upper waypoint

Mixed: Oakland Rapper Guap on His Black and Filipino Roots

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Rapper Guap (formerly Guapdad 4000) was raised by his Filipina grandmother in West Oakland. He's fiercely proud of his Black and Filipino roots. (Photo: Paul Middleton)

Listen to this and more in-depth storytelling by subscribing to The California Report Magazine podcast.

This week we’re revisiting a story from our series Mixed: Stories of Mixed-Race Californians. It originally aired in March 2023.

Even if he’s not always recognized as part of the Asian American community, Oakland-born rapper Guap is fiercely proud of his Filipino roots. On the last track of his 2021 album, 1176, he tells an origin story spanning decades and continents. His grandfather, a Black merchant marine stationed in Subic Bay in the Philippines, ripped the pocket of his uniform. He knew he’d be in big trouble if he didn’t fix it, so he found a young Filipina seamstress to repair the pocket — and fell in love. When his time in Subic Bay came to an end, the two married and moved to a one-story house in West Oakland, where they would eventually raise their grandchild Guap, the first-born child of their youngest daughter.

For the KQED series “Mixed: Stories of Mixed-Race Californians,” hosts Sasha Khokha and Marisa Lagos spoke to Guap about growing up Black and Filipino, the cultural impact his lola had on him, and how his mixed identity shows up in his music.

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint