Block 6: The Rap Devils of UK Drill

Ben Lim
3 min readNov 11, 2020
Block 6

Based in Catford, in the South London Borough of Lewisham, gang/rap group Block 6 has been doing UK Drill for a while now.

The first of their members to put Block 6 on the map musically was A6, with tracks like Skeng 4 Skeng in 2016 (a track credited as A6 featuring himself as his alter ego, Mad A, who wears a balaclava — yes it’s a bit confusing) and his now infamous Bla@ckbox session in 2017.

A6 - Skeng 4 Skeng

A6’s guttural, raspy voice and nihilistic, ruthless lyrics (even by UK Drill standards), which he delivers with crushing force, created a small buzz of attention before he went to jail in 2017. He’s still serving a 15-year sentence.

A6 - BL@CKBOX

However it’s only in 2020, through the younger members of the group, that Block 6 have truly begun to make a name for themselves as a collective in the UK Drill scene.

Young A6 x Lucii - Soul is Mine

Notably, Lucii, Young A6 (A6’s protégé), Tzgwala and Ghostface600 have all been making moves this year, gaining millions of combined views and listens on YouTube and Spotify from their group and solo efforts.

They mix impeccable beat selection, intimidating visuals and wicked lyricism, mashing together voodoo, devil-worship, drug-dealing and gang beef, to paint a visceral slideshow of occult-infused ultra-violent imagery that would make Alex from A Clockwork Orange blush.

Tzgwala x Lucii x Ghostface600 x Young A6 x M6 Devil x A6 - Rule of Six

Although there’s no questioning their talent, part of the reason they’ve created such a stir is their penchant for touching on devilish and occult themes.

Take the hook on Lucii’s song Ritz for example: ‘Got war with the pagans, staying equipped / Backing your yank and dipping up pricks / Taking their soul and doing up Ritz [rituals], 666.’ — He happens to wear a devil masquerade mask.

Lucii - Ritz

A6, on his collaboration Teezandos, Day of The Dead, raps, ‘Come on, you really think the devil wears Prada? Cause I’m him and I wear Nike Fleece.’

Teezandos x Young A6 - Day Of The Dead

Lucii on Plugged in w/ Fumez The Engineer: ‘I done caught me a case OT with three rambos and it still got dropped (why?) / What you know about voodoo? NFA [No Further Action] next day thank God / Fuck that no, man know I thank Satan, true say it’s blatant I do it a lot.’

Young A6 x Lucii x Tzgwala - Plugged in w/ Fumez The Engineer

In a somewhat ironic turn of events, rather than their violent lyrical content being the bone of contention for tabloid media and law enforcement, as so often is the case with the genre, it’s the explicit devil-related symbolism that has brought Block 6 criticism and controversy from UK Drill fans themselves.

‘This is not drill🤦🏽‍♂️ worshiping the devil is not cool it’s just weird’ writes one YouTube user in response to Day Of The Dead.

‘astaghfirullah, the amount of satanic bars in this🤦🏻‍♂️all these are going hell’ writes another in the comment section of Plugged in w/ Fumez The Engineer.

Tzgwala x Young A6 x Lucii x CR - Lightwork Freestyle

While Block 6 might be the first artists to incorporate these concepts into UK Drill, truth be told they aren’t doing anything new in terms of rap as a whole. Supernatural and occult themes have been a staple of the rap subgenre Horrorcore for decades.

On the other side of the Atlantic, acts such as Three 6 Mafia, Brotha Lynch Hung and early Eminem, to name a few, all made heavy use of the same kind of imagery.

‘I shall fulfill your every desire / Tied up to my bed made of hot barbed wire / Demons dance to the chants of the ritual / Black magic wicked Voodoo’ raps Lord Infamous on Three 6 Mafia’s Favorite Scary Movie from 1998.

Three 6 Mafia - Favorite Scary Movie

It’s hard to tell if Block 6 are doing what they do as an homage to Horrorcore, if they really do worship the devil, if the whole thing is a shtick or if there’s another reason for it entirely.

Regardless of the intent, whether or not Block 6 will continue down this road and have it translate to sustained success, be it underground or commercial, remains to be seen. But one thing’s for sure: right now these rap devils are making people sit up and take notice.

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Ben Lim

Ben is a half-Northern Irish, half-Chinese, Fourth Culture Kid based in Singapore, who has written for Discovery Channel, WWF and Asian Food Network.