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Head shot of Tyler, the Creator, against pink backdrop, photographed in London September 2019
Tyler, the Creator: ‘I got treated like I was a murderer.’ Photograph: Paul Farrell/The Guardian
Tyler, the Creator: ‘I got treated like I was a murderer.’ Photograph: Paul Farrell/The Guardian

Tyler, the Creator: ‘Theresa May’s gone, so I’m back in the UK’

This article is more than 4 years old

Four years after being turned away at the airport, the rapper talks about his battle with the Home Office, his funk reinvention – and why accusations of homophobia were wide of the mark

It is a Tuesday afternoon in mid-September and Tyler, the Creator has been in London since the weekend, when he flew in from New York to Heathrow. Going through customs was surprisingly smooth, he says. “The lady said: ‘Hey, did you have a problem with immigration here in 2015?’” He laughs. “I said, yeah.”

Four years ago, his experience was very different. The then 24-year-old rapper and musician, born Tyler Okonma, was supposed to be playing at Reading and Leeds festivals that summer. Instead, when he landed in the UK, he was taken into a detention room and shown lyrics from his first two albums: Bastard, a mixtape he had put out in 2009, when he was 18; and Goblin, from 2011. Okonma had been to the UK since those albums had come out (once, to host a screening of Napoleon Dynamite), but nevertheless he was told that he had been banned from the country for three to five years. The home secretary at the time, Theresa May, used anti-terrorism legislation to forbid him entry, releasing an official statement that said his work “encourages violence and intolerance of homosexuality” and “fosters hatred with views that seek to provoke others to terrorist acts”.

Today, Okonma laughs. “She’s gone, so I’m back.”

At the time, the ban was controversial; looking back, it seems absurd, whatever you think of his output. Those who approved argued that Okonma was a homophobe and a misogynist. Certainly, his early records were peppered with “bitch” and “faggot”; on one track, Blow, he rapped from the perspective of Ted Bundy, the serial killer pop culture can’t seem to leave alone. But Eminem, who built his early career on a cartoonishly violent alter ego, was never banned. When another American artist, Offset, rapped: “I cannot vibe with queers,” in early 2018, he was forced to apologise, but his band, Migos, played a show in London two months later. It remains unclear why Okonma was singled out for music he had made years before and no longer performed.

But his life and career have played out as a series of contradictions. His most recent album, Igor, is about a love affair with a man, and he has talked and rapped about his attraction to men for years. (On the track I Ain’t Got Time!, from his 2017 album Flower Boy, Okonma rapped: “Next line will have ’em like: ‘Woah’ / I’ve been kissing white boys since 2004.”) His work is increasingly subtle and inventive, and bold in its vision. As the opening line for his first big hit, 2011’s Yonkers, goes: “I’m a fucking walking paradox / No, I’m not.”

Okonma is in the middle of an ambitious international tour; on the day we meet, he will play the second of three sold-out shows at Brixton Academy in London, his first gigs in the UK since the ban. (He attempted a surprise outdoor performance in nearby Peckham earlier this year, but it was pulled due to overcrowding.) “It’s been four years since I’ve been back,” he tells the audience from the stage in Brixton. “Since this beautiful, flawless black skin was allowed in the country.” The roar of the adoring young audience, many of them wearing Tyler merch, is deafening.

On stage in London last month. Photograph: Getty Images

As 2019 draws to a close, it is clear that Okonma has embarked on a new phase in his career. On Igor, which appeared unannounced in May, the former rap provocateur remodels himself as a blond-wigged, Warhol-esque funk and soul singer. It seems a conscious attempt at reinvention. Okonma, who arranged and produced everything on the record, keeps its many guest spots (Kanye West, Solange Knowles, Slowthai, La Roux, Pharrell Williams) low-key, listing them in the liner notes rather than alongside the track names. He plays with samples of Run DMC, Al Green and Ponderosa Twins Plus One and is inspired by 80s pop – Everything But The Girl and Sade. His baritone rap has mostly been replaced with singing in a higher register; tracks such as A Boy Is a Gun* and Earfquake are sentimental soul songs that brim with heartbreak and longing. One of the year’s best records (and his first US No 1), Igor has brought him a new audience, some of whom tell him they don’t like his old stuff – although, by the same token, some of the old audience prefer his earlier sounds.

I am supposed to sit down with Okonma for an hour, in the studio after the Guardian’s photoshoot, but the plan changes immediately. “You know you’re coming with us, right? There’s a record store I gotta hit,” he says. Also, he wants to buy his mother some perfume. We spend the rest of the day driving around London – east, north, central – shopping and eating, talking and walking, with a revolving crew of friends and acquaintances who drop in and out. He gets bored quickly, but is easily pleased. Intensely serious one minute, the next he is sliding and twirling towards Vill, his stoic man-mountain of a bodyguard, and dry-humping him. Vill’s strategy seems to be to fondly, patiently ignore it.

Cap, golflefleur.com. Shirt, Comme des Garçons. Jewellery throughout, Tyler’s own. Photograph: Paul Farrell/The Guardian

Oddly, as Okonma’s notoriety has subsided, his fame seems to have risen. When we go for a walk in central London, he is stopped every few seconds by fans wanting to say hi, bump fists and take selfies. (He doesn’t do pictures; given the number of people asking, I see why.) Is it always like this when he is out? “It is now,” he says. “Since Igor.”

Undoing a ban on entering a country is a long and complicated process, Okonma explains, when we have made our way to the back of the car, with Vill riding up front. It took many lawyers and letters, much money and time. “Then you get the official thumbs up. It was like: damn, finally, but it was so stupid to have to endure that. I got treated like a terrorist.”

‘I feel like I won some invisible fight’

It is certainly difficult to reconcile the rapper banned for hate speech with the puppyish man I meet, who is alternately enthusiastic and droll, sweet, smart, prone to penis gags and curious about everything. “Yeah. I got treated like I was a murderer,” he says. He is wearing an emerald-green flat cap with matching knee-high socks that set off the green and gold of the grills on his teeth, a cricket jumper draped over his shoulders. He has his own clothing line, Golf, and his sharp look is part of the reason people’s heads turn with whiplash speed when he passes by. His nails are painted with glitter and he has a laser beam of charisma, when he decides to turn it on. “It was kind of stupid, and after a while I was like: I don’t even want to come back. But it was more the principle of: ‘Y’all really did this, over this? In comparison to other shit people do, that y’all let in?’ So I’m happy that I got back. I feel like I won some invisible fight.”

Did the length of the ban surprise him? “Yeah, it surprised me. But then I remembered – I’m dark-skinned, so, ahh, all right, I get it. I mean, I don’t point my finger at that at first, but I looked at every outcome and I looked at every option.” He makes a circle with his hands. “And after doing that six times, then you say, OK, what’s the difference between everyone else and me? And then you land on that.”


The Tyler, the Creator story began when Okonma was a young skater in Los Angeles, hanging out with a group of friends who coalesced around the name Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All. The loose collective, shortened to Odd Future, was home to a number of acts who have since broken big: the Internet, Earl Sweatshirt and Frank Ocean, among others. Their brand of goofy nihilism was blithely immature and deliberately provocative and it flourished online: there were mixtapes, pop-up clothing shops, Jackass-style TV shows. The aesthetic was cartoonish, all doughnuts and cats, while the lyrics were blunt-force hate-everything teen rebellion.

Many people go through an obnoxious adolescent phase, but Okonma became famous during his – and the evidence lingers in those old lyrics. “People don’t realise that all the stupid shit they did, no one knows about it but the three people in their hometown. All the stupid shit I did, or said, was public.” Does he regret any of it? “Oh no,” he says, quickly. “I wouldn’t change a thing.”

He was raised in LA by his mother. It was just the two of them until he was eight, when she had a daughter. When he was a teenager, his mother moved to Sacramento, so he lived with his grandmother for four years. Is she still alive? “No, she died in, like, 2012. Don’t say you’re sorry,” he booms. I wasn’t going to, I say. “People say that and it’s like: what are you sorry about? Did you kill her? No. Cancer killed her.”

With the Odd Future collective, including Frank Ocean (centre). Photograph: Getty Images

He moved a lot, which meant he changed schools every year or so. He found it hard to fit in. “The stuff I was into was a little different to the other kids who looked like me. They liked basketball and sports and stuff like that, and I never liked it.” He did, however, know how to rap. “That would get me the thumbs up. But I like skateboarding and I was like: check these moves out. And they weren’t feeling it. I was super-annoying. I was really hyper, loud, class clown. Just sarcastic, witty, quick.” He clicks his fingers. “Agile.”

Was he ever diagnosed with anything? “Nah! I should have been, probably.” He laughs. “My friends say I should have been. I’m trying to be chill, but, man, I just have so much energy. I think I will be like that for ever. Which I’m not mad at.” As well as music and fashion, Okonma directs his own videos. He has done so from the beginning: he is responsible for the black and white clip for Yonkers, a fevered nightmare in which he appears to eat a cockroach that has been crawling all over his face, before his eyes turn black. In IFHY, he transforms himself into a plastic mannequin in a gaudy suburban dolls’ house; his most recent, for A Boy Is a Gun*, has echoes of Cindy Sherman’s Untitled Film Stills. (In 2013, Kanye West revealed that he had asked Okonma to teach him how to make a music video.)

Taking his bike for a spin. Photograph: GC Images

He also runs the festival Camp Flog Gnaw, at the Dodger stadium in LA, although he insists that making music will always be his principal passion – everything else is “a spider web”. Does his mind ever switch off? “Nah, not really. It’s always music playing in my head, 24/7. I’m always thinking about something, always looking. There’s so much to look at.”

We arrive at Alan’s in East Finchley, a crate-digger’s secondhand paradise that was recommended by a friend. Okonma jumps out of the car and spends nearly an hour flicking through the racks, playing records, chatting to other customers and asking for tips. His manager tells me this is how they spend their time on tour, in music shops and vintage stores. Okonma has a ritual for hunting new sounds. If the artwork grabs him, he looks at the year. If it was made between 1974 and 1982, he will look to see who was involved; if it is a name he recognises, he will pick it up. He tries Roy Ayers’ LP No Stranger To Love. Alan comes over to adjust the RPM (“Roy would be very upset”) as Okonma nods along to the track Don’t Hide Your Love.

Alan asks Okonma if he has a picture he can sign. “I don’t keep anything on me. I see this in the mirror all the time,” he says, gesturing to his face. But he takes a picture outside instead and promises to send it. A schoolboy walks past, looking mildly confused, as if telling himself he couldn’t have just seen Tyler, the Creator in the suburbs of north London.

Back in the car, our conversation turns to Odd Future again. People tell Okonma all the time that it was a youth culture phenomenon, he says. “I feel like people make it seem bigger than it really was. But I was living in it, so I guess it’s different when you’re in it. It just felt like this small internet thing.” But its influence, and by extension his, can be felt all over pop. Pitchfork declared last year that “Odd Future changed everything”, praising its “unruly creativity” and its resistance to any one genre. It is even there in the gothic minimalism of LA teen sensation Billie Eilish, who wrote recently: “I would be nothing without you, Tyler, and everyone knows it.”

Cap and hoodie, golflefleur.com. All other clothes, Tyler’s own. Photograph: Paul Farrell/The Guardian

Okonma resists being pushed on why the collective struck such a chord, but he guesses that what they were doing just seemed new. “It spoke to people differently, in the sense that everything coming from Los Angeles was gang culture, low riders and Dr Dre – and we weren’t that at all.”

He is distracted by the view from the window, a long sweep of Finsbury Park. “Man, a lot of really pretty parks! Oh man, your parks are really good.” A couple of days earlier, he and his friends rode their bikes to a hill – he is not sure which – to watch the sun set. “It was the most romantic scene I think I’ve seen in my life. People were just playing cards and hanging out. I find little cheesy shit like that really cool.” Does that mean he likes the UK now? “Yeah.” A pause. “Your food still sucks.”

Okonma flickers between thoughtful and clownish in the blink of an eye. In the past, his Twitter posts were so dry that it was hard to know whether he was being serious or not. In 2015, he tweeted: “I tried to come out the damn closet like four days ago and no one cared hahahaha,” and nobody seemed to take him at his word. “See, that’s the thing,” he says now. “People always think I’m being sarcastic if I give a compliment. It’s weird, but it’s gotten better.” How so? “I stopped being funny and joking. Publicly. I’m still a goofball with my friends, but I like to keep that off the internet.”

At last year’s Grammys. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock

It is funny that he had to come out again and again before anyone took him seriously. “Yeah.” He likens it to a performance where nobody knows what is real. For instance: “Scary Movie 2 is one of my favourite movies. She gets stabbed on stage – but it’s acting, in a beauty pageant, so they’re like: ‘Oh my God, she’s so good.’”

Nevertheless, he seems to enjoy the confusion – most of the time. When he was banned for being homophobic, it hurt. “Bro! That’s the thing, bro. People knew I wasn’t. People knew the intent!” He points out of the window. “That tree over there could be a faggot! Who hasn’t played Call Of Duty online and heard some 11-year-old call you that because you killed him? You knew the intent behind it and then people were faking, like, he’s homophobic? That was pissing me off. It’s just another word.”

One of his favourite rappers as a kid was Eminem. But when Okonma said he thought a new Eminem track was “horrible”, Eminem responded by including him on a diss track, Fall, with the line: “Tyler create nothing, I see why you call yourself a faggot, bitch.” There was widespread criticism; Bon Iver, who featured on the track, tweeted that he had asked for it to be changed: “Not a fan of the message, it’s tired.” In an interview, Eminem said later that he had gone too far: “In my quest to hurt him, I realise that I was hurting a lot of other people by saying it.”

What was it like to be called that? “OK,” says Okonma, looking me dead in the eye. “Did you ever hear me publicly say anything about that? Because I knew what the intent was. He felt pressured because people got offended for me. Don’t get offended for me. We were playing Grand Theft Auto when we heard that. We rewound it and were like: ‘Oh.’” He shrugs. “And then kept playing.”

Jumper, lacoste.com. All other clothes, Tyler’s own. Photograph: Paul Farrell/The Guardian. Styling: Helen Seamons. Hair and grooming: Johnnie Sapong at the Wall Group using Leonor Greyl Pour Homme and Weleda Skin Food. Photographer’s assistants: Joe Wiles, Fiston Lingo and Freddie Farrell. Stylist’s assistant: Peter Bevan

He asks the driver to pull over – he has seen a newsagent and he wants to buy a magazine. Then we walk, and then he is hungry, so we duck into a burger place. When he is waiting, or understimulated, you get flashes of the taunting, cartoonish Tyler, the Creator character, bored and in search of a reaction. He holds the point of a steak knife under his chin and stares at me. He puts it down and picks it up again, pressing it gently into the flesh of his neck. “That’s not funny,” he says, gravely, then does it again. “Yes it is.” He shows me an old scar on his forearm, which he got by testing the sharpness of a friend’s knife (turned out it was really sharp). He is wearing a plastic beaded wristband and I ask him what it says. “It says Jay-Z,” he fibs. “I found it at a funeral.” It reads “One of One”.

Okonma walks his own path. He doesn’t drink and never has. He doesn’t like the night-time; he much prefers the day. He rides his bike whenever he can. He rarely hangs out with rappers. He doesn’t take drugs. “I’ve never seen cocaine in my life,” he says. “I just don’t like to hang around with people who indulge in that.” The mark he has made on pop culture is plain, although he disputes that his sound has been particularly influential. “I just think I’ve influenced how people present certain things, whether it’s clothes or fashion or how their videos are. I allowed some people to just be freer. I mean, I hope I have. I hope I allow people to know that there’s no rules and they can do whatever they want, artistically.”

It has been made easier by the fact that he genuinely doesn’t seem to care what people think of him. “I always did what I want. I always knew I’d be successful, since I was eight.” He seems amused that I find this funny. “Think of me and my personality and everything,” he says. “What else would I be good at?”

If you would like a comment on this piece to be considered for inclusion on Weekend magazine’s letters page in print, please email weekend@theguardian.com, including your name and address (not for publication).

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