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Hong Kong rapper Haysen Cheng wants to channel his journey from cash-strapped youth to established artist to inspire the young people of his hometown. Photo: Haysen Cheng

Leslie Cheung’s hip hop successor? Hong Kong rapper Haysen Cheng’s quest for global reach

  • Hong Kong rapper Haysen Cheng wants to channel his journey from cash-strapped youth to established artist to inspire his generation
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Self-proclaimed “Hong Kong Don” Haysen Cheng King-hei wants to be the rap equivalent of Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing – the late Cantopop icon who once propelled the genre to global heights.

Twenty-four-year-old Cheng is not your typical guest at South China Morning Post HQ, rocking up with a meticulous buzz cut, his Chinese surname shaved into the back of his head, bling adorning his neck and wrists.

His conspicuous appearance is paradoxical not only to the usually staid newsroom, but to the rapper’s polite humility as well. Before we go off for our chat, he hugs his mother goodbye as she sets off for a stroll around the Times Square mall in Causeway Bay.

Cheng was raised in Hong Kong until his parents’ divorce, when he and his brother moved with their mother to Shanghai. He was nine years old at the time, and barely spoke any Mandarin.
With new-found success in mainland China, Cheng wants to represent hope for the youth of Hong Kong. Photo: Haysen Cheng

Having attended international schools for most of his childhood, Cheng had seen what life was like for the privileged.

The Western-style private schools follow a separate curriculum and offer a cosy pathway for Asians from upper and upper-middle class families to enter top colleges in the West.

Circumstances then took the Hong Kong don to the Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago off the coast of northwestern Africa, for three years. Cheng, a hoops enthusiast, joined the Canarias Basketball Academy, which offered him a scholarship.

As financial pressures began to mount, his training in Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands, was halted and the family returned to Hong Kong.

Cheng’s signature gruff vocals were the result of a trying time, when he coached basketball during the day and worked in a factory at night. Photo: Haysen Cheng

Cheng watched his former classmates apply to Ivy League schools and his teammates in Spain being scouted by major basketball leagues.

Even as Cheng’s top grades led to more than half a dozen scholarship offers from American universities, the then 18-year-old had to abandon those dreams and pick up two jobs.

Cheng coached basketball during the day and, in the evening, made egg rolls with his mother in a Kowloon City factory, where the two would work until the small hours.
Cheng has documented his struggles in his lyrics, drawing inspiration from the likes of Drake, J. Cole and Kanye West – rappers also raised by single mothers.

Cheng could afford a two-hour session every month at a recording studio in Kwai Hing, after paying rent and his brother’s school fees.

“Don’t be taking s*** for granted, you got one life; I ain’t ever had a good father figure, but my son might,” Cheng rapped on his 2020 single “Two Step”.

His first album, Durags & Chopsticks (2019), was recorded during these rushed studio sessions, as well as at home, using his own microphone.

Cheng’s voice at the time was especially gruff – the effect of coaching children during the day and speaking over factory noises at night, and it became his signature sound.

“That tape was the first time I got onto Spotify’s editorial playlists – to see I’m there with these other players, like Jackson Wang and Higher Brothers, was just a crazy thing to me,” says Cheng.

“People outside my friend circle started to notice me, which made me feel, ‘OK, now I have to work even harder,’ knowing that people actually see something in me.”

Cheng recorded most of his early music at home or in rushed sessions at a studio in Kwai Hing. Photo: Haysen Cheng

But what working harder meant for Cheng soon changed.

Having arrived late to a would-be career-changing basketball tournament after an exhausting shift at the factory, he twisted an ankle within the first few minutes.

Forced to leave the venue dragging two large sacks of packaged egg rolls still to be delivered, Cheng decided then and there that things must change.

With some buzz among local producers and some in the United States, Cheng applied for a HK$80,000 (US$10,250) Covid-19 pandemic loan from Hang Seng Bank – to be paid back in five years at low interest rates.
“I gave my mother some money so she could take care of herself and my brother,” says Cheng, “and I took the rest and booked a flight to Shanghai – quarantined there for 21 days, the happiest 21 days of my life.”
It’s very hard for me to have true friendships with people here because I can’t respect [inauthenticity]
Haysen Cheng
Leaving Hong Kong for Shanghai in 2021, during the height of anti-mainland sentiment, Cheng lost hundreds of local followers overnight, but top artists across the border began reaching out to him.
Among them was British-Jamaican producer Harikiri, who has made hits for A-list rappers in China and the US, and founded the Iris Creative Collective in Chengdu.

Cheng signed with his long-time idol and moved to the capital of Sichuan province, one of China’s most culturally dynamic cities.

“It’s ironic that all the same people are now starting to show me love and respect again, because they see me working and being good friends with their favourite artists,” says Cheng.

“It’s very hard for me to have true friendships with people here because I can’t respect that.”

That said, Cheng has several projects in the pipeline that will bring him back to his birthplace, including a series of club performances next month.

Following an instinctive move to Chengdu in 2021, Cheng has worked with top hip hop musicians in China and beyond. Photo: Haysen Cheng

“Maybe things are changing here, maybe people are being more open-minded towards mainland China,” he says, “and maybe I have to have more love in my heart to forgive people who didn’t believe in me […]

“I feel like you have to be the bigger person if your life’s purpose is to lead, and I feel like I am meant to lead here.”

Last month, Cheng released “Chan Ho Nam”, a reference to the triad member played by Ekin Cheng Yee-kin in the 1996 cult classic Young and Dangerous.

It is the prelude to his first Cantonese album, coming this summer, after years of English and Mandarin tracks.

“I’m the only person in Asia who could write a full song in native English and Mandarin – for myself or for someone [else] – as well as in Cantonese,” says Cheng.

“I am not restrained by anything and I can write great melodies, and that makes me feel like I am untouchable in this space.”

Cheng’s brother now lives with him in Chengdu, where he is a top student. And Cheng regularly stops off in Hong Kong to see his mother and grandparents.

Having grown from struggling teen to rap star with loyal fans scattered across China, he wants to represent hope for the youth of Hong Kong.

“It’s not really about what you do,” he says, “or how much money you have. It’s about whether you can create happiness out of your situation – that’s one thing I really want to influence people in Hong Kong about one day.”

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