
Kam Boora is a rising UK rap artist known for his sharp lyricism, cultural depth, and genre-blending sound. Hailing from a Punjabi Sikh background, Kam brings a fresh voice to the scene, effortlessly fusing gritty UK drill with melodic, introspective tones that reflect both his roots and the realities of his environment.
With a growing catalogue that includes standout tracks like Scorpio SZN — which earned airplay on BBC Asian Network — Kam is carving out a unique lane that bridges the worlds of British rap and South Asian identity. His latest release, Sexy Drill (out 10.04.25), showcases a smoother, more seductive energy while still rooted in the rawness of the streets.
Driven, authentic, and always evolving, Kam Boora is a name to watch in the UK music landscape.
Photographer: -
Ethnicity: British-Indian
Location: Gravesend, UK
Instagram: @kbprojx
Website:
GET TO KNOW - completed April 2025
3 words to describe you:
Happy, Focused, Enigmatical
Describe your sound:
My sound is a blend of UK drill and rap with a smoother, more melodic edge. It’s raw but refined — gritty verses with clarity, layered with vibey beats that hit in the club or in your headphones at 2AM. I bring that unapologetic energy of drill but switch it up with storytelling, emotion, and cultural depth. It’s music you feel, not just hear. Whether it’s dark and heavy or sexy and chilled, I keep it real and rooted in who I am.
Describe the moment you knew that you wanted to pursue music:
The moment I finished writing 'what about me'. A release planned for later this year.
How does your heritage impact your art?
My heritage is a massive part of my art. Being Punjabi Sikh, I grew up surrounded by rhythm, language, and emotion — even the way our elders speak feels poetic. That energy naturally found its way into my music. It’s in the confidence, the storytelling, the pride, and even the pain. I’m not always making ‘South Asian’ sounding music, but the perspective, the values, the fire — that all comes from my roots. I carry that every time I step in the booth. It’s not about fitting a stereotype, it’s about showing a real, layered identity that doesn’t always get heard in UK rap.
What moment are you most proud of in your music journey so far?
There’s pride in taking the step to actually pursue something I love but I think after my first release I was proud of the planning and effort I’d put into it all.
Your next music goal:
If you could collaborate with anyone, who and why?
I’ve a few artists in mind and a project I’m excited to be working on, I’m a big fan of blending different sounds and environments to create something different from what’s out there right now.
Lyrics you live by:
"She don’t wanna be saved, don’t save her."
3 songs you're listening to right now:
Declan Rice - Odumodublvck
Number one Candidate - Antzlive
Immortal - J Cole
The 3 latest tracks played.
Your community shout out:
Shoutout the Punjabi community, and Gravesend 🙏