Rap and Hip-Hop
M Huncho Tickets
Concerts5 results
Concerts in United Kingdom
- 06/04/2025Sunday 19:00ManchesterO2 Ritz ManchesterM Huncho
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- 07/04/2025Monday 19:00BirminghamO2 Institute BirminghamM Huncho
- 08/04/2025Tuesday 19:00LondonEventim ApolloM HunchoLimited Availability
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- 11/04/2025Friday 19:00GlasgowWarehouse SWG3M Huncho - U2OPIA THE TOUR
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International Concerts
- 10/04/2025Thursday 19:00Dublin, IEThe AcademyM Huncho
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Gallery
About
British rapper and trap wave pioneer
Every story worth hearing hits deeper than words on the page. For Trap Wave pioneer M Huncho’s debut album, this latest phase arrives with a new aesthetic (see: a mask designed by Louis Vuitton skateboarder and British designer Lucien Clarke), hang-me-in-a-gallery artwork (painted by acclaimed British illustrator Reuben Dangoor) and a charged-up motivational reload.
“Mental health can happen at any moment and for me, lockdown was that point,” explains Huncho. “But I came out of that moment stronger and so motivated that I don’t need motivation for another god knows how many years. I came out and told my manager I’m doing this, this, this, this – put all the pressure in the world on my shoulders.”
First came sessions with a team of cherry-picked producers, where Huncho armed secluded studio sessions with a catalog of classic albums with the help of executive producers QuincyTellEm and Niall from his management team. J Cole’s 2014 Forest Hills Drive because of the content – "what he's talking about, the pictures he's painting." Future’s Dirty Sprite 2 for the instrumentals. Ye’s My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy for the gruesome, replayable rap beats. The list goes on: Kendrick Lamar’s Good Kid M.a.a.D City, Drake’s Nothing Was The Same. Gunna’s Drip Season 3... classic upon classic.
Gone are the days of pulling beats from producer’s bags and YouTube for Huncho. Instead, each beat on this album was created solely for this album, all arriving from the camps Huncho set up.
“We had the album artwork upon the wall. From each of those records we took something we loved, put them all in a blender, then mixed them up and drank the juice,” he explains. “Then we’d go through the beats with the producers and make something from scratch.”
The purpose of the curated sound design was “to sweep people off their feet – for people to say I’ve never heard this type of music come from the UK.” But between soaking up the influence of generation-defining albums at nightly studio sessions came another mission: to open up. About family business ('I’ve got a song for my unborn daughter and my unborn son'), being haunted by ghosts (on 'Vivid'), and cruising through life’s forever-shifting circumstances. Hence the name Chasing Euphoria – which represents the positive and negative connotations of searching for a life filled with happiness, security, and positive well-being.
“The one message that always makes me ponder is when someone says ‘your music saved my life',” says Huncho. “What did they listen to that made them change how they live? This record became about letting people in and showing them there’s no difference between me and you –we’re both human beings.”
Personal and artistic growth is the life force that powers Chasing Euphoria. As a result, Huncho felt it right to create a new mask for this new era, to represent his evolution into a new person. To do this, he and designer Lucien Clarke looked toward Japan and samurai art. “The idea of being a samurai – untouchable and feared – resembles me in beast mode,” he explains of the new mask’s enhanced design, adorned with Lucien’s textbook white marker Sharpie writing. “It represents growth, motivation, fearlessness - and that I’m here to take everything. I want my flowers.”
Reuben Dangoor’s artwork similarly captures the album’s themes of entering a new age. It features Huncho bathing inside his hands, both his previous masks by his side, kicking back while floating way, way above the land below, surrounded by euphoric hues. The visual represents the idea that “no matter how much life drowns you out, euphoria still lies in your hands.”
Alongside a better, brighter Huncho, Chasing Euphoria also stacks up heavyweight collaborations. The UK number one artist Headie One cruises through for the shimmering track 'Warzone'. Potter Payper goes back and forth on the mind-warping collab 'Me and My Conscience'. Grime artists Wretch 32 and Ghetts lead the charge on 'Vivid' and road-rap star Giggs appears on 'Lean'. It’s an album made up of some of the UK’s best scene-crafters, and it’s also an album born from the perspective of a half-decade in the industry.
Huncho describes the album’s ultimate takeaway like this: “For some people, euphoria is money, it’s drugs, it’s women, it’s men. This album is me thinking about what euphoria is. In each song, I’m talking about euphoria and what I’m chasing. At the end of it all, euphoria for me is building a family, it’s changing the community, it’s shifting mind frames, and making people think differently. Coming from the places we come from, we don’t all have the same 24 hours.”
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