Stars pay tribute to 'visionary' Mobo Awards founder Kanya King

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Alex TaylorBBC News Culture reporter

Getty Images Kanya King speaking on stage at a lectern with a large yellow Mobo Awards logo at the 2025 ceremonyGetty Images

Mobo Awards founder Kanya King has been remembered as a "visionary" who "changed the face of culture and music", following her death at the age of 57.

King worked tirelessly to champion black musicians' contribution to British culture, and funded the first Music of Black Origin awards in 1996 out of her own pocket.

She died on Wednesday after "a courageous and characteristically determined battle with colon cancer", the Mobo Organisation said in a statement.

Tributes have been paid by stars including TV host and Mis-Teeq singer Alesha Dixon, who called King an "incredible woman", adding: "You helped so many people, your impact is immeasurable!"

Getty Images Kanya King and Alesha Dixon standing and smiling together Getty Images

Alesha Dixon, pictured with King in 2010, won a Mobo Award with Mis-Teeq and hosted the ceremony three times

The Luther actor posted: "You inspired me. Your dedication is unmatched. I will miss you @kanyakingcbe, we will all miss you."

JLS star Oritsé Williams said she was "a pioneer" who had "created a powerful platform that championed cultures, communities and talent that were often unseen and underrepresented, despite our cultural influence being felt across the world".

Williams added: "You didn't just create opportunities; you created belief. Belief in our culture, our creativity and our potential.

"You are an icon, a true visionary, I trust and believe that your impact will be felt for generations to come."

London Mayor Sadiq Khan echoed his sentiments, calling King "a true pioneer" who "changed the face of culture and music".

PA Media Olivia Dean and Kanya King standing together and smiling, holding a Mobo Award between themPA Media

King celebrated with Olivia Dean after the singer won three Mobos at this year's ceremony in March

King's family said they were "devastated" by her death.

"She faced every moment of her illness as she faced every moment of her life: with courage, with faith, with humour, and with an absolute refusal to be diminished," they said.

Through the Mobos, she gave "an entire generation of black British artists the right to be seen, to be celebrated, and to be heard on their own terms", they added.

"Kanya leaves behind 30 years of music of joy, of resistance, of proof – proof that one woman, with vision, nerve, and love, can move an entire culture.

"We are broken. We are grateful. We are so profoundly, endlessly proud to have been her family.

"Kanya King CBE. Gone too soon. Never, ever forgotten."

Over three decades, the Mobos have become globally renowned for their recognition of black talent - platforming upcoming stars and pushing to break industry boundaries.

King defied expectations as a teenage mother who dropped out of school to gatecrash the predominantly white male music industry.

She studied English literature at London's Goldsmiths College and later, while working as a TV researcher, spotted a gap in the market for a black-focused awards show.

But success did not come easily.

"I remember being told, 'You've got a chip on your shoulder, why are you talking about race all the time?'" she told Music Week in 2021.

By 1999, King had been awarded an MBE for services to music as the Mobos grew from scrappy underdog to music industry fixture, holding its own against the long-established Brit Awards.

Its musical spectrum remains uniquely broad - giving early support to UK garage at the turn of the millennium, alongside R&B, soul, reggae, jazz, Afrobeat and broader African music, and championing grime before its mainstream explosion.

Getty Images King at the 2024 Mobo Awards in Sheffield Getty Images

King at the 2024 Mobo Awards in Sheffield

Growing up as the youngest of nine children in a cramped council flat in Kilburn, north London, King's upbringing inspired her forthright passion for change and her entrepreneurial spirit.

She told the Evening Standard she felt "written off" when she became a mother at 16, recalling a careers adviser suggesting her best prospect was managing a local Sainsbury's.

"That put a fire in my belly and gave me the motivation to say 'Why should I not have ambition'," she added.

Her aim with the Mobos, she would later write for The Times, was to bridge the "real music divide" that existed at the time, with R&B and hip-hip "completely ignored" by award shows.

Getting it off the ground wasn't easy, especially as someone attempting to reshape the industry from the outside.

"Rejection became normalised," she told Music Week. "People didn't want to take my calls".

But she made it happen through persistence; eventually gaining support from the few black industry executives of the time, like Dej Mahoney and Stevie Wonder's former manager Keith Harris.

"My bedroom was my office," she explained to 1Xtra. "I was answering the phone saying 'Mobo Organisation'.

"People didn't need to know I had clothes everywhere and the room was in disarray!".

Her tenacity paid off. The first televised event, held at the Connaught Hotel in London, appeared to come out of nowhere - just seven weeks after her pitch was accepted.

But the ceremony made headlines when Labour's soon-to-be Prime Minister Tony Blair attended with his wife Cherie, walking the red carpet alongside King.

At the ceremony itself, Lionel Ritchie accepted the Mobo's first-ever lifetime achievement accolade on stage with Tina Turner.

King's mother, meanwhile, spent the evening asking Blair if he could find her daughter a job in the government. It wasn't until 1999, when King received her MBE, that her mother finally accepted the awards as more than a passion project.

Speaking to press at the inaugural ceremony Blair emphasised the Mobos' focus on music of black origin - recognising style and influence over skin colour.

For King, this was intentional. She told BBC News in 2001: "We've always said it's about the music... an event that celebrates music of black origin doesn't seek to separate artists according to skin colour".

The Mobos' televised ceremonies soon became star-studded occasions, where UK acts like Craig David, Kano, Amy Winehouse and Stormzy rubbed shoulders with international stars, from blues legend BB King to Destiny's Child, Usher, Janet Jackson and Rihanna.

Getty Images Beyonce in a group shot as part of Destiny's Child in 1999 after winning best international R&B actGetty Images

Beyonce attended in 1999 as part of Destiny's Child, who won best international R&B act

Getty Images Usher giving an acceptance speech at the 2001 ceremonyGetty Images

Usher giving an acceptance speech at the 2001 ceremony

Getty Images Amy Winehouse performing at the 2007 awardsGetty Images

Amy Winehouse performing at the 2007 awards

Getty Images Stormzy backstage smiling with Mobo awards Getty Images

Stormzy swept multiple awards at the Mobos in 2017, two years before headlining Glastonbury festival - the first black British solo artist to do so

But with this increasing mainstream appeal came complications. Negative media coverage nearly ended the event, particularly in 2002, when headlines falsely implicated violence at an unaffiliated after-show party.

As sponsors fled, King remortgaged her home for a second time to avoid the awards collapsing.

In 2009, the Mobo awards moved out of London for the first time and since then has moved around the UK.

King announced the awards would take gap year in 2017, which extended to 2020.

King, who was awarded a CBE in 2018 for her contributions to music and culture, later told The Guardian that the hiatus was not down to funding but asking: "Is Mobo still needed?".

The answer, she decided, was a resounding yes. The Mobos returned with a revamp supporting emerging artists, not just in music but in film, television and other areas of the arts.

King's active defiance in defending black interests also extended beyond music. She launched Mobolise to tackle what she called the "scary underrepresentation of black talent" across influential industries.

PA Media Kanya King and Idris Elba standing together, she's pointing at him and he's holding a Mobo trophyPA Media

King posing in the winners room with Idris Elba, the recipient of the Mobo Inspiration Award in 2014

It mirrored her own expanding influence in numerous committees and advisory groups, including the Creative Industries Council and UK Music Diversity Task Force.

At the height of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020 she penned an open letter titled "An inconvenient truth" to then-Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden reflecting on her experiences fighting systemic racism.

"I just want to see action. That's what I want to see. The question I asked myself is: 'What do I have to do? What do I have to prove to get a seat at that table?'" she concluded.

Emily Marcovecchio King in a green dress with her lifetime achievement award, the same night she announced her cancer diagnosisEmily Marcovecchio

King with her LIVE foundation lifetime achievement award, the same night she announced her cancer diagnosis

"While this journey will undoubtedly be challenging, I've always believed in finding meaning through adversity," she said.

"If my story can save just one life, then it's a story worth telling."

She was last seen on the red carpet at this year's Mobo Awards in Manchester.

On stage, Pharrell Williams, who received the global songwriter award, paid tribute to King's determination to keep working through her cancer treatment.

"When you love what you get to do, you're never working, you're just having the time of your life."


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