Being Bradford â The secret behind Bad Boy Chiller Crew
Playing in front of fans around the country is the bread and butter for any musician.
But when Bradford rap trio Bad Boy Chiller Crew reflect on performing in front of their home crowd, it hits different.
âTheyâve seen us grow from the streets, around the corner or from the estate. Theyâve seen the work weâve put in,â Gareth âGKâ Kelly tells BBC Newsbeat.
The group honed their infectious, humourous and bass-heavy sound in their hometown, and have proudly worn their roots on their sleeves ever since.
GK says things have changed drastically in Bradford since Bad Boy Chiller Crewâs early days, with nightclubs they used to perform at closing down and a sense that âthe heart had goneâ from the local scene.
Thereâs also a sense that focus has shifted towards other cities â particularly Leeds, which is just 10 miles away.
A symbol of this is Bradford Live â the former concert hall and cinema that has been redeveloper into a ÂŁ50m music venue.
It currently sits, unopened, in the middle of the city after the operator lined up to run it pulled out of a deal with the local council.
âItâs a beautiful buildingâ, says GK.
âItâs immaculate, theyâve really worked hard on it. I just donât understand.â
GK hopes the government funding from Bradfordâs year as UK City of Culture will help to boost and regenerate the area.
The attention it brings to the city and some of its undiscovered artists is the big wish, though.
âThereâs so many races, religions and different background â lots of talent,â he says.
âAnd I think if everyone pushed together and worked together, it could be really good,â he says.
GK says he and fellow group members â MCs Kane Welsh and Sam âCliveâ Robinson have always tried to stay authentic, and believes that helped them to find success.
âI think back then it was the rawness, the naturalness of ourselves,â he says.
âWe wonât try to be anybody else.â
The group say people in the music industry tried to get them to tone down their âBradfordnessâ, but they werenât having any of it.
âThat isnât us,â says GK.
âWe couldnât adapt to that.â
Clive adds: âBecause we were that raw and that genuine, thatâs what made us stand out to everyone else.â
The pair also credit the local music scene with allowing them to experiment and find their signature sound â but also work on their trademark sense of humour.
âIt was the entertainment side of our band that caused the breakthrough for us,â says GK.
âIt was laughs, jokes, parody songs. Pranks, stunts, skits.â
âHeartbreakingâ legal issues
âWeâve had a few problems as well,â GK admits.
The rap trio have lodged a legal claim against their record label and say they are owed about ÂŁ400,000 in unpaid royalties.
They say they had âno other optionâ but to take court action against House Anxiety, which signed the group in 2020 and released their Full Wack No Breaks mixtape that year.
It included the bandâs breakthrough track 450 and follow-up Disrespectful, reaching number two in the UK album chart in 2022 under a licensing deal with Sonyâs Relentless label.
House Anxiety has previously strongly rejected the claim and said it welcomed the chance to âclarify inaccuraciesâ in it.
GK describes the situation as âheartbreakingâ and says itâs paused everything for Bad Boy Chiller Crew.
âWe got belittled and used and manipulated,â he says.
âAs it stands, thereâs no future because weâre not allowed to release music.
âWeâre not allowed to put anything out there. We couldnât even go on tour because we couldnât release music.â
Thatâs despite them âtrying and pushingâ to do so, says GK.
Clive tells Newsbeat: âItâs stopping us from working, stopping us from doing what we do best, what we love.â
House Anxiety has yet to respond to a further request for comment.
On a personal level, GK says it has taken âa massive tollâ.
âWeâve put in a lot of hard work, sacrificed a lot of things,â he says.
âIt makes you want to actually avoid people totally.
âBecause I donât want to get asked that question: âWhereâs your songs? Have you split up? Have you fell out?'â
But, once this is all resolved, fans can expect a lot of new music from the group.
âWeâve got a catalogue stacked up,â says GK.
âSome tunes remind me of when we started.
âSo thereâs a lot of songs weâve got to release.â
And the boys say they know the perfect venue to debut their new material â Bradford Live, which used to be the cinema theyâd regularly visit as children.
âAbsolutely,â says GK.
âWeâd be looking for the nachos and the popcorn.â