Reggae
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The legendary Marley family has yet another Billboard Hot 100-charting hitmaker in its lineage, as YG Marley debuts for the first time (on the Feb. 10 -dated tally) with âPraise Jah in the Moonlight.â
The song, which Marley self-released Dec. 27, debuts at No. 74 with 6.2 million official U.S. streams â up 59%, as it continues weekly gains â in the Jan. 26-Feb. 1 tracking week, according to Luminate.
YG Marley (real name: Joshua Marley) is the grandson of the late Bob Marley, and the son of Rohan Marley and Ms. Lauryn Hill â the latter of whom topped the Hot 100 with âDoo Wop (That Thing)â in 1998. YG is the sixth member of the Marley family to hit the Hot 100, after Bob Marley, Ziggy Marley, Ky-Mani Marley, Damian âJr. Gongâ Marley and Skip Marley.
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Hereâs a look at every song by a member of the Marley family (excluding Hill) to chart on the Hot 100, listed chronologically:
Title, Artist Billing, Peak Position, Year:âRoots, Rock, Reggae,â Bob Marley and The Wailers, No. 51 (1976)âTomorrow People,â Ziggy Marley and The Melody Makers, No. 39 (1988)âGood Time,â Ziggy Marley and The Melody Makers, No. 85 (1991)âAvenues,â Refugee Camp All Stars feat. Pras with Ky-Mani, No. 35 (1997)âGotta BeâŠMovinâ On Up,â Prince Be & Ky-Mani, No. 90 (1998)âWelcome To Jamrock,â Damian âJr. Gongâ Marley, No. 55 (2005)âChained to the Rhythmâ Katy Perry feat. Skip Marley, No. 4 (2017)âBam,â Jay-Z feat. Damian âJr. Gongâ Marley, No. 47 (2017)âPraise Jah in the Moonlight,â YG Marley, No. 74 (2024)
Perhaps surprisingly, Bob Marley, as noted above, charted only one song on the Hot 100 prior to his death in 1981: âRoots, Rock, Reggae.â He does, however, hold the record for the most No. 1s â 19 â in the 30-year history of Billboardâs Reggae Albums chart. Plus, his greatest hits LP Legend: The Best of Bob Marley and The Wailers has spent 820 weeks and counting on the Billboard 200 (currently ranking at No. 57, after it reached No. 5 in 2014)âitâs the second-longest-charting album in the surveyâs 58-year history, after Pink Floydâs The Dark Side of the Moon (988 weeks, between 1973 and this January). His influence has resulted in many Hot 100 chart entries under a songwriter billing, though, thanks to covers, samples or interpolations of his songs, including Eric Claptonâs âI Shot the Sheriff (No. 1, 1974), Warren Gâs âI Shot the Sheriffâ (No. 20, 1997), 50 Centâs âWindow Shopperâ (No. 20, 2005) and Rihannaâs âRedemption Songâ (No. 81, 2010).
âPraise Jahâ contains a sample of Bob Marley and The Wailersâ 1978 track âCrisis.â As such, Bob Marley is listed as a co-songwriter on the track (alongside YG and Hill). It marks his first appearance on the Hot 100 since his writing credit on James Bluntâs âStay the Nightâ in 2011; that song interpolates Marleyâs 1978 classic âIs This Love.â
As for Hill, she has charted three songs on the Hot 100: âDoo-Wop (That Thing)â and two that peaked in 1999, âEx-Factorâ (No. 21) and âEverything Is Everythingâ (No. 35).
âPraise Jahâ debuts ahead of the theatrical release of Bob Marley: One Love (Feb. 14), the Reinaldo Marcus Green-helmed biopic about the late icon. YG performed the song at several of Hillâs tour stops last winter, helping generate interest leading up to its official release. The buzz bled over onto TikTok, where the song has soundtracked over 150,000 clips to date.

Katt Williams certainly set the tone for 2024. Less than a week after the Emmy-winning comedian fired shots at peers such as Rickey Smiley and Tyler Perry on Shannon Sharpeâs Club Shay Shay podcast, two of contemporary dancehallâs leading ladies launched their own lyrical battle.
Funnily enough, the two major January dancehall clashes â Jada Kingdom v. Stefflon Don and Teejay v. Valiant â center around the two biggest dancehall crossover smashes of 2023: Teejay & DJ Macâs âDriftâ and Byron Messia & Burna Boyâs âTalibans II.â Thankfully, both clashes were kept on wax, as all artists involved participated in the battles for fansâ entertainment and the greater dancehall culture over anything else.
âThis is dancehall music, and once it is [a] lyrical battle, I am down for it,â Teejay told DancehallMag. âNothing violent; nothing out of the studio, nothing outrageous⊠just music, and if it seems like itâs getting too far, I will definitely wrap this up, because you know we have to get back to the money at timesâ thatâs the bigger picture⊠for now, we have to just entertain people but nothing serious. I donât know about the next side, but on my side I am positively sure that it is just music.â
While the hip-hop world is frenzied with haphazard rap beefs peppered with days of spiraling in lieu of actual good music, dancehallâs clash culture is still going strong and further emphasizing the global reach of this iteration of the genre â especially considering how much these battles dominated online conversations in January. If youâre not already familiar with the details, hereâs a primer on both of them.
Jada Kingdom v. Stefflon Don
As the old saying goes: Think of the messiest person you know. Itâs a man, ainât it?
At the eye of the hurricane that was Jada Kingdom and Stefflon Donâs five-song clash lies Grammy-winning Afrobeats crossover star Burna Boy. The âLast Lastâ singer is an ex of Stefflon Donâs, and once pictures of Jada and him started making the rounds on social media, tensions began to rise. Before the ladies took it to the booth, Steff threw some vague Instagram Story shade that she later clarified as directed towards her former managers. The âHurtin Meâ singer would soon throw more shade that eventually sparked the first track in her clash with Kingdom.
Before that moment, however, Burnaâs remix of Byron Messiaâs breakout hit, âTalibans,â hit the airwaves. In verse three of the song â which hit No. 99 on the Billboard Hot 100 â Burna croons, âAll of the best pumpum deh yah Kingston/ So me buy a Birkin fi Jada Kingdom.â Burna wasnât just bragging about his new fling; the line is also a play on the âYou gon need a Birkin if you wanna show me offâ lyric from Jadaâs âTurn Me Onâ (with The 9ine).
By autumn, Jada â also known as Twinkle â was seen with Pardison Fontaine, Grammy-winning songwriter and former beau of Megan Thee Stallion. But with the rumor mill swirling about a December reconciliation between Steff and Burna, the timeline between the two flings started to look a bit funky.
Naturally, months of tension gave way to Steff putting her feelings to wax. At the top of the new year, the award-winning Brit shared a teaser of a new song on Rvssianâs âDutty Moneyâ riddim, in which she threatens to âboxâ an unspecified woman who messed with her man. In total bad gyal realness, Jada not only confirmed a casual fling with Burna Boy, but she also pressed Steff to clarify just who was going to get boxed. After a bit more back and forth, Steffâs âDat a Datâ arrived and the clash ensued, eventually ending after two tracks from Jada and three from Steff.
âFor everyone whoâs saying âwar startâ, war jus done! Well, for me that is,â Jada Kingdom wrote in an Instagram Story (Jan. 9). âIâm in a happy and healthy relationship now, I wonât be prolonging this nonsense.â
Teejay v. Valiant
Teejay & DJ Macâs âDriftâ was one of the defining global hits of 2023 â and debate over which artist is more responsible for the songâs success is the basis of this clash. During an Instagram Live a few months ago, Teejay blasted Mac for allegedly trying to swindle Panda out of production credits on the hit song.
On his October DJ Mac-produced âBeer & Saltâ single â which was featured on that monthâs Reggae/Dancehall Fresh Picks column â Valiant jabbed, âMac them a link when them canât find a hit song,â a clear hit at Teejay, who recently repped dancehall on one of Billboardâs five Genre Now cover stories this month (Jan. 10). In a Jan. 14 interview on the Letâs Be Honest podcast hosted by Jaii Frais, Teejay acknowledged the shade, and soon enough, Valiant responded to the acknowledgement via Instagram, spurring Teejay to preview a diss track shortly thereafter.
Nonetheless, the clash stayed on social media for a bit longer. Valiant responded to Teejayâs preview with a message on his Instagram Story that read, âMe naah give you no strength for you EP sir, go work and promote it.â I Am Chippy â Teejayâs first project since signing to Warner Records last year â is slated for a Feb. 2 release. Right after the IG Story jab, Valiant then went live with DJ Mac himself as the âDriftâ riddim played in the background. After one more Instagram Live from Teejayâs side, in which he doubled down on his DJ Macâs disses, the musical phase of the clash began.
After two tracks each from both Teejay and Valiant, the two artists put their beef to bed. While all four songs are currently available on their respective official YouTube pages, both dancehall stars have since removed the songs from their respective official Instagram pages out of respect for one another.
Without any further ado, hereâs a ranking of the eight songs that made up two of the biggest contemporary dancehall clashes of the young decade.But first be sure to check out our Spotify playlist highlighting Januaryâs hottest new tracks across reggae, dancehall, soca, calypso and more.
Teejay, ‘Chapter 2’
In a new clip from the upcoming biopic Bob Marley: One Love, premiering exclusively on Billboard below, viewers go inside the studio with Kingsley Ben-Adirâs Marley and his full Wailers band as they record their signature 1977 reggae smash âJamming.â Ben-Adir â the British actor known for the TV series The OA and Peaky Blinders […]
The Elovaters are one of those bands who donât neatly fit into any one genre of music, but instantly invoke comparisons to some of the most popular bands in touring right now. What genre exactly is Sublime, or Slightly Stoopid or Pepper or Stick Figure?
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For most music fans, the simple answer would be that the Elovaters are a reggae music act, and that answer would not draw any protest from Jackson Wetherbee, frontman for the six-person group that is selling out clubs across North America. The West Coast leg of the bandâs Endless Summer club tour has already sold more than 34,000 tickets with 13 dates on the West Coast run already sold out, including the 1,000-cap Neptune Theater in Seattle, 1,000-cap Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom in Berkeley and two sold-out nights at the 500-cap Cornerstone in Berkeley. Their success is due in part to the huge positive reception for their 2023 breakout album âEndless Summerâ which ended the year at No. 14 on the Billboard Reggae albums chart and was the second highest rated album on the chart to be released in 2023.
Technically, Elovaters are not actually a reggae band, Wetherbee tells Billboard, although like Sublime and its more modern contemporaries, much of the bandâs music does feature dancehall reggae-inspired propulsive drumming and rock steady, up-stroke guitar work that fans of the genre have used in music such as ska and ska-punk. Honoring reggaeâs own distinctive roots in Jamaica as a potent political and religious movement, a number of bands have adopted the genre name Cali Roots or Cali Riddims. While the Elovaters have a large West Coast fan base, they hail from a small town near Cape Cod, Mass., less than an hour drive from Boston, and have adopted the larger genre title American Progressive Roots.
âThereâs a lot of bands out there that have their root in reggae music and everyone in the Elovaters grew up listening to more traditional reggae along with rock and hip-hop,â Wetherbee tells Billboard. âThose influences are what makes it progressive. Weâre not following the traditional Jamaican style of reggae, but we are influenced by reggae. Instead of focusing on trying to fit into any one subcategory, we find our best music comes when we focus on a certain vibe or mood.â
The fact that he is even leading a rootsy beach band is a bit of a fluke, he tells Billboard. As a child, music was a means of overcoming a difficult speech impediment that came with a difficult stutter, Wetherbeeâs mom Liz Elliott told Billboard in an email, noting, âI recall vividly one day asking him to sing a song about his day. He never stuttered when he sang. He started talking in a singsongy voice to get his verbal needs out,â after months of working together, the stutter was gone.
Wetherbee said years of singing in front of an audience, sometimes seven nights a week, helped solidify his confidence and ability to perform as a carefree frontman who exudes confidence and embraces the beach-side lifestyle.
âIâm always trying to piece together songs that just hit me in a certain way,â Wetherbee says. âMy songs donât always end up being the song that I first heard in my head, but as a band, weâve found a way to hone in on who we are musically and create a sound and style that brings joy to our fans.
On Thursday (Jan. 25), the Elovaters released the video for their latest single, âM.I.A.,â from Endless Summer. Check out the video below and look for tickets to their Endless Summer West Coast tour at theelovaters.com.
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Septemberâs Hip-Hop Forever show at Madison Square Garden in New York â part of the yearlong celebration of the genreâs 50th anniversary â brought the stars out. Alongside legends who helped build hip-hopâs storied past was a slightly more unexpected booking: Jamaican dancehall king Sean Paul. He tore the house down with hits like âGive It Up to Meâ and âLike Glue,â reminders of a time, in the early 2000s, when dancehall records topped the Billboard charts â when Paul, who has now traded his trademark cornrows for a crisp, neat Caeser, effortlessly mixed dancehallâs infectious riddims with hip-hop sensibilities and aesthetics. Blending reggae and dancehall with other popular genres wasnât a new idea when Paul did it, but no one else besides Bob Marley and Shaggy had done so to greater effect.Â
At least until now. That night, Paul wasnât the only dancehall MC to bless the stage. One of the âspecial guestsâ teased on the showâs flier was a comparatively little-known 29-year-old guy from Montego Bay, Jamaica, that most audience members couldnât pick out of a lineup if they were promised the numbers to the next Powerball. But though silence at first overtook the crowd when he stepped onstage, Teejay looked every inch the star when he arrived.Â
Invited as a guest of Funkmaster Flex, the longtime Hot 97 DJ who oversaw the nightâs proceedings, Teejay emerged dripped out in a Gucci jacket and matching sneakers. And when the opening chords of his current hit, âDrift,â blared out of the speakers, concertgoers slowly caught on: This was the guy who made the song that had taken over TikTok for a few months last year. As Teejay warmed up to the crowd, so did they, breaking into the signature dance that would help propel âDriftâ to a No. 47 debut on Billboardâs R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart three weeks after the Garden performance.
It was a big night for Teejay â one that affirmed that the hard work heâd been putting in over the past three years was finally paying off. So what if few can yet recognize him by face? They recognize his music. Well, sort of.Â
âMost people still donât know what Iâm saying,â says Teejay with a laugh, thinking back to the Garden show. Weâre in Los Angeles, meeting for the second time at his Billboard photoshoot, and his fit looks as if it costs more than most peopleâs monthly income. âBut they love the vibe. They love the music. They love the sound. So, I just work with it.â
This digital cover story is part of Billboardâs Genre Now package, highlighting the artists pushing their musical genres forward â and even creating their own new ones.
Born Timoy Janeyo Jones in Montego Bay, Teejay learned early on to just work with it. To most people from outside Jamaica, Montego Bay is an idyllic resort city, but it has a shadier side that doesnât make travel brochures or TV commercials. One in which families of nine like Teejayâs â he grew up with his mother, uncle, five brothers and one sister â live in small board houses, in sometimes dangerous neighborhoods (like Glendevon, where Teejayâs family lived). His brothers were all musicians who as kids picked up digital production and recording software like FruityLoops and Pro Tools to produce music. Naturally, Teejay took to them as well.Â
âI started recording myself at the age of 9,â he says. âEvery day, I would come home and see them recording with Pro Tools and Iâd just sit there for hours, and when theyâd gone, Iâd just record myself.â
Michael Buckner
The autodidactic method worked. By the time Teejay was in seventh grade, he decided to leave school behind and focus on music full time. âMy teacher asked me, âWhat do you want to be in life?â And everybody in the class said they want to be a policeman, a lawyer, a judge, a doctor. I tell the teacher I want to be an artist. She said, âThatâs not professional. Give me something else.â I said, âEntertainer!â â When he was supposed to be taking notes, Teejay was instead tapping out riddims on his desk. His teacher told him that he needed to take that noise to the music class â so he did.
The way he saw it, he could help his family much more financially if he dedicated his time to growing into an artist like 2Pac or the Jamaican great Jah Cure â two of the MCs idolized in his neighborhood. âGrowing up in my community, we listened to 2Pac every single day. Once youâre a Montegonian, youâre going to know about 2Pac and Jah Cure music.âÂ
His focus paid off when Tommy Lee â fellow Montegonian and controversial mentee of incarcerated dancehall star Vybz Kartel â let Teejay rock with him and his crew, even helping the fledgling artist score his first live performance in 2010. The experience left Teejay feeling like he could actually become a star. But it would take a good while longer before the dreams in his mind materialized outside of his head.Â
Steve Jobs famously said, âGood artists copy, great artists steal.â Teejay watched the artists who were remaking dancehall in the early 2000s â artists like Movado, Aidonia, Busy Signal and Tommy Lee, who were all more different than similar â and studied what made them connect not only with Jamaican fans, but the throngs of dancehall fans around the world. He took bits and pieces from each oneâs style, creating a dancehall sound that was fluid, melodic and, at times, lyrically crazy.Â
Over the next eight years, he produced a torrent of music, culminating in his 2018 regional hit, âUptop Boss.â Though it didnât make much noise in the United States, the slinky gangster dance track was a massive hit on the island; its official video has racked up over 16 million views on YouTube.Â
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Then, tragedy struck: Two of Teejayâs close friends, who often appeared in his videos and lyrics â Romario âGrimmy Bossâ Wallen and Philip âAfro-Manâ Lewis â were gunned down in St. Andrew, Jamaica, on June 4, 2020. (The two were reportedly just hanging out on the block when a shooter pulled up and opened fire.) Condolences poured out from fans and fellow dancehall artists, with many posting photos and comments on Instagram. But Teejay went quiet: He deleted everything on his Instagram page except for two posts of his departed friends.Â
Wallenâs and Lewisâ deaths derailed Teejayâs momentum just as he was finding his footing as an artist â but they were also a wake-up call. He took time away from music, leaving the country for a bit and settling at a friendâs house in Miami to refocus his energy and clear his head. His friendsâ deaths affected both his physical and mental health: He changed his diet and started to eat healthier, in turn losing a lot of weight. But the biggest change wasnât what he was putting into his body â it was what he put into the world.Â
He no longer wanted to make music that was overtly gangster. âHardcore music has a barrier,â he says. âIt canât be played in a Christian home or in certain homes. I decided that weâre not going to go violent; I want to do something happy.â To achieve that, he decided to make some changes â starting with who handled his business. âJamaican artists donât even know what a proper management is,â Teejay says. âAs a Jamaican artist, we have to still go out there and look for a chauffeur ourselves and an interview, everything. Some people donât even know that some people in Jamaica who say that theyâre a manager are basically a booking agent.â
Sharon Burke, the leader of Teejayâs new management team since 2021, is much more than a booking agent. Co-founder and president of the Kingston, Jamaica-based Solid Agency, Burke has worked for years to bring reggae and dancehall music to a global audience. She has had a hand in the success of many of Jamaicaâs biggest superstars, including Freddie McGregor, Barrington Levy, Bounty Killer and Aidonia. And her company produces the annual Island Music Conference, bringing the wider music world to Jamaica. When it came time to set up the Verzuz battle between Bounty Killer and Beanie Man â ultimately watched by over 3 million â it was Burke who Verzuz creators Swizz Beatz and Timbaland turned to.Â
Burke believes in Teejay â that he has what it takes to really leave a mark on the game much as some of her previous clients have â but she has impressed upon him that good music alone wonât take him to the top âI said, âListen, if youâre just going to sit by and think itâs talent alone, I canât work with you. Itâs hard work. Itâs about presentation. Itâs about excellence. Itâs about choreography in the way you move. So, if youâre ready for that journey, I will go it with you.â âÂ
Michael Buckner
One of the first things Burke did was to connect Teejay with Panda, one of their in-house producers. While Teejay was in Miami getting his mind right, he began to think beyond the boundaries of the genre heâd worked within for so long. He loves dancehall â itâs the music he was raised on and the music that changed his life â but he understands that, right now, dancehall and reggae arenât as popular as they once were.Â
Back in 2003 â when Sean Paul was hopping on remixes with Busta Rhymes, when LL Cool J jumped on Wayne Wonderâs âNo Letting Goâ remix, when Elephant Man had everyone ponning de river â new dancehall artists were making serious waves in rap and R&B music. Fast forward to 2021, when the bestselling reggae and dancehall artists in the United States were Paul, Bob Marley and Shaggy. No new artists broke onto the Billboard Hot 100 that year.Â
Now, another type of Black diasporic music, Afrobeats, has assumed the position reggae and dancehall once occupied. Over the past three years, an increasing number of new African artists have broken onto the charts with big singles, like Wizkid and Temsâ 2020 hit, âEssence,â the first Nigerian song in history to appear on the Hot 100, reaching No. 9 on the chart. Now, mainstream American rappers like Drake and Future and singers like Chris Brown are tapping the genreâs ascendant stars to help them move units. Futureâs first Hot 100 No. 1 as a lead artist, for instance, came courtesy of a song that heavily samples Temsâ song âHigherâ from her 2020 EP, Broken Ears.Â
âTheyâre saying now that Afrobeats is bigger than dancehall,â Teejay says. âI was at a show where there was an Afrobeats artist on the stage â I wonât say any names â and he was saying âour music is your musicâ because they took pieces of all the legendary [dancehall] artistsâ music.âÂ
He took to the makeshift studio in the garage of his friendâs Miami house, puzzling over a riddim heâd had in his head for close to three years but couldnât quite figure out how to translate into a workable beat. He wanted to make something that was new but also paid homage to the warm dancehall feeling that radiated from songs made by legends like Supacat and Shabba Ranks. Then, one day in 2022, he received a batch of beats from Panda. âI called the beat-maker and said, âBro. You got it. This is good.â âÂ
What he got turned into âDrift,â the slick dancehall ditty that could easily be mistaken for an Afrobeats song if not for its decidedly dancehall drum programming and, of course, Teejayâs perfectly syncopated bars that swell into what has become an inescapable chorus.Â
âMe and the team, we created something called âAfro dancehall,â â he says with a laugh. âItâs more of an Afrobeats song with a dancehall artist on it. At the time, dancehall music was kind of slow and really toxic, based on everything that was going on in Jamaica. I was like, âWe need to embrace happiness [in] the world. Something everyone can dance to.â We created that old dancehall feeling where people just want to dance. Itâs simple math. We used less words and more melody so people can remember it.âÂ
That last, key idea came to Teejay from his mentor, Shaggy, the platinum-selling superstar whoâs also one of Burkeâs partners at Solid Agency. Combining reggae and dancehall with music from around the world and making it as simple as possible to sing along to has been a Shaggy trademark since he dropped the Marvin Gaye-sampling âBoombasticâ back in 1995. âHe has been telling me, âListen: choice of words,â â Teejay says. â âTry to say less, but make sure itâs effective and that people can understand it.â âÂ
â[Teejayâs] incredibly talented. Heâs a guy that is making music outside of the box and he also works extremely fâking hard,â Shaggy says. âAnd I think that is the formula that is needed to have a very long and successful career.âÂ
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A little luck also helps, and it was on Teejayâs side when it came to promoting âDrift.â He gave the song to a DJ who then leaked it on TikTok, and it took on a life of its own, becoming a top-used sound on the platform. Soon, celebrities like Jamaican Olympic gold medalist Usain Bolt and Cardi B were making TikToks doing the dance from the music video. âDriftâ became Teejayâs first Billboard chart entry, landing at No. 47 on R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay.Â
While the song took Jamaican and U.S. audiences by surprise, its success isnât that shocking to Shaggy. âIn the early days, when I played stadiums in Africa, the majority of the music they were playing was dancehall,â he recalls. âThe traditional music that you might hear from Fela Kuti and some of these original artists over there wasnât the type of music you would hear in the nightclubs. Dancehall is what you heard in the nightclub. Whether it be Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, those are the songs that were played â dancehall. It has had a very strong influence on the African culture. So, to me, itâs all one.âÂ
What does the future of dancehall look like if one of its most popular artists is co-opting the sound of another genre to make waves internationally? âIf you listen to dancehall from the 2000s, itâs a totally different dancehall than what we have today. The sound of it is different,â Shaggy says. âThe dancehall they make today is more a trap kind of dancehall. Thatâs just evolution at the end of the day. With an artist like Teejay, it gives him the opportunity to experiment and try a different vibe.âÂ
On Dec. 15, 2023, Teejay released an official remix of âDriftâ featuring none other than leading Afrobeats artist Davido (the song also has a couple of rap remixes at this point). He sounds perfectly at home on the track; if you didnât know any better, you might assume that Teejay was the guest feature. Its success, and Teejayâs own, are proof that thereâs an audience for this new sound, one that keeps dancehallâs driving groove intact while mixing in the breezy and blithe feel of Afrobeats. And if anything, it proves dancehall is at its best when pushed to new limits.Â
âI hope [new artists] keep experimenting and keep finding new ways,â Shaggy says. In other words, they just got to work with it.
We finally made it, folks! 2024 is here. To kick off the new year, Billboardâs monthly Reggae/Dancehall Fresh Picks column is back with the best selections from December 2023.
As the world celebrated the various December holidays, the biggest names in reggae and dancehall convened in Portmore, Jamaica, for the 40th edition of Sting â the iconic music festival that served as both a debut stage for future reggae superstars and a host site for legendary clashes. The 2023 edition of the festival featured headliners such as Bounty Killer and Capleton, although severe delays prevented several headliners from performing, drawing heated responses from musicians such as Tanya Stephens.
Elsewhere in the reggae and dancehall worlds, Masicka notched a second consecutive No. 2 peak on the Reggae Albums ranking thanks to his new 17-track Generation of Kings album. Teejay, Shenseea, Bunji Garlin, Rupee and Ding Dong all lit up the Hot 97 Winter Jam stage on Dec. 30.
Naturally, Billboardâs monthly Reggae/Dancehall Fresh Picks column will not cover every last track, but our Spotify playlist â which is linked below â will expand on the 10 highlighted songs. So, without any further ado:
Freshest Find: Lila IkĂ©, âGood & Greatâ
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Jamaican reggae star Lila IkĂ© has been performing âGood & Greatâ in live settings for most of last year, but she finally gifted fans with an official streaming release at the tail end of 2023. Equal parts reggae and gospel, âGood & Greatâ finds IkĂ© singing her praises to Jah and thanking him for keeping her and blessing her. The lyrics read as confessionals, dripping with vulnerability thatâs accentuated by the string arrangements in the background. âSometimes I fail, oh gosh/ Sometimes I falter/ And feel as though youâve left me in a corner/ But here you are the light upon my tunnel,â she croons with her irresistably buttery tone.
DEV & Millbeatz, âRum Hit Mehâ
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It is truly a testament to how strong the âJouvert Jamâ riddim is that every song on the five-track compilation is a banger. For his take on the riddim, Trinidadian soca artist DEV shifts his focus to the intricacies of his vocal performance. âDi rum hit meh bahhhhd,â he chants and the chorus, doubling down on the airy qualities of the vowel in the word âbad,â and delivering a level of animation that embodies the balls-to-the-wall energy of Jâouvert festivities.
Dan Evans & Nessa Preppy, âBy Mehselfâ
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Wining is synonymous with much of dancehall and soca, but contemporary cultural conversations concerning consent have sparked some reevaluations of the social cues that are integral to the dance style. For her take on Dan Evansâ â90 Degreeâ riddim, Nessa Preppy delivers an ode to wining for yourself, not for a man or any other dance partner. The brightness of her tone pairs well with the fairly sparse instrumentation in the beginning of the song, but itâs the giddy glee in her vocal performance that truly conveys the feeling of liberation that comes from dancing for, with and by yourself.
Bunji Garlin, âForwardâ
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Three days before he graced the Hot 97 Winter Jam stage, Bunji Garlin provided the opening track to his collaborative âSmoke Riddimâ double single with Shurwayne Winchester. On âForward,â Garlin rides on high-octane soca percussion to deliver a track that doubles as both an anthem of West Indian pride and a party track that is sure to rule the coming year. âRags in the air is the forward!â he proclaims.
Nicki Minaj, Skeng and Skillibeng, âForward From Triniâ
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Tucked away in the middle of her sprawling, Billboard 200-topping Pink Friday 2 album, âForward From Triniâ stands as the latest in a string of Nicki Minajâs musical odes to her home country of Trinidad & Tobago. Minaj has collaborated with both Skeng (âLikkle Missâ) and Skillibeng (âCrocodile Teethâ) in the past, but this is the first time all three artists have appeared on the same track. A loving mixture of hip-hop, dancehall and soca (with notes of calypso), âForward from Triniâ serves as a reminder of both the interconnected lineage of those styles and Minajâs boundless versatility.
Tech Sounds & Millbeatz, âDoh Runâ
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As the opening track on Millbeatzâs Jouvert Jam Riddim compilation, âDoh Runâ needed to feel massive. With his booming âDoh run!â chants juxtaposed against ever-so-slightly hollow percussion, Tech Sounds delivers a worthy kick-off to the Jâouvert tape. The funky riddim isnât just infectious, it almost demands listeners to get up and wine their waists.
Fay-Ann Lyons, âMiss B-tchâ
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Thereâs already a litany of songs reclaiming the word âb-tch,â and Fay-Ann Lyons is seeking to add to that legacy with âMiss B-tch.â For her contribution to DJ Avalancheâs âDo Youâ riddim, Lyons coasts over the electro-soca beat with a tone that can only be described as âgangsta.â Thereâs a certain bite and assertiveness in her tone that balances out the inherent humor in the drawn-out âThis biiiiiitchâ chant that punctuates the chorus. While, lyrically, she doesnât offer any new spins on the word âb-tch,â Lyonsâ conviction is far more than enough.
Nailah Blackman & Pumpa, âBorn to Flyâ
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Just as the Jouvert Jam Riddim compilation captured the rambunctious celebratory energy of Jâouvert festivities, so does âBorn to Flyâ for the Carnival season in general. Blackmanâs piercing, saccharin upper harmony pairs well with Pumpaâs gruff tone as the two recount the feeling of freedom and catharsis that characterize partying during Carnival. The duality of their respective voices â a siren-esque timbre and a rousing roar of rasp â cover the wide expanse of Carnival energies. As they croon in the song and display through their collaboration, the true essence of the season is coming together as one to celebrate.
Masicka & Spice, âWOWâ
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At the top of last December, Masicka dropped off his Generation of Kings album, which featured collaborations with a wide range of artists, including the likes of Dexta Daps, Fridayy and Chronic Law. On âWOW,â Masicka teams up with dancehall queen Spice for a no-holds-barred ode to tantalizing sexual chemistry. In a typical fashion, Spice is just as brash and forward as Masicka with her demands for sexual gratification, and the pairâs rhythmic flows recall dancehallâs influence on hip-hop.
Popcaan, âLife Is Realâ
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On Christmas (Dec. 25, 2023), Popcaan gifted fans a surprise mixtape titled Best Mood. The projectâs closing track, âLife Is Real,â is both an easy standout and a clear continuation of the crossover starâs penchant for somber evaluations of life, with all of the violence and riches that complicate it. âPeople you show your love and give your things often/ Same one will pop your neck just like a guitar string,â he warns, before proclaiming that no one can ever take his life from him â either literally or metaphorically. Thereâs a current of hope that courses from the songâs opening notes to those closing piano keys, but itâs Popcaanâs interpolations of family lessons and conversation that truly show just how much he has matured and grown over the past decade.

December may traditionally signal the end of the calendar year, but for Masicka, the twelfth month of the year houses plenty of new beginnings. The dancehall superstar opened the month with the release of Generation of Kings last Friday (Dec. 1), his sophomore studio album and first full-length release since signing to Def Jam in February. The 17-song set comes on the heels of his summer hit âTyrant,â which sat alongside Byron Messiaâs âTalibansâ and Chronic Law & Ireland Bossâ âV6â among this summerâs defining crossover dancehall hits.
Upon Masickaâs signing to Def Jam, CEO Tunji Balogun said, via a press release, âDef Jam has always been the home for great artists across the wide spectrum of Black music, and Masicka is very much emblematic of that vision.â That may seem like a catch-all corporate platitude, but Masicka truly does embody the ever-evolving spectrum of Black music. Hailing from Portmore, Jamaica, Masicka grew up listening to not just dancehall and reggae, but also rap music. As Hip-Hop 50 has acknowledged, the relationship between dancehall and hip-hop is as storied as it is symbiotic, and Masicka continues that legacy with a stage name partially derived from his favorite blockbuster 50 Cent album.
Across Generation of Kings, Masicka infuses his trap dancehall foundation with flourishes of R&B (âWetâ) and Afrobeats (âFight For Usâ), calling on a globe-spanning collection of collaborators to bring his vision of collective royalty to life. Equally introspective and biting, Masickaâs lyrics â which explore everything from settling beef to reflections on his childhood â perfectly complement his penchant for lush melodic lines and reverb-drenched harmonies. With such a strong ear, itâs no surprise that, despite dancehallâs current Stateside commercial stagnancy, Masicka has been able to truly break through.
438, his debut album which also won dancehall album of the year at the 2023 Caribbean Music Awards, has earned over 50,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. since its Dec. 3, 2021 release, according to Luminate, and his overall catalog has collected over 258.8 million on-demand streams. Upon release, Generation of Kings looks poised to explode those numbers. In just over a week, the album has hit No. 1 on Apple Music in 16 countries, scored the eighth biggest album debut on Spotify U.K. for the period Dec. 1-3 and reached No. 11 on U.S. Apple Music. Furthermore, with Generation of Kings, Masicka became the first artist in history to simultaneously occupy the top 17 on Apple Music in Jamaica â and he even surpassed Bob Marley & the Wailersâ unmoveable Legend compilation for the No. 1 spot on both U.S. iTunesâ and Apple Musicâs reggae albums charts.
Still basking in the glow of the immediate success of Generation of Kings, Masicka stopped by the Billboard offices to chat about his future as a Def Jam recording artist, his formative musical influences and 50 Centâs influence in Jamaica.
Letâs talk about Generation of Kings. Where was your head while making this album? What were you drawing inspiration from?Â
After the first album [438], mi feel like mi cement myself inna di dancehall space with a great body at work. So, with Generation of Kings, mi just feel like itâs my time. The whole era, the whole music, the whole feel, just how everythingâs going. Â
How did you go about assembling the tracklist?Â
I think that was the hardest part, being we had quite a number of great tracks on the album. So, you kind of get them fi tell a storyline. Mi went back in the studio a couple of times, link up with di team, we decipher a likkle bit and then we think what we choose was more of the songs that were what people can relate to. Theyâre like the motivational songs you can get a positive vibration from. Â
So, what exactly was the storyline you envisioned for the record?Â
Triumph. Just transitioning and taking a greater step towards fulfilling your dreams. This album was basically telling the people dem that Iâm ready.Â
You have some fire collaborations on the album â Popcaan, Spice and Fridayy, to name a few â tell me about bringing those artists into your vision.Â
The most anticipated collab was the Chronic Law [track], heâs a lyricist from Jamaican and people always wan us fi do a song together. That song also features Lila IkĂ© too â bad upcoming female artist. Mi think di people dem really resonate with that collab. The song with Fridayy, itâs different, the one with Fave too. But I think all of the collabs went exceptionally well.Â
Did you reach out to Fridayy or did he reach out to you?Â
Tunji [Balogun] set that up! When I heard di track, I was like, âYo, this dope,â and Fridayy connected right as his album dropped â mi love di album, itâs crazy.Â
Speaking of Tunji, you signed to Def Jam earlier this year, so congratulations! Why Def Jam? What drew you to them in particular?Â
The direction and empowerment for artists culture they have. Mi like how dem work. Mi like Tunji vision more than anything else. We spoke probably about a year and a half before [I] actually signed. Mi also like the humbleness. Mi think we share the same work ethic and vision all in one. Anythingâs a risk, but mi think this a good risk.Â
Why did now feel like the time for you to sign to an international label?Â
I think, personally, mi cover a lot of ground throughout the Caribbean. I feel like Iâve done everything I needed to in the Caribbean. Iâve traveled the Caribbean like 6-7 times already, over and over again, and itâs just trying to get a greater reach. They see the talent, they see the creativity. Itâs just trying fi expand the content and mek di ting grow and just build it. Nuh sense fi have all this talent and you remain on the same level.Â
There are a lot of hip-hop influences on Generations of Kings and the genre has a rich relationship with dancehall. Are there any rappers youâd like to get on a remix of one of these tracks?Â
Probably Lil Baby. Lil Baby dope. Jay-Z. 50 Cent.Â
Compare your headspace from the release of 438 to the release of Generation of Kings.Â
Mi think mi more mature. Mi think mi have more control in terms of how mi want di music fi sound. The ting before it was just di tip of di iceberg. Mi had just started to venture out into creating albums and creating projects. Mi think 438 was dope, just like Generation of Kings. But mentally, mi more mature, more settled, and the music a likkle bit more polished and direct.Â
What song on Generation of Kings took the longest to finish?Â
Mi think âLimelight.â Mi record âLimelightâ and then leave it for like a month and then mi other verse come. Most of the time mi do something like that. Mi a just go inna di studio and spit something out. With âLimelight,â di riddim is different so mi actually do the chorus and then the verses.Â
Why did you decide to make âLimelightâ a single?Â
Mi think di vibe â it was a likkle bit after summer, so you know everybody needs to be pumped. Mi think the vibe and the energy and the whole feeling of the song just felt victorious. Mi just feel like we had âTyrant,â so mi haffi come with again with something sick. After the âTyrantâ success, mi just say, âAlright then, let mi listen through everything. What does it feel like?â âLimelightâ was the next thing. Itâs showing that itâs our space and weâre here.
Obviously, weâre in the Social Media Age â how has that been an effective tool for you as you continue to navigate your career?Â
Social media is the Golden Age, man. It mek it a lot easier and mek people from all over di world see your music. It helps a lot. It help to promote, it help to grow the fan base. Social media is one of the key things right now for musicians. They can just pick up the phone and see somebody in Guatemala and somebody one million miles away. We have a better advantage now than the generation of artists before us, so we just haffi make use of that.Â
What else do you have on the horizon to promote Generation of Kings?Â
Mi a shoot alla di music videos! Nuff video, nuff promo, mi already started working on a deluxe. Mi have some songs recorded. Mi think I have some sick collabs on it, itâll be just as crazy as the album.Â
What do you listen for in new beats and riddims?Â
The thing is, you know, the beat donât matter. Itâs the once mi get the beat and mi feel a vibe, mi will record. The beat is a surface problem. For me to get a beat and really write to it, mi like pianos, beats with guitar, percussion. Mi like live songs that have a soulful feeling to it.Â
How do you approach songwriting? Are you more of a freestyler?Â
Normally, mi go inna di studio, play di beat for like 2-3 hours, and vibe it, vibe it, vibe it, vibe it, vibe it. Mi cyan write just sitting down. Mi write if mi haffi write, but mi like freestyle. Mi think the music better when mi freestyle. So mi would freestyle it and then go back inside, listen, see where we can make some more arrangements and stuff like that. Thatâs how mi create music. Mi have a studio at home, so mi inna di studio everyday majority of the time. Â
Sometimes itâs just the melody alone mi have, I just go inna di studio and mumble it. And throughout the day, when Iâm playing a game or something, I just think about it subconsciously, and I finish it like that. Mi nuh have no songbook. Iâve never had a songbook.Â
Sonya Stephens recently praised you as an amazing songwriter, with a lot of that you can teach older generations of dance artists. I also spoke with Beenie Man few months ago about sharing knowledge across generations of dancehall. What do you think you and your peers can learn from your dancehall elders and vice versa?Â
Mi think we can definitely study the longevity of the artists dem before. All of them have amazing careers and dem stood the test of time, like Beenie Man and Bounty Killer. Mi think the difference is modern dancehall just gets five minutes of fame. Mi think them nuh love di craft. I think itâs more about getting out there than mastering the craft.Â
Bounty and Beenie Man start from when they was small, so dem actually really love di music, so they never had any other options. Now we have too much choices. Thereâs no appreciation for the music, so everybody feel like dem can just be a part of the music and just call themselves anything.Â
Definitely, mi think they can learn to take more risks, cause mi think we take a lotta risks, the younger generation. They could take more risks and pave more way for di yutes because dem have the opportunity and dem could do way more.
There were a number of global dancehall crossover hits this year, âTyrantâ among them. How do you think that momentum can be maintained?Â
We just have to realize itâs a bigger market out there. People with different ears, you know, so we just haffi try stuff. We just haffi try to be appealing, try the different music â but at the end of the day, keep originality and keep authenticity. We just haffi try and merge it with the Afrobeats â theyâre on that level now. Dancehall was on that level, and it can be on that level again. It will, Imma speak it into being. I just think we need fi come together as people and push di music.Â
Do you feel that thereâs any division thatâs preventing that from happening?Â
Yeah, definitely. Dancehall is known for segregation, and that hinders the growth of the music a lot. Mi think once you have that togetherness and that unity⊠mi think thatâs happening now. Yuh see di yutes dem now? I think the mindset is different, and mi think the yutes just work and take more risks. I venture to say that is why you have so many labels looking to the Jamaican market right now â because mi think thereâs a change coming.Â
And I think that risk-taking, especially in terms of blending genres, is whatâs really helping modern dancehall right now. Where do you think your courage to try new sounds comes from? Who were your main musical influences?Â
Mi love dancehall, but mi started off listening to rap. So, 50 Cent, Eminem, alla dem tings. Get Rich Or Die Tryinâ, Massacre. Mi love music. Mi love dancehall, Iâm a dancehall artist, but mi love music. Adele a one of my favorite artists of all time, mi listen to Lukas Graham, mi listen to so many different kinds of artists, so mi think with experimenting, it comes from feeling comfortable and mastering the craft and practicing every day. So, if mi get a beat, mi just look at miself like an instrument instead of just a dancehall artist. If I get a beat a need to sing in Spanish, then mi need fi guh learn Spanish! [Laughs.]Â
We only have one life, so why not experiment and why cage yourself into a box? Grow and try different stuff! Mi just think di music can be so big and diverse, you know?Â
You had a show in New York recently for your birthday, how was that?Â
Crazy, crazy. It was my birthday celebration. Di people dem love me out there. They love me in New York, so I always bring the energy. It was a crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy vibe. Â
Do you have any plans to tour soon?Â
I have a couple of shows, one in Miami. I have a show in Jamaica soon. And then we start off next year fresh. Right now, mi just a focus on GOK, and getting out there and pushing it.Â
So, I take it youâll get some downtime with the family for the holidays.Â
Yeah, man, just spending some time. Family is big to me, so mi love fi get a likkle time fi spend with my family. I gotta take a break man. After next week, Def Jam cyan get to me! [Laughs.] Just kidding!Â
Looking out towards the next five years, what are some benchmarks that you want to hit?Â
In five yearsâ time, I really love fi become a fully established artist in the U.S. A fully established dancehall artist selling hundreds of thousands of records, start performing in stadiums, and sign some artists. Â
When it comes to signing artists, what you be looking and listening for?Â
Typically the same thing what mi have inna miself. Versatility, the love for di music first. You can have the talent, but if you donât love it nah guh fully work. So them haffi have di love and di drive for it first. Â
Are there any notes you think the Jamaican recording industry can take from the American and African ones as you continue to work with international labels?Â
The professionalism. 100% the professionalism and the business behind the music. Mi think that is why the African industry is advancing now and booming like that. Mi think thatâs what we lack, but weâre getting back there, right? Once we get back to that disciplinary level within di yutes and within di music, then we will have investors interested in working with dancehall artists cause youâre committed to your words and your work. Â
Before we go, I heard thereâs a dope story behind your name.Â
You know, actually, it was 50 Centâs album, The Massacre. Back in high school time, my auntie bought me the album. Initially mi never wan become an artist from di time mi was young, young, young. Mi coulda write songs mi nuh wan turn that.
What did you want to be?
A lawyer, mi was young! I still started my music career young, like 17, 18. But mi get the CD and I kept playing it. My friends dem used to call me Sicka, and then mi just decide say, Yo, Masicka, this is it.Â
50 Cent influence inna Jamaica is massive. You have the G-Unit tank tops, everybody loves Young Buck, Lloyd Banks â I think G-Unit was one of the crew that everybody inna Jamaica was just crazy about. You have other groups thatâs mad talented, but the gangster thing, the aggressive thing just resonate with our culture.Â
Bob Marleyâs legendary life and career will be captured in the forthcoming film Bob Marley: One Love, and in a new clip shared on Monday (Dec. 4), the late reggae starâs son, Ziggy Marley, gives actor Kingsley Ben-Adir the stamp of approval for his portrayal of his father. âIn the audition, I saw Kingsley, who plays […]

As the penultimate month of the year comes to a close, itâs time to start reflecting on the past year in music and culture. This month, Billboard unveiled the 2023 Year-End charts across genres, including five rankings celebrating the year in reggae. Greatest hits sets from Bob Marley, Shaggy and Sean Paul ranked as the first, second and third biggest reggae albums of the year, respectively, while 2023 breakout star Byron Messia made an appearance in the top 10 with his No Love album (No. 8). Messia also made an appearance on the 2023 Year-End Billboard U.S. Afrobeats Songs chart thanks to his Burna Boy-assisted âTalibans IIâ (No. 26).
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Although our general focus has shifted to previewing the new year and reflecting on the current one, 2023 is far from over. To close out the year, Messia, Teejay, Shenseea, Jada Kingdom, Ding Dong and Nadg will perform at Hot 97âs Winter Jam on Dec. 30. Thereâs still one month to go before that concert, so letâs take some time to sort through the best November releases across reggae, dancehall, soca and their cousin genres and scenes.
Naturally, Billboardâs monthly Reggae/Dancehall Fresh Picks column will not cover every last track, but our Spotify playlist â which is linked below â will expand on the 10 highlighted songs. So, without any further ado:
Freshest Find: Duane Stephenson, âGolden Nights (in December)â
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On the day after Thanksgiving, VP records dropped a holiday covers album titled Reggae Christmas Classics. Among the selections â which include a cover of âThis Christmasâ bv Christopher Martin and a Thriller U rendition of âFeliz Navidadâ â is Duane Stephensonâs original track âGolden Nights (In December).â Built around a jazzy intro that launches into a blissful rocksteady groove, Stephensonâs honeyed voice croons about the irreplaceability of his lover on the coldest December nights. âIf youâre not here with me in December/ There are no golden nights to remember/ If youâre not here with me in December/ Such a lonely, itâs a lonely time of year,â he coos.
Farmer Nappy, âHow ah Livinâ
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Relentless optimism and hope in the face of a world that seems hellbent on snuffing the light out of nearly every part of life is not just welcome, itâs vital. Thatâs part of why soca continues to resonate after so many decades, and itâs also the driving force behind Farmer Nappyâs âHow ah Livin.â With joyous percussion sourcing accents from the ebullient background horns, âHow ah Livinâ is a purposeful reclamation of joy. âHow ah livinâ?/ Better than them!/ How I lookinâ?/ Better than them!â Nappy sing-chants.
Chronic Law & Ireland Boss, âStill Darkâ
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Alongside âTalibansâ and âDrift,â Ireland Boss and Malie Donnâs âV6â was another summer dancehall hit that dominated the year. After letting that track enjoy months of success, Ireland Boss has unveiled the latest take on his V6 riddim with some help from Chronic Law. âWe nah love talk, yeah we popular fi dark/ Them ya gun ah go fi blood like Dracula mi dawg/ When we ah go ah school, have mi ratchet and mi dark/ Know mi and mi matic affi charge,â Chronic spits over the slinky, laid-back instrumental, opting for an approach that brings the riddim closer to the gun chune lane than the sexually charged braggadocio of the original.
Gbmnutron & Jus Jay King, âWhen Lastâ
Letâs face it: life has been different since the pandemic no matter how hard a âreturn to normalâ is pushed. With âWhen Last,â Gbmnutron and Jus Jay King hold space for the feeling of longing for the fetes and parties of years past, infusing both the instrumental and lead vocal with an unmistakable dash of wistful nostalgia. âWhen last you been to a party?/ Plenty women looking so nice, we must be in paradise/ When last you had a time to remember?/ Itâs only bumper to fender, and the drinks cyah done. big up di bartender,â he sings.
Protoje & Zion I Kings, âJah Deliver Meâ
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A delectable slice of more traditional reggae stylings, âJah Deliver Meâ is housed on In Search of Zion a remix album based by Zion I Kings based on Protojeâs 2020 release In Search of Lost Time. In the verses, the two-time Grammy nominee employs a hip-hop-influenced cadence, while the chorus finds him opting for a more legato, melodic approach in his singing. A solemn, introspective track, âJah Deliver Meâ is the perfect soundtrack for the darker moments of the winter months; âI hold my order, give my praises/ Oh, Jah, deliver me through these days/ Sometimes really hard to go and face this/ Oh, this life can truly be amazing,â he sings over hopeful brass.
DSL, âIâm Highâ
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A dancehall and reggae artist hailing from Ghana, DSL balances atmospheric guitar-tinged arrangements with a languid vocal delivery to embody the greened-out energy of the aptly titled âIâm High.â âWho are these people doing much good to we/ Why do you want to spoil my melody/ So what do you want from me/ The herb is my remedy,â he explains. Itâs a simple song, but DSL creates an incredibly immersive sonic space through the attention he pays to the relationship between his rasp-accented vocal and the saccharine female voice in the background.
Darryl Gervais & Fryktion, âOver & Over (Cyah Stop It)â
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On this gospel-indebted selection from Fryktionâs The Rub-a-Dub Project EP, Darryl Gervais sings praises to the Most High over an instrumental pulls equally from modern reggae and soca. âIt ainât nothing that you can do to stop my blessings come through/ Yuh cyah stop it, no, yuh cyah block it,â Gervais proclaims. He delivers his lyrics with the gravity of a person who is unshaken in their face, completely wrapped in their trust in the Lord. Between a catchy melody and that irresistible hook, âOver & Overâ achieves the perfect balance of being both a universal anthem of praise and a personal moment of thanks.
Ding Dong, âRebelâ
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Dance is, of course, one of the key cornerstones on dancehall, so itâs no surprise that Ding Dongâs new single celebrates Christina Nelson, also known as Dancing Rebel, one of the most popular Jamaican dancers and choreographers in the world. Already complete with a dance combination courtesy of Nelson, âRebelâ rests on Ding Dongâs commanding voice and engaging ad-libs to morph into what could very well be the next viral dance track from the dancehall scene.
Lyrikal, XplicitMevon & N.M.G. Music, âFetinâ Mayorâ
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XplicitMevon and N.M.G. Musicâs resurgence riddim is one of the best riddims of the year, and everyone from Ricardo Drue to Preedy delivered electrifying takes on the accompanying Resurgence Riddim EP. Lyrikalâs version, however, reigns supreme: His magnetic voice booms across the track as proclaims himself mayor of âthe nation/ the fetinâ congregation/ the party population.â He cheekily expresses his selflessness in making sure that everyone, not just himself, is having the time of their lives at whatever function theyâre at. While the rest of the world is slowing down as winter takes over, Lyrikal is square in the middle of the dancefloor, beckoning us to join.
Viking Ding Dong, âHarderâ
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In addition to the Resurgence Riddim EP, November also gifted us the Saying Something Riddim EP. With âHarder,â Viking Ding Dong delivers an anthem of resilience and gratitude. âLife hard but we harder!/ Life hard, but we harder!/ But we haffi give thanks to di Father,â he declares over the thumping percussion and cheerful guitar strums. Obviously weâre in a season of thanks, and Viking Ding Dong doesnât take that lightly as he skates across the track with sanctimonious reverence.
Bonus Pick: Samory I feat. Lila IkĂ©, âOutsideâ
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Over thumping, militant drums and a thumping bassline, Samory I and Lila IkĂ© flex their vocal chemistry across âOutside,â an ode humility, perseverance, and faith. Lilaâs dulcet timbre rings throughout her voice, providing a gorgeous contrast to Samory Iâs soulful tone. When those rock-tinged guitars kick in, however, âOutsideâ evolves into something different: a genre-smattering love letter to the different sounds styles of the Black diaspora that find a common thread in their musical displays of Black tenacity. âJah Jah we call upon your name/ Pray you lantern all our days/ When it gets dark, we know youâll always make a way,â Lila croons. Existing while Black is a task that demands a certain level indefatigability, and the community that can be sourced through that is the backbone of âOutside.â

Between Teejay and Bryon Messiaâs ongoing beef, a brand new From the Block live performance video from Shenseea, and the passing of dancehall star Gully Bop, itâs been a packed month for the West Indian music scene â and most of these things only happened within the past week!
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To help sort through all the new Caribbean music released in October, Billboardâs monthly Reggae/Dancehall Fresh Picks columns returns with a host of new selections for your listening and wining pleasure. Of course, as is the case across genres in todayâs age, thereâs an overwhelming amount of new music released every day, let alone every month. Naturally, this column will not cover every last track, but our Spotify playlist â which is linked below â will expand on the 10 highlighted songs.
Without any further ado, here are 10 tracks across reggae, dancehall and their cousin genres that are heating up both our personal playlists and late-night functions from Kingston to Queens:
Freshest Find: Teejay, âUnwanted Childâ
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Although itâs still unclear what exactly sparked the beef between Teejay and Byron Messia, the new-school dancehall stars are continuing to fire off diss tracks. This week, Teejay sent some more direct hits to the âTalibansâ singer with the blistering âUnwanted Child,â a scathing diss track that alleges that Byron is a literal unwanted child (âAct like a we mek him madda disown himâ) who doesnât live the life he raps and sings about in his music. The dark, grimy beat is a smart complement to Teejayâs sinister delivery; his voice drips with equal parts disdain and haughtiness, two of the most important feelings for a proper diss track.
Khalia feat. Shaggy, âDouble Troubleâ
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On this selection from Stay True, Khaliaâs debut project, the Westmoreland singer joins forces with Shaggy for a conversational duet that traces the story of two partners with undeniable sexual chemistry who simply cannot work in a proper relationship. She employs a cadence reminiscent of contemporary R&B as she recounts this roller coaster of a relationship over the slow-burning dancehall-inflected beat. âAnuh any any man can win da spot ya inna my heart/ Keep it premium on a level affi inn a path/ You affi show me all your cards before let dung my guard/ And den I work it and reverse it so Iâm keeping him sharp,â she croons.
Valiant, âBeer & Saltâ
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When you reach the top of of the food chain, there are always going to be those people waiting for you to slip up â even Valiant canât escape that phenomenon. After a less-than-impressive performance at Miami Carnival and a subsequent social media backlash, Valiant uses âBeer & Saltâ as way to respond to his detractors and reflect on his tumultuous past few months. âAnd if a badness, just talk, make me load me strap/ I see them lurking on my IG/ I know your profile private/ All of this was a dream but you canât ketch the flows Iâm finding,â he spits over the slinky DJ Mac-produced beat.
Mavado, âNo Sorryâ
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Taking a similar approach to Valiant, Mavado uses âNo Sorryâ to champion his lack of regrets for the way he has chosen to live his life. Backed by a skittering trap dancehall beat, Mavado sings, âA ghetto youth pon the top of the mountain ah di greatest story,â once again reaffirming that his intentions are genuine and pure, even if his actions may garner mixed reactions from some. Heâs unapologetic in who he is and where he comes from as he reflects on his life and success across the self-affirming track. After all, âDonât make excuses, we make sacrifice,â he sings on âNo Sorry.â
Chronic Law, âWar Cycleâ
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Moving away from the self-motivating introspection of Valiantâs and Mavadoâs new tracks, Chronic Law opts for despondent piano to anchor his stab at trap dancehall â a solemn reflection on the emptiness he sometimes feels in spite of his success, likening the dynamic to the ongoing violence that plagues his home country. âWhat a cycle/ The likkle scheme warm than Grove Street turf/ Me a drink and pretend mi donât feel hurt/ Cyaa describe mi pain with no real words,â he croons.
Mystic Marley, Nailah Blackman & Walshy Fire, âJumpâ
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This new track from the granddaughters of Bob Marley and Lord Shorty, respectively â with production contributions from Walshy Fire of Major Lazer â combines bits of dancehall, reggae and soca for one of the most undeniable party records of the year. With bubbly brass stitching together elements of Marleyâs âRainbow Countryâ (1971) and Shortyâs âEndless Vibrationâ (1974), Mystic and Nailah balance the familiarity of old-school reggae guitars and infectious soca percussion as they implore their listeners to, well, âjump!â
Intence, âLessonâ
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Rising Jamaican dancehall artist Intence delivers a heartfelt reflection on the most pertinent lessons life has taught him. Staunchly within the modern trap-inflected dancehall arena, Intence offers up several nimble flows as he recounts various life-altering experiences that remind him of both his mortality and his divine protection. âJust another ghetto youth and if you ask me I would have tell you from the start the amount a times them double cross me/ Me a real youth me donât need to tell you that so let them talk cause me donât care as long as God see,â he spits in an impressive rapid-fire delivery.
Zagga, âBelieve & Prayâ
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Released near the top of last month (Oct. 13) as the penultimate song on his Energy Never Lie album, âBelieve & Prayâ finds Zagga both talking with God and encouraging his listeners to have faith and trust in the power of prayer. âPrayer move mountain, prayer with faith, dawg/ Jah Jah eva on time, never yet late, dawg/ Whula we a sin but mi no ready fi graveyard/ Conscious, but the world mek mi behave bad,â he sings over the solemn, uplifting beat, which is part of a new riddim produced by Shane Creative.
Talia Goddess, âForever Youngâ
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Guyanese-British multi-hyphenate Tayahna Walcott, aka Talia Goddess, perfectly captures the buzzing sensuality of hot summer nights during the prime of your youth with this smooth dancehall and R&B-inflected banger. In the hook for âForever Young,â which is built around a thumping dancehall riddim, she reaches for high-pitched, Amaarae-esque tone as she sings, âTell me is you really mine my lover?/ Cah you make me feel alive, so true/ I can take you to the light my darling/ I just wanna live my life with you.â Both the track and its globe-trotting music video are testaments to the rich global legacy of West Indian music and culture.
Roze Don, Countree Hype & Konshens, âUnch It Remixâ
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Some of the best dancehall tracks are the instructive ones; theyâre inherently interactive and personable. For the official remix of their function-rocking âUnch It,â Roze Don and Countree Hype recruit dancehall star Konshens to add his own spice to the steady, percussive beat. Their tones are calm, just shy of nonchalant, but glimpses of staccato flows and the sneaky sensuality of a whisper add dynamics that elevate the song nicely. From the booming bass to irresistibly danceable melody, the âUnch Itâ remix is nice update of the August orignal for the autumn season.
For good measure, here are two bonus Fresh Picks that are only available to stream via YouTube.