Angola Records and Entertainment – Rasta Caliente Riddim

Angola Records and Entertainment Rasta Caliente Riddim       Jah Bouks Feat. Fantan Mojah – Have It Prestige – Beautiful Girl Anthony B – Nah Left Lymie Murray – Let Me Know Lutan Fyah – Loyal Queen Jholi – Rude Girl Turbulence – Don’t Worry About A Thing King Tappa – Time Up Ginjah – Stand Side By Side Short Ghad – Gold Medal Munga Honorable – I Don’t Mind Tmo Tearz – Spectacular

Interview: Ammoye on Consciousness, Rebirth & Being a ‘Soul Rebel’

As a kid growing up in the provincial little village of Halse Hall, in the Parish of Clarendon, Jamaica, the now-force-of-nature songstress Ammoye (Shernette Amoy Evans) was not even allowed to listen to reggae music, which her grandmother, who was raising her, considered vulgar. But by the age of six she was singing in the church choir, which imbued her with a strong sense of music as a great communicator of spirituality. Her considerable will eventually won out, and she ultimately threw herself into the local dancehall scene. When her grandmother passed, she joined her mother in Toronto, where she discovered hip-hop, soul, house music, R&B… and the musical foundation was laid for what is now her genuinely inimitable style.… Continue reading Interview: Ammoye on Consciousness, Rebirth & Being a ‘Soul Rebel’

Audio: Ray Isaacs ft R Embassida – Raggamuffin [House of Riddim]

#RayIsaacs #REmbassida #Raggamuffin #HouseOfRiddim | Ray Isaacs ft R Embassida – Raggamuffin [House of Riddim] Bass – Gerald Schaffhauser Guitars – Herb Pirker Keyboards – Parvez Syed Drums, Percussion – Sam Gilly http://www.houseofriddim.com https://www.facebook.com/Houseofriddim http://www.youtube.com/houseofriddimband https://www.instagram.com/houseofriddim

The Women Essential To Reggae And Dancehall

In honor of Women’s History Month, GRAMMY.com highlights some of the foundational women who have shaped the sounds of reggae and dancehall as well as spotlights one artist who is taking one of the genres into the future When many people think of reggae, one name immediately comes to mind: Bob Marley. The legend is just one of many prominent men — including the late Bunny Wailer and Toots Hibbert — whose voice and production work get major credit for shaping the popular Jamaican genre as well as other sounds of the Caribbean. The reality is, women have built much of Jamaica’s musical scene. From the freedom sounds of ska to reggae’s conscious lyrics and grooving downbeat — which originated… Continue reading The Women Essential To Reggae And Dancehall

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