Street sets get millions of hits â and Skepta and Lethal Bizzle are fans
Itâs a dark, drizzly, night in London and thereâs a crowd gathered around a set of decks.
Theyâve turned up for DJ AG â whose street sets have been getting a lot of attention.
He invites people, anyone, to pick up a mic and spit bars with him.
It started as a platform to showcase new artists, but more recently, big acts have been getting involved, including Skepta, JME, Chip, Krept & Konan, Ms Banks, Devlin, ArrDee and Lethal Bizzle.
DJ AG always draws a crowd in real life but there are thousands more watching on social media â his streams have racked up millions of views on TikTok.
He tells BBC Newsbeat itâs not planned and he just rocks up with decks and sees what happens.
âThe sets arenât new but the fact theyâre broadcasting them across the planet means people have an opportunity to get their music out there in an organic way.
âThe great thing is weâve shaken up the industry,â he says.
For aspiring artists, it can feel harder than ever to find opportunities to showcase their talent.
Figures released earlier this year by the Music Venues Trust said financial stresses led 125 UK venues to abandon live music in 2023.
Thatâs one of the reasons DJ AG puts on his sets.
âWhatâs different now is thereâs nothing at grassroots,â he says.
âYouâve got a lot of open mics closed down.
âRight now, outside, weâre not paying for anything. A bit of power and weâre bringing it to the streets.
âOn this platform, itâs free. The emerging artists donât have to pay anything.â
A chance to hear something new?
Rapper Louis Massey and his manager Kaianne Lewis Sapong feel these types of sets not only help provide opportunity, but also offer the chance to hear something different.
âFor me, it can help. Itâs only one viral moment away from your career taking off,â says Lewis, 22.
âThis is exciting. This is organic. This is the rap scene which came from the organic scene.â
Kaianne, 22, agrees that the industry sometimes feels âstaleâ at the moment.
âI complain about it frequently. Me and my artists want to really solidify our base so we can bring a difference to the UK because it sounds a bit repetitive at the moment.
âThereâs a lot of talent in the UK but itâs not being pushed to the forefront,â she says.
In the early noughties, grime emerged from the electronic dance scene â helped by the underground and pirate radio stations.
Grime MC D Double E says the authentic nature of these live sets â which at times have a pirate radio feel â reminds him of his own journey.
âI learned this from lockdown. Everyone was going online, doing sets and it was a great look.
âWhen it stopped happening â I was like âwhy has it stopped?â
âTo see people doing it now â like itâs new. Itâs great.â
The record producer, who has been in the industry for over 20 years, says he âbroke out in the same wayâ.
âDoing a set for no reason. But it wasnât being recorded and people couldnât watch it.
âThis is the difference now â you can actually see it. Some of our famous sets, Roll Deep [the grime collective], Dizzee Rascal, you canât see us, only hear us.â
âYouâre gonna see more talent. More windows [opening]. Thatâs whatâs supposed to happen when the lightâs shining.â
And he says it will bring more originality, after a period of things feeling âa bit roboticâ.
âFor some reason, everyone just went international and the UK voice wasnât there.
âNow itâs just straightening up a bit more.â
1Xtraâs DJ Target, another grime pioneer, feels people are now âenjoying that early essenceâ of the genre.
âThat self-sufficient, just turning up at places, those live moments,â he says.
âSo seeing that in 2024, a new generation getting stuck in and doing the same â I love to see it.â
He agrees with the views of artists such as Skepta, who believe âcreativity sometimes get lost in the music industryâ.
âItâs good to get back to that raw, straight to the consumer, sometimes direct from the street, untouched raw talent,â says Target.
âSeeing this happen in 2024, I feel thereâs only going to be inspiration for the next generation.
âAnd weâre probably going to see a few stars come out of it.â