2000s Narstie began his working life as a dog trainer in his home town of Lambeth. In 2007, Big Narstie signed to independent label, Dice Recordings. His track "Brushman" was also named
RWD magazine's "Song of the Year". Sampling
Coldplay, it was supported by personalities from multiple mainstream radio stations. Big Narstie has featured on records including
Professor Green's "Before I Die Remix" and
N-Dubz's "N-Dubz vs N.A.A", from their debut album
Uncle B. Big Narstie continued to record and released BIG NARSTIE three other mixtapes:
Mind of a Fat Guy,
Drugs and Chicken, and ''I'm Betta Than U'', which had guest appearances from
Giggs,
Scorcher, and
Wretch 32.
2010s Big Narstie released his first mix CD of the year in February 2012, called
Pain Overload. Shortly after,
Pain Is Love was released in July for free download via
SB.TV. Big Narstie's first official E.P,
#PAIN was released in October and entered at number 5 in the iTunes UK Hip Hop chart and he won the 2012 Urban Music Award (UMAs) for Best Grime Act beating artists like Skepta, Lethal Bizzle and Dot Rotten. In 2013, Big Narstie released his second EP ''Don't Fuck Up the Base
. The EP Big Narstie
was the highest selling grime EP of 2013. He also had a Don't Fuck up the Base'' EP launch party, which featured music artists, Flirta D, Mic Righteous, Scrufizzer, Kozzie and DJ's, DJ Cameo, Charlie Sloth, DJ Logan Sama. He performed at a number of festivals across Europe including The Wireless Festival, A Day in Dam with English Frank and
Black The Ripper, the Hip Hop Kemp Festival in Czech Republic and The Outlook Festival in Croatia. He also won UMA 2013 Best Grime Act award for the second year in a row. At the end of 2013 he released an EP
Hello Hi. with True Tiger. Noisey named Big Narstie as their name of 2013. and he also reviewed the year at
Fact magazine. In 2014, Big Narstie released ''What's the Story Brixton Glory Part II'', where he covered various
Britpop classics by artists such as
Oasis. He then embarked on the Base Defence League (BDL) Tour around the UK, which had a host of music artists supporting him. Big Narstie was featured in
Craig David's single, "
When the Bassline Drops", which was released on 27 November 2015. The song saw commercial success, entering the UK top 10 and being certified Gold. In 2017 he rapped on the
Enter Shikari single "
Supercharge". In 2017 he collaborated with
Robbie Williams and
Atlantic Horns on the song "Go Mental". Channel 4 announced they had commissioned
The Big Narstie Show following appearances from him on Gogglebox: Celebrity Special for Stand Up To Cancer and The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2017. In 2019 he reappeared in the Big Fat Quiz, this time the Big Fat Quiz Of Everything The first series of the show features guests including
Ed Sheeran,
Jonathan Ross,
David Schwimmer,
David Haye and
Keith Lemon having joined hosts Big Narstie and Mo Gilligan. The programme performed strongly for the network, with The Big Narstie Show rating as one of Channel 4's most popular programmes for young audiences. It was up 94% on the channel's share of 16–24-year-old viewers; up 129% on share for BAME viewers; and up 144% on share for black audiences. The show continued for five seasons, winning a
BAFTA TV award in 2021 for best comedy entertainment programme. During 2018 Big Narstie also appeared on
Good Morning Britain reading the weather report which went viral. He also appeared on
Celebrity Crystal Maze for Stand Up To Cancer,
Celebrity Juice,
Would I Lie to You? and
The Chris Ramsey Show. He also started in the cinema hit
The Festival. Big Narstie was caught up in controversy in 2018 during an episode of ''
Britain's Got More Talent'' when he appears to push contestant Robert White during a live show. The pair resolved the issue publicly on Twitter. In 2020, Big Narstie featured on the track 'Catch 22' by
NAHLI produced by
DaVinChe.
Grime comedy Big Narstie was cited by music blog 'RansomNote' as one of the first in the '
grime comedy' genre. The blog states "Big Narstie is probably the don of this – at either end of his career you can find lyrics and beats drenched with sorrow, regret and nostalgia" and goes onto talk about the subjective opinion of the audience – "the fact that most outsiders can't tell the difference between rage and satire tells you more about the audience than the performer". ==Other activities==