Br3nya

Rapper, London


Br3nya has channelled her influences, environment and cultural heritage into her music. The West-London/Ghanian rapper has a lyrical ability and confident, clever delivery that has drawn co-signs from the likes of Stormzy (Br3nya opened his last MERKY Festival, Stormzy also shouted her out in his landmark Glastonbury headline slot), Headie One, Ms Banks, and Ivorian Doll, playlists at Radio 1, 1Xtra and support from The Guardian, British Vogue, The Face, NOISEY, CRACK, The Fader, Complex UK, CLASH, NME, MTV, BET and more. 

Bringing themes of female empowerment, knowing your worth and owning your mistakes into her music – Br3nya has earned a cult following of young, exceptional Black British women. Taking a year off to hone her sound, heading to Ghana for the first time in 10 years to collaborate with producers and artists on the ground, Br3nya returned earlier this month with ‘Kumasi’, setting the young star on a path to reclaim her crown as a UK Rap Queen.

Br3nya on Trippen


Br3nya has channelled her influences, environment and cultural heritage into her music. The West-London/Ghanian rapper has a lyrical ability and confident, clever delivery that has drawn co-signs from the likes of Stormzy (Br3nya opened his last MERKY Festival, Stormzy also shouted her out in his landmark Glastonbury headline slot), Headie One, Ms Banks, and Ivorian Doll, playlists at Radio 1, 1Xtra and support from The Guardian, British Vogue, The Face, NOISEY, CRACK, The Fader, Complex UK, CLASH, NME, MTV, BET and more. 

Bringing themes of female empowerment, knowing your worth and owning your mistakes into her music – Br3nya has earned a cult following of young, exceptional Black British women. Taking a year off to hone her sound, heading to Ghana for the first time in 10 years to collaborate with producers and artists on the ground, Br3nya returned earlier this month with ‘Kumasi’, setting the young star on a path to reclaim her crown as a UK Rap Queen.