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Bucking the trend of U.K. road rappers, south-east London's Tiny Boost is a prolific talent, whose gritty, deep-voiced delivery graced no fewer than 50 releases in the five years that followed his 2018 career reboot.

He was born-and-raised in a pre-gentrified, early-'90s Peckham, his father leaving home before he reached secondary school. Part of the gang Peckham Young Gunners, Boost was barely into his teens when he fell into crime and was first arrested for robbery. Alongside other crew members -- such as Y Lap and Shocks Shot -- he recorded a handful tracks in the mid-2000s under the PYG moniker: "Coming Up," "Gunshot Riddim" and "Who U Talkin' To?" The latter cut was picked by his musical mentor <a href="spotify:artist:3S0tlB4fE7ChxI2pWz8Xip">Giggs</a> for a 2007 <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22SN1%22">SN1</a> mixtape, Welcome to Boomville. Two years on, under both his <a href="spotify:artist:3S0tlB4fE7ChxI2pWz8Xip">Giggs</a> and Hollowman aliases, the rising star gave Tiny Boost equal billing on an expansive project titled, Who Said Dat? However, shortly afterwards in 2009, Boost was arrested in Aylesbury for firearms offences. His resulting conviction placed him behind the bars of 10 different prisons for the next eight-and-a-half years. During that time, his only musical activity came in the form of "Popping Freestyle," a 2015 recording made with Swaggie Studios while on day release.

Following his release in early 2018, Tiny Boost took full advantage of the streaming age and announced his return with three quickfire singles -- "Streets Back," "2 Days" and "240 Seconds (Pt. 1)" -- that September on <a href="spotify:artist:3S0tlB4fE7ChxI2pWz8Xip">Giggs</a>' <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22SN1%22">SN1</a> label. His first solo mixtape, Strictly for the Streets, appeared the following month before early 2019 brought one-off collaborations with Joe Grind, <a href="spotify:artist:1AKNroq6zJX4DlJaA0dcKw">Frisco</a> and Billy the Kid. August 2019's "Feels Good" anticipated his second project, Street Dreams, which appeared later that year after a joint single with Lewisham's Rosca Nini Zullu. Mid-2020 saw him work with ASB on "Where I Been" and "Get It," two tracks that ultimately appeared on the west London rapper's Prayer, Profit & Progress mixtape. After November's "Street Diary," Tiny Boost teamed up with the Paperboys Records production team for "Still Here," "Pandemic" and "Fresh." Alongside self-released 2021 singles such as "Certified" and "Nobody," Tiny Boost also issued tracks on other labels that year such as Sicario, Link Up TV, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22TruCulture%22">TruCulture</a> and Rich Made.

Perhaps his busiest year to date was 2022, during which he not only released Street Paper -- a third full-length project -- but also worked with labels like Street Lounge, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%2223+Formation%22">23 Formation</a>, JJR, Mxney Szn and <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22GRM+Daily%22">GRM Daily</a>. Then, early the following year, he released "Sharks 2" the first fruit of a joint project with <a href="spotify:artist:5tdTldHOWl0iRO4jtII6tv">Youngs Teflon</a>, ultimately released as Purple Hearts that June. The record included guest spots from <a href="spotify:artist:0T2sGLJKge2eaFmZJxX7sq">Wretch 32</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:39XT9gMoNmMCOlvTTR273m">K-Trap</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:3S0tlB4fE7ChxI2pWz8Xip">Giggs</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:2fOvE1l01YyORhYzwoaLCM">Miraa May</a> and the pair embarked on a U.K. tour to promote it. ~ TiVo Staff, Rovi

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