Amir Abd el-Fattah is Starchild, The Mighty Star of Africa. The son of an Egyptian immigrant entrepreneur and an African-American human/civil rights activist and journalist, Starchild is the product of a multi-cultural, politically charged environment, having spent most of his life growing up within the immigrant communities of Arabs, Ethiopians, Somalians, and various other communities of Africans, Middle Easterners, South Asians, and Central and South Americans within the Washington D.C./Northern Virginia Metropolitan area.
This, combined with his time spent as a child in the hometown of his father, Egypt's Port Said near Cairo, has shaped Starchild into an artist who can vivdly describe and depict the struggle and plight of America's immigrant and minority communities, the struggle of Africans and the African international diaspora, as well as display, through wicked braggadocio, his revolutionary skills on the microphone through rap, singing, and other forms of musical and literary art. His endless variety of rap patterns and flows, his amazingly poetic and articulate use of the English langauge, and a seemingly infinite vocabulary, as well as his clever use of metaphors and similes, make Starchild an artist with incredible musical prowess, especially when coupled with his singing ability and production style. Starchild uses his masterful lyricism, not only to raise awareness of these social problems and situations, but also for the shear satisfaction of displaying just why he, and many others believe he is the best rapper and lyricist in the game today.
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