<span>If a book </span><span>was </span><span>ever written about the UAE's music scene, a fair few passages </span><span>would be dedicated to Foreign Beggars. The hip-hop crew </span><span>was one of the country's first international success stories, finding </span><span>their roots in Dubai</span><span> in the late 1990s before relocating to London and performing </span><span>at some of the world's biggest music festivals.</span> <span>Some of the acts the four</span><span>-piece band supported over the years include Snoop Dogg, Public Enemy and Wu Tang Clan. </span><span>Last month they performed at </span><span>Iceland's quirky Secret Solstice Festival among</span><span> some of their favourite acts. "Oh, that was great, man," </span><span>says Pavan Mukhi, who raps under the name Orifice Vulgatron. "We were sandwiched between The Black Eyed Peas and The Sugar</span><span>hill Gang, and it was a time of the year whe</span><span>n the country was in sunlight for 24 hours</span><span>. It was brilliant."</span> <span>But Mukhi's</span><span> experience at the festival was bittersweet. After more than two decades on the grind, he says the group has decided to call it a day at the end of the year. </span><span>But they will not quit</span><span> before embarking on a farewell world tour</span><span> that will include a performance in</span><span> Dubai</span><span>. "Are you kidding bro? We are definitely coming back," Mukhi says. "</span><span>We are still working on it, but expect an announcement later in the year. It will be a great home gig."</span> <span>That Mukhi still calls Dubai home</span><span> </span><span>despite </span><span>living in </span><span>Britain for </span><span>more than a decade is </span><span>testament to the role the emirate played in launching the group. </span><span>In a way, Foreign Beggars </span><span>are also the </span><span>perfect example of the creative riches </span><span>such a cosmopolitan </span><span>society yields.</span> <span>An Indian born in Dubai</span><span>, Mukhi met fellow Foreign Beggars member, </span><span>Dag Nabbit – </span><span>who grew up in Iraq before relocating to the UAE as a child</span><span> – at Dubai English Speaking School</span><span>. </span><span>Mukhi says the UAE entertainment scene </span><span>he remembers from his childhood </span><span>was a far cry from the thriving landscape </span><span>it is now.</span> <span>"For expat</span><span> kids that were living there at the time, any kind of entertainment </span><span>was really for those who were over the age of 21," he says. "If you were </span><span>younger than 21 you either </span><span>did sports, </span><span>went to the cinema, </span><span>went to Leisure</span><span>land or stayed at home."</span> <span>Such a lack of options </span><span>led Mukhi and his peers to create their own home-grown music scene. "What happened was all these kids from all these different Dubai schools</span><span>, </span><span>such as Choueifat, Emirates International School </span><span>and Dubai College,</span><span> would all end up gravitating towards each other," he says. "After school, we would put on events </span><span>such as house parties, battles of the bands or even go to each other's houses and jam. I mean, in my house we would get six or seven bands coming nearly every day and </span><span>simply playing music together."</span> <span>A central hub for that scene was Dubai's famed Al Mansour </span><span>music shop in Deira. "It was a time where the only available music in these shops </span><span>was </span><span>what was </span><span>in the charts," he says. "But sometimes you g</span><span>ot acts that kind of slipped through the net and I would get music by </span><span>Ice</span><span>-T, 2 Live Crew and Metallica."</span> <span>Keen to widen his musical palate and industry contacts, Mukhi moved to </span><span>Britain in 1999, with Dag Nabbit joining him a year later. </span><span>The pair solidified Foreign Beggars and through </span><span>touring and releas</span><span>ing music regularly, the group </span><span>became one of the </span><span>most respected names in </span><span>Britain's independent hip-hop scene.</span> <span>Ironically, w</span><span>hile the UK hip-hop community was </span><span>more developed</span><span> compared to its counterpart in the UAE, when the duo arrived in </span><span>Britain they once again found themselves </span><span>in a small scene that was </span><span>bubbling slowly to the surface. This was a time where the idea of an English grime artist headlining the UK's celebrated Glastonbury Festival, </span><span>as rapper Stormzy did last month, was utterly unthinkable.</span> <span>That said, as well as </span><span>adding two </span><span>members to </span><span>Foreign Beggars</span><span>, rapper Metropolis and DJ Nonames</span><span>, Mukhi says his UK experience gave him a front</span><span>-row seat </span><span>to watch as the community</span><span>, with its vibrant mesh of rappers and DJ</span><span>s</span><span>, </span><span>develop</span><span>ed</span><span>.</span> <span>"We worked with Skrillex before he became the super</span><span>star </span><span>he is now," he says. "We also knew people </span><span>such as Rag'n'Bone Man and Roots Manuva</span><span>. These people were all part of that community."</span> <span>Those connections </span><span>benefited Foreign Beggars, with the group collaborating with </span><span>Rag'n'Bone Man</span><span> on last</span><span> year's album </span><span><em>2 2 Karma</em></span><span>. The single, </span><span><em>Standard,</em></span><span> may </span><span>surprise some Rag'n'Bone </span><span>fans </span><span>as the British </span><span>artist </span><span>shows off some impressive rapping skills</span><span>, </span><span>a talent he honed </span><span>long before he </span><span>became the successful </span><span>singer he is today. "We are both from the same era of hip-hop and grew up on the same artists and we met way before he blew up," </span><span>Mukhi says. "It is interesting in that we collaborated together because he signed a music deal </span><span>in which he can do any kind of rap music he wants. So that allows him to collaborate with people he knows and respects."</span> <span>With Mukhi looking forward to exploring new creative terrain after Foreign Beggars calls it a day, he describes the group's journey as nothing but successful. From those early jam sessions in his family's Dubai home to performing</span><span> shows across the world, the group always did things on their own terms.</span> <span>"Look, I don't live in a mansion or drive fancy sports cars," he says. "But I can do what I want to do and whenever I want to do it. Music is my job and my life</span><span>. Now that is success for me."</span>