It's one thing to have an anthem,

but it depends what that anthem's saying

or how it's being interpreted.

You know, a bunch of young guys

who are talking about how tough they are,

about carrying knives,

about hating another crew.

You know,

anthems can be positive and... and negative.

Obviously, Onefour get a bit of notoriety.

They're getting popular.

The real controversy around Onefour

started when a couple of other drill acts

started popping up in West Sydney as well.

The media latched onto feuds

between these rappers.

We have a media in Australia

particularly on the conservative side.

Tabloids like the Daily Mail

and the Daily Telegraph

have whipped up a fervor

of g*ng crime in Western Sydney.

These newspapers sell

when they talk about g*ng crime.

They love to splash this stuff

on the front page.

They love to create

a sense of panic and hysteria.

If you believe these papers,

you'd think that Sydney

was like Gotham City.

Right? You'd think there was

a violent crime epidemic

and Western Sydney crime

is out of control,

and it's all being perpetuated

by young Islander men.

When you actually look at the numbers,

it's not the case.

It's the safest Sydney's been in so long.

My first recollection

of coming across Onefour was,

um, a newspaper article,

and I thought,

"This is kind of really interesting."

"What the hell have these guys done

to... to get this kind of media attention?"

On an international scale,

you wouldn't say that Australia

has a... a serious crime problem.

In Australia, the crime problems

are around domestic and family v*olence

and sexual as*ault.

And yet often, the media attention

are on these different forms of crime,

whether it be organized crime

or g*ng crime, if you wanna call it that,

that seem, on the face of it,

more exciting and much more newsworthy.

Do I think Sydney's getting more violent?

I think there are aspects.

Young Sydney's getting more violent.

That's coming

not from Bureau of Stats or Census.

That's coming from 40 years

of reporting crime in Sydney.

All these tabloid newspapers,

they were suggesting that,

if these music groups come

to more popularity and prominence,

there's gonna be more v*olence

on the streets.

Something is sick in New South Wales,

particularly Sydney.

This is very, very scary.

The worst urban conflict in a generation

is being fueled by drill rap.

Yeah, it incites.

There's no doubt about it.

I don't know

how comfortable I'd feel

about having a 14- or 15-year-old of mine

going to one of these concerts

'cause I'm scared there'll be conflict.

We make music.

You know? We don't incite v*olence.

We don't make people go out there

and do things that we're saying.

The media was never on our side.

Yeah, they hated,

like, what we were representing,

and anytime, like, something happens

on the street, they would just blame us.

There's nothing unique

about art that talks about v*olence,

but for some reason, when it comes

to hip-hop from Western Sydney,

we're having that debate all over again,

and I think

it's because of who's telling that story.

I think that the controversial aspect

of Onefour

definitely became a double-edged sword

with them.

What attracted people

to the group initially

was then turned against them

by the larger media corporations

and, of course, the police.

I grew up in Southwest Sydney

as a young person,

and in my time growing up,

you know, I saw the impact of crime.

You know, I had family

who were victims of crime,

so I have a real drive to make the place

a safer place for everyone.

My name is Deb Wallace.

My first station, 40 years ago,

was a place called Blacktown,

and the substation was Mount Druitt.

I think I saw the harm

that drug and g*ng crime does

to a community,

and it was an area

that particularly interested me.

It was probably the middle of July 2019

when we started to see the v*olence

escalate with these street gangs.

We saw them take on banners,

and they changed them regularly,

which shows me they weren't

real structured or very sophisticated.

They probably had more banners

than I've had baked dinners.

I think when we first started

to see them emerge,

uh, their names were Greater West

and District 21,

and then we started to see Onefour.

And, um, we started

to hear about some lyrics

that Onefour were using.

Where we're trying to combat

and divert kids from v*olence,

this group was using lyrics that, to us,

had the possibility

of inciting the acts of v*olence

that the street gangs were committing.

It's pretty entrenched

in drill rapping

that unless you have

actually done that crime

or you are in that g*ng,

um, you cannot sing

about that actual activity.

And we know

that some of them were involved

in serious, serious assaults.

And if you read

the lyrics of "The Message,"

they are really essentially two groups,

you know, open platform

to talk about what will happen

if those two groups come to each other.

So the idea was to get onto it quickly

before it escalated.

The New South Wales police force

has a long history of different units

aimed at targeting g*ng crime.

Basically, those groups have been merged

into a force called Strike Force Raptor.

That's a intense tactical elite unit

of New South Wales police,

whose job it is

to disrupt organized g*ng activity

across New South Wales

that focuses particularly

on terrorism suspects

or organized motorcycle gangs.

It was around this time

that Strike Force Raptor

began their crusade against Onefour.

A special strike force has been set up

by New South Wales police

to address the youth crime epidemic

in Sydney's West.

They say that children as young as 13

are joining these so-called gangs

that are modeling themselves

on violent US rap culture.

The fact that these powers

started being used

against rappers

and people in the hip-hop community,

it's unprecedented in Australian history.

When they got fixed on us,

we didn't know what was happening.

We didn't know why they were doing that.

We were just getting raided and rushed

by the police everywhere we were going.

So they employ

high-impact policing.

A lot of raids. You get pulled over a lot.

There's heavy surveillance,

things like that,

to really get in your face.

We have a suite of legislation

in New South Wales

that, particularly for overseas countries,

would really not probably allow

or understand

their police forces having such powers.

My parents were getting searched

everywhere they go.

Like, they'll drive down the road,

and they'll get stopped.

When you go through sh*t,

it's not just you that goes through it.

You go through it with family.

When my house gets raided,

who's in the house? My family.

Everything's turned upside down.

Even the rubbish bins,

pot plants, everything.

My daughter was 14.

She was walking towards

the front of the house when they came in,

and they had r*fles at her,

and she was crying.

And all she's saying is like,

"Don't sh**t my dog! Don't sh**t my dog!"

Yeah.

We have to experience that.

We have to live with that.

I don't expect them to understand

something they didn't grow up in.

They're the ones kicking the doors down.

They're not the ones living in the house

that the doors are getting kicked down in.

Of course it's not a fair fight.

You've got one side

who has 15 million dollars in funding

and a staff of over 100 police officers

against a few rappers

who are trying to make artwork.

Yeah, so I had been a fan

of Onefour's music for a while.

I thought what they were doing

was incredible

and it reminded me

of what we saw in the United States

in the early '90s

and late '80s with N.W.A.

I did an audio documentary for the ABC,

Australia's national public broadcaster,

called License to Drill.

I sat down with Sergeant Trueman,

the head of the team targeting Onefour,

and what he told me was pretty shocking.

I'm gonna use everything in my power

to make your life miserable

until you stop doing what you're doing.

Every aspect of your life,

I'm gonna make it uncomfortable for you.

The ability of Raptor,

which local police don't have,

is that we have the time, the resources,

and the tenacity

that where we have a problem,

we will make sure that we are

lawfully harassing that group

and enforcing all measures that we can

until that group either dissolves

or they desist

from their criminal behavior.

And we don't apologize for that.

The way that the police are being used

to target Onefour

is something that has

never been seen in Australia,

and the police know what they're doing

is going to break them.

So I got this text

from another colleague of mine.

They said, "Oh, Raptor Squad, the police,

is running a presentation on Onefour

and its effects on young people."

I went, "Okay, I definitely need

to check this one out."

From a Raptor perspective,

community engagement always sits

at the heart of what policing is, right?

Because the reality for policing

is we can't police

without the community,

you know, wanting us to police.

The really fundamental principles

of policing.

So you walk in, and then

they would pull up the presentation slide,

and they say,

"Okay, everyone, this is Onefour."

So there was elders, you know,

church ministers, youth leaders,

community leaders, young people.

We were all sitting there,

and they were lined up

in the back of the wall.

Yeah, they were in their...

their Raptor suits,

their, you know, thick vests.

Yeah, showing us images of young people

and saying that, you know, these people

are potentially responsible for v*olence

and putting up lyrics.

I guess they were trying

to educate parents

about signs of youth

being involved with gangs and stuff.

I felt like they were blaming

a lot of things on my children,

and they were saying

it was because of the music.

It was just getting us in a room,

as Pacific people, together

to tell us to stop being bad.

If you're constantly

being profiled by police

and you feel insecure and unsafe

in your own community,

you're gonna get angry.

It was like the camp of the group

was split in two.

There was a group of them saying,

"Yes, Onefour are

promoting g*ng v*olence,"

and then there was the other half going,

"They are,

but that is not the full picture."

There was a lot of shock.

There were tears.

I recall some people,

halfway through the presentation,

just getting up and leaving,

and saying,

"These are our family members."

It was oriented to be intimidating,

to scrutinize our communities

who feel already out of place.

It's so stupid,

in my opinion, spending money

on stupid sh*t like that

when they could be, like,

helping the kids and sh*t on the streets.

It's a shame 'cause

there's so much resources behind you.

You can do so much

to be able to touch people

and... and build that bridge

between youth and police.

Then one of my officers came to me said,

"Boss, they're starting to do concerts."

"In fact, they've got one,"

and I think it was a theater in Sydney.

And they said, "We're concerned

that if this concert goes ahead,

it's really gonna be a clash

of, you know, the Onefours will turn up,

but also 21 District,

and if they do, they're not gonna

sit there and share Jaffas together."

Well, we knew that the police

were gonna try to do

whatever they could to disrupt.

But we... we had no idea, like,

to what lengths they would go to.

'Cause they were so full

of great ideas, these... these police.

And they said,

"We're gonna go and talk to the promoters

and just tell them

about the concerns we have."

I provide all the information

to the venues, and I say to 'em,

"You can't provide the safety

that needs to be provided

for this event to go ahead,

and the cost of the tickets

are never gonna cover

the amount of police they need

to try and safely run an event like this."

I will do that for every event

in New South Wales

until the v*olence stops.

It's ridiculous.

Yeah, it just got to the point

where the promoters just had enough.

This is the first time ever

that one of our shows got shut down.

If you find an opportunity

to break out of these hoods

and make something of yourself,

and then the police tell you

you're never gonna perform live

in the city that raised you

to your biggest fans,

it's really demoralizing.

We got banned from playing in Sydney,

but it didn't mean

we couldn't play in another state.

We booked a show in Brisbane.

2,000 people.

We announced the show,

and within probably ten minutes

to 15 minutes, it was sold out.

This was big for us

'cause it was our first headline show.

I feel like it's a bit of a spotlight,

you know? I'm proud.

Nah, yeah.

We worked really tightly

with the event promoters,

who are also Pacific Islander.

We made sure that there were

community elders the kids would recognize

in the room before they entered,

and we worked very closely

with the local community

to make sure that there was no trouble.

Everyone in Australia

in the music industry

is watching this show.

Number one thing basically is

no sign of any v*olence.

The adrenaline's hitting now,

and we're keen, you know?

We're ready to get on stage.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Please.

Dear heavenly father, thank you

for bringing us all together.

- Amen.

- Let's go, boys.

Brisbane show was their moment

to shine.

But I can't stop this w*r

So therefore this clip must be empty

I grip it like it's friendly

Tell them Grim Reaper sent me

One, two, one, two

Then back in the whip

Watch 'em freeze like Demzy...

That's when I realized

the amount of fans we had.

It was crazy to see. Just like, f*ck yeah!

We're actually gonna be able

to leave this life behind.

Made me realize

being on that stage is what I wanna do.

Having shown

that we could hold, uh, an event safely,

we thought, like,

"There should be no problems now."

Uh-uh

We drop "In the Beginning,"

and everyone goes crazy.

- Right, ready?

- They, they, they

Everyone's really positive,

like super, super excited,

and we decide that, you know,

now's the perfect time

to do a national tour.

Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth,

over to NZ, back to Sydney.

Couple of hours after announcing,

we're already on the verge of selling out.

We're doing the rehearsals

and preparing for this national tour.

- It was only me and the g*ng

- g*ng

Introduced this country to drillin'

All of a sudden...

And the guys are going

through their set, super excited.

Everyone's, like, nailing their verses,

and the set's coming together.

Trap, drill, ching, and sh**t...

f*cking love now, baby!

f*cking sick!

We love you! Oh!

Thanks for real, buddy, yeah?

Thank you! This is the best day ever!

And I get a message

from our booking agent

saying that Raptor have approached venues

in Melbourne and Adelaide,

and it looks like

one of the venues is about to pull out

because of pressure from the police.

The police are sending

intimidating letters to the venues to say,

"If you have this group play,

we're gonna have a little closer look

at some of those breaches

of your liquor-licensing laws

that might've occurred

over the last couple of years,

and perhaps you won't have that license

into the future."

Anyone looking at the letter

would probably interpret it as

something being very close to blackmail.

We didn't say they couldn't perform.

We just had an obligation

to tell the venues of the potential risk.

I wanna

really set the record straight,

that it wasn't the police that stopped it.

The venue itself determined

that they weren't prepared

to allow that, um, concert to go ahead.

When I read that email, I was like,

"Oh man, how do I tell these boys this?"

"It's just gonna destroy their morale."

And I'm sitting them down

after rehearsals and saying,

"Look, I've got a bit of news."

"The police are pressuring Melbourne,

and we're gonna lose Melbourne."

And they said,

"As long as we don't lose Sydney,

as long as we get to do home,

like, it's okay."

And the next day, we rehearsed again,

and I got the second piece of news that

we were gonna lose Adelaide and Sydney.

Yeah, it happened day by day.

Like, we lost each venue a day at a time.

Oh, no venue wanted to do anything with us

because of the police pressure.

Yeah, it was heartbreaking for us.

They wanted to fight back,

but how do you fight?

How do you fight back

against something that big?

Touring for an artist is... is a big deal.

It's... it's... it's their opportunity

to not only connect with their fans

but it's an opportunity

to make some really good money.

It's interesting because, um, I think

we should give these guys a go.

They've got a chance

to go, um, international here,

and it's a known fact

that you make your money from concerts.

Just stifling like that,

you're commercially cutting them dry,

like, they'll... they'll have nothing,

which I think's massively disappointing

for a group of guys from Mount Druitt

who've done so well to come this far.

The only one that we felt like

we're definitely gonna be able to do,

and the police can't really do much

to interfere, was New Zealand.

I was like, "At least

we get to do New Zealand."

But unfortunately, YP, Lekks, and Celly

are due to be sentenced

for that incident at the pub

a few years earlier.

So the only two members who could travel

to New Zealand was J Emz and Spenny.

We were excited to get out of the country

because of all the dramas

that was going on back home.

We disembarked,

and we went through customs,

and I knew something was wrong

because I saw quite a number of police.

We got to immigration,

and as we went through to clear passports,

Spenny tried to go through first,

and the gate wouldn't open.

Just a big red X.

Who had their passports taken?

Can youse three come with me?

The rest of you guys,

if you want, you can wait...

They said that Raptor from Australia

has contacted them,

saying that we're coming into the country.

As the commander of Strike Force Raptor

and the g*ng Squad,

it's quite normal

that any information about potential risks

to another community

or another area is passed on.

It's the only way

we can combat organized crime.

We don't tell anyone else

how to do their job or what to do.

We just simply pass on the information

about what we found and what we did.

They tell us

that J Emz won't be let into the country

because of his prior criminal record.

I explained to them.

I said, "This is what we're here for."

"J Emz doesn't pose any particular risk

to the country."

"He's not gonna offend while he's here.

He's here to work."

But they said,

"We're not letting him into the country,

and that was pretty much it.

Yeah, I was gutted.

You know, traveling that whole way

and not being able to do it,

but, yeah,

I guess I shoulda seen it coming,

you know what I mean?

While I was in that holding cell,

that's when I got the news

that, um, Lekks, my little brother,

and Celly got locked up.

P got four years.

Lekks got four years,

and Celly got... I think he got ten.

It gets to a certain stage

where you just become numb to emotion.

In the moment, like when, um...

when she was calling out the verdict,

I knew my family, and that was hard.

But I still had that mind frame,

like, "Yeah, f*ck it. This is the life."

I told my husband,

"No matter what happens today,

I'm not crying."

"I'm not gonna put that on him."

But I remember just coming home

and just going over the Harbour Bridge

and just wiping my tears.

When I got the news,

yeah, I was pretty broken.

I thought, like, "How are we gonna be able

to hold up the crew while they're gone?"

We didn't think

they were gonna get that long.

Everything was going so well,

and then, like,

for it to just be, like, put on pause,

yeah, it was the worst timing.

...statement.

The show's getting canned, eh?

Do you reckon I'd be able

to do it by myself?

No way.

You'd suck.

That's not happening.

- You have to do it by yourself.

- Huh?

Oh, I felt for Spenny at the time

because there's

a lot of weight on your shoulders now.

We didn't know whether we were gonna

go through with the show or not.

f*ck it. I'm doing the show still.

Just to let our people know.

Run the ball up 'cause we're insane.

The show must f*cking go on.

They can't stop...

They can't stop us!

The show must f*cking go on!

I wasn't nervous. I was more angry.

I wanted to prove a point.

I was over all the bullshit from them,

like, just them trying to stop us.

I wanted to look back at it and be like,

"They didn't end up breaking us

that night."

Hope you're ready

for tonight.

- Ah, tonight!

- Whoo!

There is a massive show going down

from a global group

who just took the world by storm.

And I could see Spenny

just thinking.

Like, he was committed to the idea,

but he just didn't know

how it was gonna work.

Unless you go through the sh*t

that we've gone through,

then come talk to me, bro,

you know what I mean?

We don't just make f*cking music like this

because we want to.

It's because that's what

we've been through.

And that's why people love it,

because a lot of people have been through

the same thing, the same situation.

That's why people

are actually gonna show up.

They know it's real, know what I mean?

The government doesn't want us to perform.

They don't want us to be better, but

it's not up to them, you know?

'Cause the people speak for themselves.

I was more nervous

five minutes before the show.

My legs weren't working,

but I just ran with it.

It's a lot of weight

to carry on your shoulders, you know?

But he knew that he had

Onefour's reputation to uphold.

He knew that the fans were waiting,

like, had been waiting for a long time.

Free YP! Free YP!

All right.

They gave Celly ten years and YP four.

But, listen, YP wrote this sh*t

just before he got locked up.

Listen to the f*cking lyrics.

This sh*t's a struggle for us.

They call us ball runners

With the utmost respect

Well known in the system

There's not much of us left

One of my proudest moments.

That show tells you a lot

about the character of the group,

what they're willing to do for each other,

and how committed they are

to what they're doing.

Came home to the same sh*t.

Raptor was there,

waiting for us at the airport.

They separated us and started

to ask us a bunch of questions

about what we did,

whether we knew that what we were doing

was illegal or wrong.

So they asked us

to sign non-association papers

to say that we wouldn't affiliate with

the members of the group, the rappers.

One of the strongest, uh, tools

we had in our toolbox

was the legislation of consorting.

And it's about telling people

that if you associate with that person

who has been convicted

of a serious offense,

then you may be

committing a crime yourself.

And you warn them.

We just feel that was just intimidation.

It was meant to just make us fearful

about working with the group.

They were saying to me

I can't affiliate with J Emz.

I was getting nervous

'cause I was, like, "Is this true or not?"

If we can't affiliate with each other,

how are we meant to do music?

Could this be the end of Onefour?

You know, Lekks was already in.

Celly was in. YP's about to go in.

Could Spenny and J Emz carry that torch?

It's just me, Spenny left,

and there's a lot that we have to uphold

now that they're gone.

I think this was,

like, the lowest time for us.

I wanted to give up,

and I just didn't wanna do it anymore.

Like, I felt like

the stress was just too much.

Yeah, there were moments

when I definitely felt like

all of us had the idea

that, like, this is getting too hard.

How much more of this can we take

before we have to say, like,

"Oh man, it's just not working"?

Um... Yeah, we were just thinking,

like, "How the f*ck

we gonna get out of this one?" You know?

Thing is,

these boys have changed their lives

and for the better,

and I've seen it personally.

It really does feel like

they don't wanna see 'em win.

I think you've gotta give people a chance.

You've gotta give people room to grow.

You can't shut them down.

Yeah, I had thoughts of, you know,

just going back and doing what we knew,

doing the same old sh*t

or running around the streets.

Where's Spenny? Call Spenny and...

I'm always trying to be there

for the team.

I'm always trying to be there,

but at the end of the day, I'm a criminal.

- You know me.

- I know... It's done.

- You wanted this bad.

- End of the day, I'm a crim.

That's not the point.

I knew that the guys just needed

to get away from things for a while.

There was sadness

for losing Lekks, Celly, and YP,

and I just figured it could be a good time

to capture that feeling,

and that feeling would be the backbone

or inspiration behind some new music.

So we went somewhere

in the country,

and we just started making music,

and the sole purpose to go out there

was to make music with B Wise.

We were thinking

at that time, like,

"How do we show people

that there's more to the group

than what they might see?"

You... You have to find that balance,

you get what I'm saying?

Don't completely abandon something

that's clearly working.

Just what you're doing is

you're just... you're showing progression.

We're just able to think out there,

be able to work differently.

We just knew we had to base it

around what was going on at the time.

Then we ended up coming up

with a song called "Home and Away."

At w*r with the cops like Brax

But this ain't home and away

Didn't grow up

Round all those beaches...

We dedicated that song to the boys

in jail and the area where we came from.

Pull up, bang, spray

Do dat, do dat, g*ng, g*ng

g*ng, g*ng

"Home and Away" was

those boys trying to find something

to fulfill that void.

Onefour grew up

watching Home and Away

and not seeing themselves represented.

They want the next generation

of kids coming up

not to be focused

on what's happening at the bay

but to realize the lives they live

are as valid of being represented

and of telling stories about.

When you see Home and Away,

you just see palm trees, beaches, sand.

We feel that's the perspective

people have on Australia,

so we just thought we'd show 'em

a different side of Australia

and the life that we're living

and what it's like

on our side of Australia.

Yeah, I grew up in Mounty

That's home of the brave

Out here

We at w*r with the cops like Brax

But this ain't home and away

I didn't grow up round...

So, for the next year,

we got into a rhythm of working, and yeah.

The EP Against All Odds,

they purely recorded

what they were feeling at the time.

I imagine that would've been

a difficult time for J Emz and Spenny,

just the two of 'em,

especially going through

so many obstacles and so many hurdles.

We've got a lot on the line right now.

It's... It's different.

Like, I got people that rely on me.

This call is originating

from the correctional center.

You boys are on the radio now,

and I know that the boys are massive.

You can do this for us as well.

What do you think?

I'm learning how to play the song

'cause I'm gonna prove everyone wrong.

That's what I'm good at doing,

proving people wrong.

It's all about Onefour

and their new EP.

From Mount Druitt to the globe.

What do you want everyone

to take away from this project?

Just read the title Against All Odds.

You can have your back

against the wall all you want,

but it's how many times

you get back up and keep fighting.

True.

We found out

that some big international artists

started reaching out to us,

and we realized,

bro, it's time to work, you know?

No one's gonna do this for us,

so we've gotta do it for ourselves.

We had Ferg hit us up.

AJ,

Headie.

Hey, hey, hey

Hey, hey...

We also did

a song called "My City,"

uh, which featured The Kid Laroi.

I'm like the Jay

Or the Drake of my city

f*ck what they say

They won't say that sh*t to me

I'm in downtown

All my brothers is with me

Shout out my boys from the 70

Shout out my boys from the 60

They know what's in me

Shout out my boys from the 17

They really know how I was livin'

Oh, what a feeling

Get the f*ck out my face

I couldn't believe it.

Like, I've just never seen anyone

from Australian hip-hop

even get recognized

by an overseas act that I admired.

These are guys that are at the top

of what's happening in culture

at the moment

because hip-hop is, you know,

the biggest genre in the world.

And yet, in Australia,

we wanna deplatform it and censor it.

If they're not allowed to perform,

if they can't make a living by making art,

Onefour, I think,

will be a pretty bleak cautionary tale

for what happens if you choose

to tangle with the Australian police.

If the police are successful

in destroying a group,

it's a dark day for Australia

and freedom of expression.

Very disheartening.

You know, you would question yourself.

Like, what's... what's the use

of... of making music

if I can't even perform,

you know, for the people?

In fact, that's the old me

Now you got me wishing

That I could go back in time...

I heard on the grapevine

that YP is getting out very soon,

and I think that's the injection of energy

that Onefour really needs right now.

I can't wait for him to get out. It's...

We've been doing it without, you know,

him and Lekks and Cell as well,

and, you know, finally, it's time for us

to come back together and go forward.

The one with Illy on it?

We're on video call every weekend.

It's always me and him.

Everyone will say hello,

and then they'll go, "Here's Mum,"

and then I'm the phone call

for the rest of the time.

I've realized what I wanna do.

I wanna do music, like, all the way.

I don't really wanna do anything else

when I get out. Just music.

I can't wait.

You know, that's my... that's my brother.

I've been waiting for this day

ever since he went in.

sh*t, I already got his bed ready

for him and that.

He's been inside for two years,

and, like, I feel like

he might be a bit lost.

When you're inside those walls,

you can become trapped, and you feel sh*t,

like, "This is gonna be me now

for the rest of your life."

He's a bit institutionalized

from, you know, going in at a young age.

He went in at 18.

But better things will come

when he leaves those gates.

I guess you can kinda see,

like, where my head was at

before I even walked out of them gates.

Still trapped. Still looking at everyone

like I wanted to turn on everyone.

And when I walked out,

and I seen my little sisters and my mum,

it was a bit unreal in a sense.

Give me another cuddle.

I felt, like, some type

of, um, anxiety and sh*t,

and I never knew what that was,

but soon as I walked out, I noticed.

Bro, like, this is just weird, you know?

Also coming out

and, like, not knowing what to do,

was... it was the big thing.

Like, all right, I'm gonna...

I'm gonna fall back into my old habits,

and I'm gonna end up back in jail.

You all right?

And then, like,

when I was outside, I realized

f*cking opportunities

are in my hands now, like.

You know, if I don't get there to the...

to my end goals, this and that,

it's on me, so that's when I stepped up,

and I was, like, "f*ck this, let's go."

You know, "Let's take it all away."

Studio sessions are coming up.

Monday to Friday, weekend off.

My routine started kicking in again,

and it was just like,

"You know what? You gotta do this now.

This is your job. This is your work."

"If you really wanna

keep on the straight and narrow,

this is what you gotta do."

This is the make it or break it.

Yeah, I'm excited for it.

I feel like with all the things

that's happened around us and

all the setbacks

that we've had to go through, like,

it's finally our turn

to see our full potential

and get to where we're meant to be.

But lo and behold, Raptor stepped back in.

This week,

New South Wales police upped the ante

with a warning to sites

like YouTube, Instagram, and Spotify

that they would take action over material

inciting v*olence or criminal activity.

From what I can gather,

police are looking now,

and it's not just songs.

It's also posts, video content,

that they believe could create a thr*at

to any part of the community.

They're gonna approach the platforms

and say, "We'd like you to look at that."

"We're thinking that it's dangerous."

It wasn't so much

about us going to a YouTube

or a social media platform

and saying, "Take this down."

Where we thought the messaging

was, you know, inciting v*olence,

then we would say to the platforms,

"We're bringing this to your attention.

You decide."

"Is that fit for purpose

for your framework as a company?"

The police are trying to stop this music

from being heard, from being performed,

from being streamed,

and they're trying to send a message

to Onefour and anyone else like them.

"Don't bother.

We'll ruin your lives if you do this."

But is the New South Wales police

really an adequate judge

of what is acceptable and what's not?

I can't think of any other moment

in Australian hip-hop

where musicians were censored,

and I've heard some

of the most violent Australian hip-hop

that you can possibly imagine.

These guys could take to any stage

in Melbourne or Sydney whenever they want.

I think as long

as the New South Wales police

censor and deplatform artists of color,

um,

we've got a long way to go

in terms of the type of culture

we're willing to accept and represent.

They're not bashing us

like they were before,

but in my opinion, it's even worse, bro.

We've literally tried

to go straight and narrow,

and... and they're taking our ability

to work and fend for ourselves,

so they might think, you know,

they can shut down one or two shows.

The way I see it is, all they're doing

is building that fire bigger in me.

I'm never gonna stop now

just 'cause of what they keep doing.

But clearly,

Raptor aren't gonna let it go.

Lucky for us,

an old friend has reached out.

He messaged me,

and he was telling me

that it wouldn't be right

for anyone else to open up for him,

so he hit me up,

and he asked me how it was looking.

In the two years

that I've worked with Onefour,

Laroi has gone on to become

Australia's biggest musical export.

I do the same thing

I told you that I never would

I told you I changed

Even when I knew I never could...

A global superstar.

Find nobody else as good as you

I need you to stay...

Laroi had requested

that Onefour support him

on his national tour.

Well, The Kid Laroi is one

of the biggest pop stars on the planet

after absolutely exploding onto the scene

only a couple of years ago.

Laroi is finally back in Australia

for a huge arena tour of the country.

I was trying to have them open

for the, uh, for the tour,

and, uh, they... they told me,

um, "There's no way in hell

that that's happening."

We're going back and forth,

and he was saying

they won't be able to do the tour

if they announce us.

I said, "Oh. Okay, you know what?

It's all good. Don't worry about it,"

and, um, yeah,

so I'm just pretty much

gonna just bring them in

and just not tell anyone, so...

That's why I'm sneaking 'em

into the show on Thursday.

It's gonna be bonkers.

They've, you know...

They've barely performed two live shows,

you know, so to go out on stage

and get their roses

in front of 20,000 Sydneysiders,

like, it's not a small thing.

Tell me

Where did they all get their confidence?

I ain't gotta take this sh*t no more

First class and I'm on that plane

Put Aus on the map

And they all complain

Tellin' the truth

And they still complain

The opportunity to go and perform

actually without f*cking getting pressed

by any venues,

and big shout out to Kid Laroi

'cause, you know,

we never get to do shows anyway,

so f*cking love, man, all love.

Word. They probably think

your little apology...

One-f*cking-four, baby!

See you... See you later.

See youse tonight.

It's mad that we get to rehearse,

knowing that, on the same night,

we're about to come out

in front of 20,000 people.

It's gonna be our first time,

like, performing with YP on stage

for, you know, around three years.

It's crazy, like, doing anything

with Kid Laroi at that kinda level,

like, it's gonna be big.

Police search warrant!

Open the door!

Yeah, just the police,

they end up kicking our door in

and raid us

the night of Laroi's first show.

It's putrid. You know, like,

it's your home, you know,

and then you've got a bunch of strangers

running in your house, g*ns out,

this and that,

just flippin' it upside down.

You can just imagine what,

like, my mum and my sisters would think.

It's just, like,

you know, it's wrong.

The house was searched,

and they had two police on us

the whole time

to make sure we didn't leave the room.

And from then on,

we're, like, "f*ck's sake."

The boys aren't gonna come.

We couldn't make Laroi's first show.

It can't be a coincidence.

There's a motive behind this

and a message the police are sending

that, um... that we're not in control,

that they are.

Yeah, 100% they knew

that we were gonna come out.

We were getting ready to leave

at six o'clock,

and their house

literally got raided at 5:30.

If the inference is that Raptor went there

because they were doing a surprise visit,

I'm not sure how much of a surprise

it must've been.

But, no, we would never, ever

go and do a raid on someone's house

because they were gonna sing at a concert.

That's just, in my view, um, nonsense.

That's the thing about the cops

trying to stop us.

If

they were able to stop us,

we'll be worse than what we ever were.

You know, we're trying to make it out,

and putting us back in the trenches,

we just create more drama for them.

So no matter what

we've been through in the past

and what we've had to go through

with Onefour,

I feel like it helps everyone around me,

not just myself.

It helps my family.

It means everything now.

Success to them now is,

first of all,

being able to provide

for their friends and family.

But that's their culture

and where they come from, is like,

you don't succeed on your own.

You gotta bring your village with you.

I remember when they first came up,

J Emz would always say,

"When we get big, we're gonna come back

and renovate your studio."

Lo and behold, just two years later,

they came back and renovated the studio.

There is a lot of young music

and young talent coming up.

I love it.

I love hearing at all, you know.

They opened the floodgates

for so many other acts,

especially

from Pacific Islander backgrounds,

to get into music

and realize that this was a viable career.

Hell yeah. You know,

I'm... I'm very proud of what we achieved.

We set out to shift the culture,

and we did.

I think, at the end of the day,

it all boils out to,

you know, that young boy

at home in Mount Druitt

suddenly sees these rappers

who live across the road from him

make it to the world stage.

And suddenly, he gets that spark

to dream in the same way.

One thing I want people to understand

is how important it is

to find something you love

and then run with it.

Whether it's music

or whether it's anything else.

That's the one thing that helped us

get out of a lot of the bullshit

we had to go through.

Onefour's presence has just had

such a massive impact

on the music industry

as a whole in Australia,

but ironically, Onefour have been banned

from playing shows,

so even though they're the reason

why everyone's getting bigger fees,

they're not getting

their slice of the pie.

Essentially a pie that they baked.

As much as

we did take that big hit

losing tours, losing rappers,

we're not gonna go out like that.

No way.

That's one of the main reasons

why we all keep pushing together,

'cause we know the circle's bigger,

the picture's bigger,

and, you know,

there's a lot more to lose if you lose.

So we can't lose.

Luckily for us,

Laroi put on another show the next day.

Ha ha.

Heading to the show on Friday,

you can feel

that there's, like, an anxiety

or, like, a nervousness,

but also, like, a...

a suspense.

We don't know

that this is actually gonna happen or not.

We can't risk the police

catching wind of any of this.

Stay out of sight, out of mind right now,

while we get the cops

on that side of the building.

We just don't want, obviously,

them trying to disturb us.

We gotta stay over here,

stay out of sight,

in case they jeopardize

anything with the show.

Do pray, Father, at this time

that the show will not be disrupted

by any means whatsoever.

- Amen.

- Amen.

- Hey, Lekks.

- Hey, bro.

Hey, bro. We're about to go up.

I'll call you later. Love you, Lekks.

We deserve this.

We deserve to be up there.

Sydney, usually, usually,

we would roll right into the next song.

But tonight,

I told you guys on my Instagram

that I have a very special special guest.

Before this very special guest comes out,

I wanna say this.

These guys have been banned

from performing in Australia.

And guess what?

I don't f*ck with that.

So tonight, I'm gonna f*cking get them

what they deserve,

and they're gonna come out here

and do a few songs for us tonight.

Let's f*cking go, Sydney!

Make some noise for your very own Onefour!

You know what f*cking time it is!

Let's go, Sydney!

Whoo!

g*ng, g*ng, g*ng, g*ng

I'm like the Jay or the Drake of my city

f*ck what they say

They won't say that sh*t to me

I'm in downtown

All my brothers is with me

Shout out my boys from the 70

Shout out my boys from the 60

They know what's in me

Shout out my boys from the 17

They really know how I was livin'

Oh, what a feeling

I walk through the city

They treat me like God

We were six deep in that five-seater car

I heard they got a problem with me

Told 'em, "Come to my face"

But they fakin', they fraud

Drive in the hood in Lamborghini cars

I might just give a hunnid to my dawgs

Thank you for holding it down

And I'm sorry if you ever felt

Like there was love lost

Now they blamin' Onefour

For all of the drillings

They blamin' us

For what happens in Sydney

They blamin' us

For what happens in Melbourne

They blamin' us

For what happens in Brissy

Tell me who's with me?

'Cause I ain't kidding

This sh*t's been happenin'

Since back in the day

No one said nothing when sh got...

Now everybody's got suttin' to say

Get the f*ck out my face

...now between the event coordinators,

your manager, and police,

you were meant to perform your song

promote it, whatever.

That's not happening now.

So there's no song.

There's no singing, dancing.

There's no promotion.

What's the problem

with us doing the song?

- That's the whole problem.

- What's wrong with the song?

It's nothing to do with the song.

It's the fact that you guys are here.

But why are you

stopping the song from playing?

- Am I gonna keep going in circles?

- Just answer my question.

- I'm trying to explain to you...

- You're not answering straight.

No problems. Everyone, get on that wall.

Put your hands against it.

- You're not answering.

- No, you're not listening.

This is censoring.

Yeah, I grew up in Mounty

That's home of the brave

Out here we at w*r with the cops

Like Brax, but this ain't home and away

I didn't grow up round all those beaches

But I still got bros at the bay

Pull up, bang, spray

Do dat, do dat, g*ng, g*ng

Came straight out of Bidwill Deccan Way

Right there that's home of the g*ng

Took my first L at the back of the block

But that's what made me a man

Everything that I do is illegal

For my opps my intentions are evil

And I take the throne for my people

King of the ring like William Regal

Every day that it's FTS, FTP

Til they Mounty

Bopping back on these streets

Free up Lekks, free YP

For the g*ng I stay doin' O.T

Free up Biggs, that's my bro

Free up the whole of the GSO

We do not talk, we stick to the code

That's rule number one

When we step on the road

Like sh, sh

Talk to me, talk to me nice

On God if you f*ck with a opp

Sh will get got, I put that on my life

All the times that they switched up

And how many times did I pay that price?

- This is Mounty

- Home of the brave

I don't wanna have to

Say that sh*t twice

Yeah I grew up in Mounty

That's home of the brave

Out here we at w*r with the cops

Like Brax, but this ain't home and away

I didn't grow up

Round all those beaches

- But I still got bros at the bay

- Ay, free 'em up

Pull up, bang, spray

Do dat, do dat, g*ng, g*ng

Yeah, I grew up in Mounty

That's home of the brave

Out here we at w*r with the cops

Like Brax, but this ain't home and away

I didn't grow up

Round all those beaches

- But I still got bros at the bay

- Ay, free 'em up

Pull up, bang, spray

Do dat, do dat, g*ng, g*ng

For me, growing up in Mounty

That's home, you know?

All the bullshit aside

All the v*olence and that

It's still home

I won't let no one talk down on Mounty
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