Ty

Rapper

Popular As T.Y. Ben Chijioke

Birthday August 17, 1972

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace London, England

DEATH DATE 2020-5-7, London, England (47 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#63317 Most Popular

1972

Benedict Okwuchukwu Godwin Chijioke (17 August 1972 – 7 May 2020), better known by his stage name Ty, was a Nigerian-British rapper.

1990

In the early 1990s, he was discovered after competing at the open mic competition at Muthaland at the Borderline in London's West End.

He continued to hone his skills and make connections there for a few years.

1995

In 1995, he co-founded Ghetto Grammar, a pioneer in hip hop education in the UK.

2001

He released the albums Awkward (2001), Upwards (2003), Closer (2006), Special Kind of Fool (2010)

Ty's first album, Awkward, was released on Big Dada in 2001.

2003

His second album, Upwards, was released in 2003 and reached No.35 in the UK Independent album charts.

The single from it, "Oh U Want More?", reached No.65 in the UK Top 100.

2004

Upwards was nominated for a Mercury Prize in 2004.

2006

His third album, Closer, was released in 2006, and featured guest appearances from De La Soul, Speech, Bahamadia, Zion I, and others.

2007

He left the Big Dada label in 2007, saying "there's a time when you ... acknowledge that the people either have lost faith in what you're doing or are no longer interested in what you're doing" and experimented with spoken word for a period.

2010

He returned in 2010 with the album Special Kind of Fool, released by Barely Breaking Even.

The BBC described it as "a mixture of uncompromising rap and populist soulfulness, often playing side-by-side".

2018

and A Work of Heart (2018).

Upwards was nominated for a Mercury Prize.

Ty collaborated with musicians such as Shortee Blitz, Drew Horley, Tony Allen, Roots Manuva and De La Soul.

Benedict Okwuchukwu Godwin Chijioke was born in London into an Igbo family from Nigeria.

His final album, A Work of Heart, was released in 2018 on the contemporary jazz label Jazz re:freshed.

2019

He spent many years of his youth in the care of private foster parents in Jaywick, Essex—as reported in a 2019 Channel 4 News feature by Symeon Brown— "so they could focus on work and study."

In the piece he said: "As kids we had no clue why we were here, and then my parents said 'we're going now, but you're staying'," he said.

"So we didn't know why we were being left here. And just feeling a little bit abandoned really."

In 2019, he was joined by Blak Twang and Rodney P to form Kingdem, which The New York Times called a "supergroup of British rap elders".

2020

On 7 May 2020, Chijioke died in hospital, aged 47, due to pneumonia after intensive treatment for COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in England.

He had previously been admitted into a hospital in early April but had been moved out of the intensive care unit on 19 April.

Several memorials were painted for him in and around Brixton to honour his legacy.