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Flourgon’s Lawyer Speaks On Steely & Clevie’s Reggaeton Lawsuit

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Stephen Drummond, the Jamaican-born attorney who represented veteran Dancehall artist Flourgon in his US$300 million copyright infringement case against Miley Cyrus, says Steely & Clevie Productions must put up a “tough fight” in its lawsuit against a slew of Reggaeton artists for infringing on the label’s Fish Market riddim.

The Hanover native, who was speaking on Radio Jamaica’s Beyond The Headlines with Dionne Jackson Miller, said the Jamaican label’s case, while very “challenging,” is “not insurmountable.”

“I took the opportunity to pull the complaints… and I would say these cases are challenging, but it doesn’t mean one should be discouraged by the fact that they are challenging.  And my overall opinion of just this area of law – and not just specific to this case – is you have to put up a tough fight.  Even though the odds may seem against you from time to time, don’t be discouraged by it.  Put up a tough fight and then be prepared to take it all the way,” Drummond advised.

Steely & Clevie. Left: Cleveland Constantine Browne (Clevie), right: Wycliffe Johnson (Steely), who died in 2009 in New York at age 47.

“It is a challenging case; that is my assessment of it.  It is challenging but not necessarily insurmountable,” he added.

Steely & Clevie had initially filed three separate lawsuits against Panamanian artist and producer El Chombo, Puerto Rican artists Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee, and dozens of other Reggaeton artists, producers, and record companies.

On July 15, 2022, the three lawsuits were consolidated into a single action.

It is alleged that 56 Reggaeton songs — including Despacito, Rompe,DuraGasolinaand Shaky Shaky — ripped off elements from the Fish Market Riddim.

In pointing out some of the possible defenses to the lawsuit, Drummond said that the statute of limitations could be the Achilles heel of the case, which the label would have to overcome.  

Fish Market is said to have been created in 1989.  That’s quite a long time ago. It is alleged that someone took it.  The first question you have to ask, is ‘when did the person take it and when did you come to find out that someone took it?  And why didn’t you act before?  So you have a statute of limitations, in just about any area of law.  Copyright law is no different in that regard,” he argued.

“But that’s a long time ago for someone not to have taken action and that part of it presents some challenges.  There could be a myriad of reasons as to why you didn’t, but I am fairly certain that that argument will be advanced.  That even if it’s alleged that someone took it, why did you sleep on your rights so long?  And that question is always asked in law. That why you have to act and act early and the first thing I would recommend is get your work copyrighted.  Because once you do it, chances are someone won’t just go out and just take it like that,” he emphasized.

Added Drummond: “The other point I want to make is when was it copyrighted?  When did they first get their work copyrighted.  Because even if they were to prevail, that component of it can affect the damages, the value of how much money you are entitled to.”

Steely & Clevie first registered its US copyright for the Fish Market riddim in June 2020 as a “sound recording and music,” according to public records obtained by DancehallMag.

Drummond said another issue likely to be raised is whether or not the production duo had permitted anyone else to use the riddim, before the Reggaeton artists’ expropriation. 

“So just from reading the article and what’s alleged in the complaint., at some point the Fish Market riddim was given to Dem Bow.  And that was given, it said, ‘to Shabba Ranks with permission’.  Well, the question becomes ‘did another party that you gave permission to then give it to another party’?  And if that party that you gave permission to, gave it to another party, can you allege that it was taken from your original song or your original rhythm?  All of those things, they are not unique just to this case but it’s just part of things to be considered,” he said.

Shabba RanksDem Bow, produced by the late Bobby ‘Digital’ Dixon, had used the Fish Market beat from Jamaican vocalist Gregory Peck’s Poco Man Jam, one of the 1989 tracks on Steely & Clevie’s original riddim.

In their complaint, Steely & Clevie noted that “in 1990, subsequent to the release and success of Shabba Ranks’ Dem Bow, Denis Halliburton aka “Dennis the Menace” had replayed Dem Bow’s instrumental to record a Spanish language cover version of Dem Bow entitled Ellos Benia.

They claimed that another song titled Pounder by the duo Patrick Bernard aka “Bobo General” and Wayne Archer aka “Sleepy Wonder,” had a “B Side,” which featured an instrumental mix of Halliburton’s sound recording, and that “this instrumental has been sampled widely in Reggaeton and is commonly known and referred to as the Pounder riddim,” which “is substantially similar if not virtually identical to Fish Market.

Drummond continued: “So when I say challenging, those are the hurdles.  One of the good parts of the case is the argument of access… you have to establish that the other party had access to it.  The riddim is so worldwide known and it is so well-distributed that they won’t have a challenge demonstrating that people knew of it or that the people who have alleged to have infringed on their work, knew of it.”

Drummond, who is based in New York, was at the helm of the team that dragged pop singer Miley Cyrus to court in 2018 for plagiarizing the line “we run things, things no run we” from the deejay’s 1998 track We Run Things and embedded it in her 2013 single We Can’t Stop’ altering the lyrics to “We run things, things don’t run we.” 

That case was settled in January 2020 to the “mutual satisfaction of all parties.”

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Steely & Clevie Facing An “Uphill Battle,” But Have Been Strategic In ‘Dem Bow’ Lawsuit, Say US Attorneys

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Two US-based lawyers have offered their views on Steely & Clevie Productions’ copyright lawsuit against Panamanian artist and producer El Chombo, Puerto Rican artists Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee, and a slew of other Reggaeton artists, producers, and record companies.

Multi-platinum and Billboard-charting hits such as Despacito, Rompe,DuraGasolinaShaky Shaky, and Dame tu Cosita are among the 56 Reggaeton songs named in the lawsuit as having allegedly infringed on the Dancehall label’s 1989 riddim Fish Market (Poco Man Jam), better known as ‘Dem Bow.’

According to The Guardian, Gregor Pryor, a lawyer who specializes in media and entertainment, posited that Steely & Clevie “may be facing an uphill battle” if they cannot convince the court that “the defendant ever actually heard, or could reasonably be presumed to have heard, the plaintiffs’ song before creating the allegedly infringing song.”   

The attorney, who is not involved in the case, said that it is hard to prove that someone has had prior knowledge of a song, which means that the courts will have to consider a song’s popularity.

Nevertheless, he said that the use of language such as “foundational” and “iconic” in the Jamaicans’ lawsuit “to describe the instrumentals are early attempts to signpost its popularity and show that access would have been likely.”    

“Whether this point is successful or not will depend on the plaintiffs’ ability to demonstrate that the work was as popular as they have suggested, which may prove challenging,” he said.

Additionally, Pryor said that Steely & Clevie could also have to contend with the fact that the defendants have “a plethora of defences against copyright infringement at their disposal, which will make the plaintiffs’ argument more difficult to prove.”  

The lawsuit had initially comprised three separate cases, before they were consolidation into a single action in July 2022.

In April 2021, Steely & Clevie Productions’ made their first move when they filed a lawsuit against El Chombo and several other artists, producers, and record companies over their involvement in the release of Dame tu Cosita (which featured Jamaican artist Cutty Ranks) and the Dame Tu Cosita remix (which featured Pitbull and Karol G).

In October 2021, Steely & Clevie filed the second lawsuit against Luis Fonsi and several other artists, producers, and record companies over 10 of his songs, including Despacito (with Daddy Yankee) and the Despacito Remix (with Daddy Yankee and Justin Bieber).

In May 2022, they filed the third lawsuit against Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee and several other artists, producers, and record companies over his alleged use of the Fish Market in 44 songs.

In March last year, the attorneys for Fonsi had responded to the copyright infringement lawsuit, pleading that they “have not engaged in any type of infringement,” that “there is no actionable similarity between the works at issue,” and by and large that they “deny knowledge or information sufficient to respond” to the majority of the allegations.

New York copyright lawyer Paul Fakler told the Guardian that Steely & Clevie has been strategic with their request for a jury trial.

“One of the key things in copyright law is that ideas are not protected, but unique expressions of ideas are.   So a lot of times when you have these copyright cases go to juries, you can get wacky results,” he told The Guardian.

Fakler also explained that when judges and juries “are faced with the intricacies of musical theory, the verdict often becomes less about the music and more about the story behind it”.

As a case in point, he cited the 2015 Blurred Lines case, in which a jury found Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams guilty of infringing on the copyright of a 1977 Marvin Gaye song, as a watershed moment in pop copyright claims.

In that case, according to an Ethics Unwrapped commentary by the University of Texas at Austin, Marvin Gaye’s Estate had won a lawsuit against Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams for the hit song “Blurred Lines,” which had a similar feel to one of his songs.

The University noted that in 2013, Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams had co-produced the hit single Blurred Lines, which earned them more than $16 million in sales and streaming revenues, and which had also been viewed hundreds of millions of times on YouTube and Vevo, and parodied numerous times.

“Despite its popularity, the similarity of Blurred Lines to Marvin Gaye’s 1977 hit song Got to Give It Up sparked controversy. The family of artist Marvin Gaye was outraged; they believed Gaye’s work was stolen. Thicke filed a pre-emptive lawsuit to prevent the Gaye family from claiming any share of royalties. However, Thicke also stated in public interviews that he was influenced by Marvin Gaye and, specifically, Got to Give It Up when he co-composed “Blurred Lines” with Williams,” the article stated.

In March 2015, the jury ruled in favor of the Gaye estate, stating that while Williams and Thicke did not directly copy “Got to Give It Up,” there was enough of a similar “feel” to warrant copyright infringement. Gaye’s heirs were awarded $7.4 million in damages, the largest amount ever granted in a music copyright case.

In September last year, British pop singer Ed Sheeran was ordered to stand trial in the US over claims his hit song Thinking Out Loud plagiarised the beat of Marvin Gaye’s Let’s Get It On, a track whose beat was also sampled in a remix of Shaggy’s megahit song, Mr. Bombastic in 1996.

The allegations were that Sheeran and his co-writer Amy Wadge “copied and exploited, without authorisation or credit Lets Get it on, including but not limited to the melody, rhythms, harmonies, drums, bass line, backing chorus, tempo, syncopation and looping”.

According to a BBC report, a judge had denied Sheeran’s efforts to dismiss the case, ruling instead, that the similarities between his song and that of the late Motown singer/songwriter’s, must be decided by a jury. 

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Ziggy And Cedella Marley Join Fight To Keep Bob Marley Beach Open To The Public

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Ziggy Marley and his sister Cedella have joined the Jamaica Beach Birthright Environmental Movement’s (JABEM) bid to get the Government of Jamaica to make unconditional access to, and use of all Jamaica’s beaches, including the Bob Marley Beach in St Andrew, a Constitutional Right.

On Friday, Ziggy, who is the eldest son of Bob Marley, shared a poster for the petition titled Protect Beach Access for all Jamaicans & keep Bob Marley Beach Public, which calls for “the protection of public access to Jamaican beaches, including the declaration of general and unfettered rights to the entire beach and river ecosystems, to be constitutionally enshrined as pillars of the country’s ecological heritage”.

The petition notes that the JABEM is “alarmed by recent events at the Bob Marley Beach in Bull Bay, St. Thomas, a favourite spiritual retreat of the late Bob Marley, where the Jamaican public came under imminent threat of losing access to yet another community beach, along with the destruction of fisherfolk livelihood and land dispossession of prominent Rastafari family members”.

In making his support for the movement clear, in his discussion on Instagram, the Rebellion Rises singer said that he was particularly aggrieved as “they are also trying to intimidate, cheat and force locals who have been there since I was a baby from these areas.” 

“When I was younger, we freely had access to most of our local off the beaten path beaches and rivers including Bull bay and Cane river.  Now, there is a pressure campaign to privatize more of these local beaches and rivers and deprive Jamaicans and in particular Jamaicans who cannot afford to pay for a day of well needed stress relief and rejuvenation of these natural resources,” Ziggy declared in his caption.

“Jamaica is one of the only Islands in the Caribbean that does not guarantee its people GENERAL rights of access to its beaches. There is no GENERAL RIGHT to bathe, fish, or walk along the beach. We always enjoy and encourage visitors to our Island and ask them to join us in making sure that Jamaican people today can freely enjoy Jamaican waters like many of us did before,” he added.

Over on Cedella’s Instagram page, she shared the post and expressed similar sentiments.

“Jamaican people should be able to freely enjoy Jamaican waters like many of us did before,” she noted.

The petition, which is listed on change.org, notes, additionally, that the threat of beach access loss remains at a high level, and is systemic across the island including areas such as Bluefields and Little Bay in Westmoreland; Cousins Cove in Hanover; Cornwall beach St. James, Alligator Pond in St Elizabeth and Mammee Bay, Peach Beach and Little Dunn’s River beaches in St. Ann.

The document also lists north-eastern beaches such as Reggae Beach and Lagoon at Goldeneye in St. Mary and San San and Dragon Bay in Portland as other affected beaches.

“It is at a crisis level, and if not addressed soon, Jamaica’s beaches will eventually be fenced off from its citizens,” the petition stated.

 The JABEM’s petition, which is targeted to “Prime Minister Andrew Holness and the Jamaican Government”, Governor General Patrick Allen, and King Charles III, also notes that the people of Jamaica and its Diaspora “along with friends of Jamaica worldwide” are calling for the repeal and replacement of the Beach Control Act of 1956.

The group describes the Beach Control Act of 1956, as a “colonial-era law that is discriminating against the Jamaican people in restricting their unfettered access to the beaches and use of the sea and rivers, while promoting the ecological degradation of the Jamaican coastline.” 

“We recognise that in Jamaica, the public does not have general rights to access the beach and use the sea and rivers…The Act, that remained in place until Jamaica got independence in 1962 did not give the island nation’s 2.7 million people the legal right to beach access. 

“Jamaica needs a modern law that grants general and unfettered access rights to all beaches, rivers and sea around Jamaica, whilst guarding against ecological degradation…  This law is arguably racist and should have no place in the body of laws of Jamaica and must be repealed and replaced immediately,” the petition adds.

The JABEM also pointed to, as evidence of discrimination, the fact that even the Government of Jamaica’s Beach Access and Management Policy For Jamaica states that “in Jamaican common law, the public has no general rights of access to the foreshore except to pass over it for the purpose of navigation or fishing and “there is therefore no general right of bathing, or to walk along the foreshore, except where acquired by custom or prescription, nor is there any general right to fish except as provided in Section 3(3) of the Beach Control Act, 1956.”

The petition also warned that the rush by the ultra-rich to grab beachfront properties at the expense and exclusion of Jamaicans should not be tolerated.

“We recognise that as a result, controlling beaches has become the new gold rush in Jamaica; impacting the livelihood of fisherfolks and the environment.  Mass commercialization from beachfront tourism enterprises is also fueling the displacement of vulnerable Jamaicans from lands adjoining the sea. If this exclusion of the Jamaican people from the ecological heritage of the island is not stopped, it could possibly lead to social unrest and upheaval,” it said.

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Spice Returns To The Stage After 6 Month Absence Due To Health Scare

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Queen of Dancehall Spice is officially back in full effect after returning to the stage in the Cayman Islands last night (March 24, 2023). This was her first time in six months, after suffering several medical mishaps that resulted in four surgical procedures and weight loss.

Patrons who turned out at the Start Di Fun Music Festival couldn’t contain their excitement as they awaited the Send It Up singer on stage. Chants of “we want Spice!” echoed across the venue, and as she finally made her way up, the chants turned into screams as everyone had their phones out to capture the moment.

Clad in thigh-high blue boots, a body suit of the same colour, and a short wig of a lighter shade of blue, the 40-year-old delivered like she had never left. Romantic Mood was the starting number that set the tone for the high-energy set.

“This is my first time on stage for the past six months. I don’t know how you feeling, but I’m gonna show you how I’m feeling,” she declared.

By the time she touched So Me Like It, Spice benched the heels so that she could comfortably gallivant for her fans. Of course, there was the usual interactive segment where she invited eager supporters on stage to show off their best moves to her raunchy hits. Last night’s selection was Tik Tak, and the brave fans did their best to adhere to the beat leaving everyone entertained by their efforts.

Spice took to Instagram earlier today to express gratitude to her audience for a warm welcome back.

“Cayman I love you soooooo  much  . Thank you for making my first night back on stage after 6 months so very special. God is truly amazing

#TheQueenisBack #JesusisKing #Godablessme #SpiceMarley”

She was accompanied to the island by her Love and Hip Hop cast mate Shekinah Anderson, who offered only moral support.

The Tape Measure singer has also been receiving lots of love all day from her fans for the commendable performance.

“Not gonna lie @spiceofficial I waited to see if you could still bruk out same way like before I was a little concerned but regardless of what ppl say performance never fail ” one fan said to which Spice replied, “Thank you baby , I promised myself to never come back until I’m fully healed and ready , God is good , health is wealth ”

She also pinned a comment from a supporter who lauded the weight loss she has been self-conscious about.

“The weight loss looks so good on you u look amazing ” 

Spice replied, “I was so nervous that y’all would say I look weird  Cause I look so weird to myself with this weight but thank you ”

“Spice you’re truly one of the best in the industry! Last night was electrifying!!! ” another supporter said.

“Won’t He Do It. Cayman was def a Vibe and you absolutely Murdered that show sis. ” said one more fan.

Spice released her very own Gospel Reggae song on Friday titled Spice Marley, dedicated to her late father and a follow-up to God A Bless Me, which was released a week before.

She’s expected to release a third song this month titled, Queen of the Dancehall.

She also has other upcoming performances in New York, Jamaica, and Bermuda.

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Foxy Brown Releases Remastered Video For ‘Oh Yeah’ With Spragga Benz

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Fans of Rap/Dancehall fusions received an unexpected gift last week with Brooklyn rapper Foxy Brown releasing a remastered version of the music video for Oh Yeah, her hit 2001 song featuring her then-boyfriend Spragga Benz.

The song— which sampled vocals and the instrumental from Toots and the Maytals’ iconic 1968 song 54-46 That’s My Number — appeared on Foxy’s third album, Broken Silence.

She also recently shared a remastered version of the video for B.K. Anthem, a song released as a B-side to Oh Yeah, and which also appeared on the album.

Oh Yeah showcases the rapper’s signature blend of hardcore rhymes and gritty hooks, while Spragga Benz adds a Dancehall touch. The two were in a relationship and even got engaged in the early 2000s, before breaking up in 2003.

In Foxy’s verses, she proclaims her status as “the most critically acclaimed rap b#@ch in the game”, while flexing her wealth and power. Spragga Benz takes over at intervals with some strong and assertive vocalizing, bellowing out the distinctive patois chant that makes up the song’s chorus, all while displaying the artist’s proud Jamaican roots.

The song’s music video was directed by Canadian filmmaker Director X, who also helmed the production of several classic videos from the era, including Sean Paul’s Gimme The Light, Get Busy, and I’m Still In Love With You, Wayne Wonder’s No Letting Go, and Jay-Z and The Neptunes’ Excuse Me Miss, among others.

Shot in Jamaica, the Oh Yeah video starts with Foxy Brown rapping in a forest near the river, before it took her to a party with her group Fox 5 (which includes her older brother Gavin Marchand).

The visuals featured fashion from both genres, with Foxy and her group donning the once-popular baggy clothes and fitted caps with flashy jewellery. Meanwhile, Spragga Benz makes the Dancehall influences clear, from old-school Dancehall settings and fashion pieces. There was also a combination of Jamaican dances and those originating in Brown’s Brooklyn, New York environment.

Foxy Brown

Toward the end of the video, Cham appears for an interlude with Foxy and they perform a snippet of another collab from Broken Silence titled Tables Will Turn, before the track reverts to its original.

Oh Yeah failed to debut on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, but it did peak at No. 63 on the R&B/Hip Hop Singles Chart and No. 22 on the Hot Rap Songs chart.

The song also peaked at No. 27 on the UK Singles chart.

In November 2004, Foxy announced that she would follow up Broken Silence with a new album titled Black Roses, inspired by Dancehall legend Barrington Levy‘s song of the same name.

“My best friend Barrington Levy has a song called ‘Black Roses.’ He’s been traveling all over the world and never seen a black rose in no other garden. When he found his black rose, he knew that sh-t was special. Y’all ni–as can have all the female rappers in the world, but there’s only one black rose. I feel that’s me,” Foxy told MTV at the time.

However, the following year Foxy announced that she had experienced severe and sudden hearing loss in both ears, and that she had not heard another person’s voice in six months.

Black Roses, which reportedly featured production by The Neptunes, Kanye West, Timbaland, Trackmasters, and Dave Kelly, and guest appearances by Barrington Levy, Dido, Luther Vandross, Mos Def, Cham, Spragga Benz, Shyne, Big Daddy Kane, Rakim, KRS-One, Roxanne Shante, and Jay-Z, was never released.

After Foxy had her hearing restored through surgery, the street album Brooklyn’s Don Diva was ultimately released in 2008.

It featured Mavado, Demarco, Lady Saw, Morgan Heritage, and Spragga Benz.

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Bounty Killer Says Afrobeats In The Lead, While Dancehall Held Back By Unappealing, Silly Content

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Bounty Killer has attributed the perceived stagnancy in present-day Dancehall to what he described as the “fool-fool”, internationally unappealing topics, such as Obeah and lotto scamming (chopping), around which upcoming artists are centering their songs.

Speaking in an interview with I Never Knew TV, Bounty weighed on the inertia in the music, pointing out that much of the songs being released — while they are ‘full of lyrics’ — lack grooves and melodies and contain downright silly content, which music lovers in and outside of Jamaica are not interested in listening.

He said that unless this problem is remedied, Dancehall will remain in the perceived doldrums and not regain the acclaim it once held.

“It’s just the topics.  Dancehall artists don’t have any topics.   They are stupid.  They are singing some regional things; some corner argument.  They are not singing household argument where every household understand what this means.  Chappa argument, scamma pan corna; dat not relatable.  People caan relate to that in every nation and every country. How far that goes? Fool-fool.  People jus a sing fi roun di road the road. So that’s why Afrobeats a lead…,” a seemingly exasperated Bounty said.

“So the [Dancehall] artists they are very talented, even more than me.  Caw di style weh dem a use and di different things great.  But the topic stupid.  We need to look in the world and choose a topic fi suit we and them… universal topic or relatable argument, household topics, weh every household understand  and can relate. And then, Dancehall will get back to the fore.  But nuttn nuh wrong wid Dancehall.  All Dancehall a do is lose the feel.  The music and the topics not right,” he posited.     

Bounty Killer said that in examining the work of Afrobeats artists with which Jamaicans are being compared, though the Africans’ songs, for the most part, are lacking in lyrics, unlike most upcoming Jamaican artists, they offer music lovers the key elements of music that become global hits: internationally relatable topics, melodies and grooves.

“Afro have topic.  Afro don’t even have lyrics.  Afrobeats don’t even have lyrics; they a have a lot of melody, groove and topic,” he said.

He then cited Burna Boy’s Ye as an example: “Ye, ye.  Dat a lyrics?  Dat a  topic.  Ye, ye, we know what Ye Ye Ye, mean… those are topic and di melody.  Style melody topic.  Simple!”

Koffee, Burna Boy

Turning to one of his own songs, Look Into My Eyes, Bounty said it was evident why simpler songs would be bigger hits than the lyric-laced Madhouse-produced track.

“Look into my eyes tell me what to see can you feel my pain.   A whole heap a lyrics dat comparing to Burna Bwoy Ye Ye Ye, enuh.  An Ye Ye Ye is a bigga song enuh.  Caw Ye Ye Ye easy fi catch.  Him nuh want suh much lyrics; him jus want “ye ye ye”.  One word, with a lot a melody an di beat nice and full a style and groove.  Wi nuh want nuttn more,” the Coppershot artist said.

“Jamaican music too technical.  Dem a do all type a ting an dem a sing inna metaphor, like dem nuh really waan yuh know weh dem a seh.  You make it simple technical, not technically technical.  Dis is how Dancehall music is today.   Technically technical, they are making the songs like it’s a test.  You have to figure out can puzzle it out.  Nobody don’t want to puzzle music,” the Warlord stated.

Continued Bounty Killer: “We want music to relieve our stress…  we don’t want music fi stress out wi brain and wi ears a fight fi hear because yuh a  sing inna yuh nose an all dem suppm deh.  Dat a mash up Dancehall. Is the creativity.  They are not creative anymore.  Any likkle foolishness a gwaan a man want come tun it inna song.”        

Turning to the international market, Bounty questioned whether the artists have been considering the fact that the content of their songs will only take them so far and no more, unlike artists like Charly Black, who, while not considered huge in Jamaica, has sold gold in the US, and has a massive overseas following.

Charly Black with his Gold Record for ‘Gyal You A Party Animal’

“How much nation yuh si a falla di likkle foolishness weh yuh a sing?   When yuh a meck a song, look pan di nation and di world and talk to wi.  Don’t look roun a Waterhouse or Calaloo Bed or Seaview an a meck di song,” he advised.  

“That’s Dancehall problem – the topics.  The topics are limited.  None a di chapppa artiste nuh big like Charly BlackParty Animal.  Everybaddy know bout party.  Di word party big inna every nation.  Which nation don’t party?  Simple.  So a dat.  Our artiste dem don’t choose di topic right.   Di argument is regional and wi a sing inna wi own dialect and wi a talk to wiself.  Suh dem music deh just go in di diaspora,” he said.

In bolstering his point that simplicity was key, Bounty cited Skillibeng’s Whap Whap, which he said, while considered nonsensical, was catchy with simple lyrics that foreigners could quickly grasp.

“Watch Skillibeng.  Whap Whap – and dem seh a eediat song.  It catchy! No bag a technical and foolishness. Simple.  That’s what the music need to go back to – simple.  Why yuh think di 90s dancehall is the best one?  Dem nuh want no bag a technical suppm weh a tell yuh fi do all these foolishness,” he said.

Skillibeng in the ‘Whap Whap’ video.

“That’s why 90s dancehall is the best one caw it naw tell yuh no lie.  It just talk to you and tell yuh di truth.  It just free.  No petticoat,” he emphasized.

The content of the music, the Warlord warned, was not even impressing the Jamaicans in the Diaspora, who themselves are unable to relate to or do not support the scamming lyrics.

“So it’s like our music selfish.  It is not making for the universe; it’s just making for the Diaspora.   It’s like as far as Jamaican people deh, a deh suh mi music a guh.    Caw you are singing just content that suits us.   How much people know wha chappa mean?  People nuh know what dat mean.   More time Diaspora people don’t know wha yuh mean by chap.  Dem think a grass yuh a chap.  Betta yuh did seh scam, caw di world know scam,” he said.

“And den now, how much people a celebrate scam?  Because dat’s a criminal act.  Suh a criminal we a sell?   Obeah and dem foolishness deh?  We need fi fix it. Wi can’t deh come wid dem fool-fool topic deh.   Suh di slang suppm dem, dem nuh guh far,” he added.

Watch the full interview below.

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Foxy Brown Releases Remastered Video For ‘Oh Yeah’ With Spragga Benz

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Fans of Rap/Dancehall fusions received an unexpected gift last week with Brooklyn rapper Foxy Brown releasing a remastered version of the music video for Oh Yeah, her hit 2001 song featuring her then-boyfriend Spragga Benz.

The song— which sampled vocals and the instrumental from Toots and the Maytals’ iconic 1968 song 54-46 That’s My Number — appeared on Foxy’s third album, Broken Silence.

She also recently shared a remastered version of the video for B.K. Anthem, a song released as a B-side to Oh Yeah, and which also appeared on the album.

Oh Yeah showcases the rapper’s signature blend of hardcore rhymes and gritty hooks, while Spragga Benz adds a Dancehall touch. The two were in a relationship and even got engaged in the early 2000s, before breaking up in 2003.

In Foxy’s verses, she proclaims her status as “the most critically acclaimed rap b#@ch in the game”, while flexing her wealth and power. Spragga Benz takes over at intervals with some strong and assertive vocalizing, bellowing out the distinctive patois chant that makes up the song’s chorus, all while displaying the artist’s proud Jamaican roots.

The song’s music video was directed by Canadian filmmaker Director X, who also helmed the production of several classic videos from the era, including Sean Paul’s Gimme The Light, Get Busy, and I’m Still In Love With You, Wayne Wonder’s No Letting Go, and Jay-Z and The Neptunes’ Excuse Me Miss, among others.

Shot in Jamaica, the Oh Yeah video starts with Foxy Brown rapping in a forest near the river, before it took her to a party with her group Fox 5 (which includes her older brother Gavin Marchand).

The visuals featured fashion from both genres, with Foxy and her group donning the once-popular baggy clothes and fitted caps with flashy jewellery. Meanwhile, Spragga Benz makes the Dancehall influences clear, from old-school Dancehall settings and fashion pieces. There was also a combination of Jamaican dances and those originating in Brown’s Brooklyn, New York environment.

Foxy Brown

Toward the end of the video, Cham appears for an interlude with Foxy and they perform a snippet of another collab from Broken Silence titled Tables Will Turn, before the track reverts to its original.

Oh Yeah failed to debut on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, but it did peak at No. 63 on the R&B/Hip Hop Singles Chart and No. 22 on the Hot Rap Songs chart.

The song also peaked at No. 27 on the UK Singles chart.

In November 2004, Foxy announced that she would follow up Broken Silence with a new album titled Black Roses, inspired by Dancehall legend Barrington Levy‘s song of the same name.

“My best friend Barrington Levy has a song called ‘Black Roses.’ He’s been traveling all over the world and never seen a black rose in no other garden. When he found his black rose, he knew that sh-t was special. Y’all ni–as can have all the female rappers in the world, but there’s only one black rose. I feel that’s me,” Foxy told MTV at the time.

However, the following year Foxy announced that she had experienced severe and sudden hearing loss in both ears, and that she had not heard another person’s voice in six months.

Black Roses, which reportedly featured production by The Neptunes, Kanye West, Timbaland, Trackmasters, and Dave Kelly, and guest appearances by Barrington Levy, Dido, Luther Vandross, Mos Def, Cham, Spragga Benz, Shyne, Big Daddy Kane, Rakim, KRS-One, Roxanne Shante, and Jay-Z, was never released.

After Foxy had her hearing restored through surgery, the street album Brooklyn’s Don Diva was ultimately released in 2008.

It featured Mavado, Demarco, Lady Saw, Morgan Heritage, and Spragga Benz.

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Carl Livington, Bunny Wailer’s Brother, Dead At 77

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Carlton Livingston, the patriarch of the Livingston family and brother of the late reggae superstar Bunny Wailer, is dead at age 77.

Donna Carradice, Bunny Wailer’s younger sister, made the announcement on Facebook with a heartfelt post.

“Carlton Livingston, the first son of Thaddeus Livingston and elder brother of Neville Livingston transitioned today. It’s a solemn & memorable time for family and friends who loved and depended on his caring and skillful service to and for all and sundry. The man in and of the Street headquartered for years at the Red Hills Road Plaza running tings!” She wrote.

With Jah B’s death, Mr. Carl Livingston was the senior Livingston who he trusted to ensure his wishes were executed. Seven years ago, Bunny Wailer determined how he wanted to manage his affairs while alive and after he passed, and Carl Livingston was named as the executor of his estate.

“He ran tings for Bunny all their lives together, defending him as a youth and managing him as a Solomonic Wailer! Call Carl was Bunny’s calling card for family, friends and business,” Carradice said.

Born March 25, 1945, Carl Livingston died two days short of his 78th birthday on March 23, 2023.

His relationship with his stepbrother Bob Marley, mirrored Bunny’s and went deeper as they were closer in age, Carradice added.

“Bob’s job At Chrysler was gotten by Carl, who worked there in Delaware. Much history about The Wailers, he was knowledgeable of that enriches the musical brotherhood of Bob and Bunny under the fatherhood of Thaddeus.”

Livingston is survived by his wife, Mary, and sons, Derrick and Dennis.

“We salute Carlton Livingston for his life of human service as the testimonies of life long friends and companions begin to pour in and overflow as a great big cushion for his loved ones in this time of physical separation and grief,” Carradice ended.

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Minister Marion Hall Responds To Criticism Of New Song’s Cover Art Showing Her “God-Blessed Body”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

The fashion police are out in their numbers for Minister Marion Hall, after the former Queen of Dancehall shared the cover art for her latest single, I’m Doing Better

The contentious photo sees the gospel artist showing off what she has described as her “God-blessed body” in a black sequined jumpsuit with mesh detail that reveals her stomach. For some critics, the look errs on the side of her former persona Lady Saw.

The controversial promo photo for Minister Marion Hall’s new project.

“There is a time and place fi everything,” one social media user wrote. “You had you time and you place. Go rest nuh.”

Another chimed in, “Aren’t Christians suppose to be the light of the world?? God is not a God of confusion nor is He to be mocked. If you know better, do better. NOBODY NUH COME TELL ME BOUT A SUH FOREIGN PASTOR DRESS…”

“Now Minister, you darn well know you can’t minister to people in a bralet and mesh. Unuh must stop it now.”

There was even the question, “Minister of what, local government?” 

Another angle of Hall’s ensemble for her single ‘I’m Doing Better’.

Her response to the naysayers could have been “come kiss out mi Bible.” But instead, she directed them to a Bible verse that seemingly explained her intentions behind the artwork.

“For whoever have a problem with me showing of my God blessed body. Please read 1 Corinthians 9 verse 19 to 23 and Keep your opinions to yourselves,” Hall said in a Facebook post.

1 Corinthians 9:19-23 reads:

Though I am free and belong to no one, I have made myself a slave to everyone, to win as many as possible. 

To the Jews I became like a Jew, to win the Jews.

To those not having the law I became like one not having the law (though I am not free from God’s law but am under Christ’s law), so as to win those not having the law.”

To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.”

I do all this for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.”

1 Corinthians 9:19-23

Some of Hall’s followers have also risen to her defense.

“She looks amazing,” one user said. “We just need to understand and respect that we do not get to choose how one lives his life. More love to her.”

Another wrote, “Who came up with the idea of ‘church clothes’? Grew up in church and I’m happy the day I became a MATURE AND INFORMED ADULT. I got to experience different cultures and God for myself. We can’t forget some of the most vicious people on earth are those disguised in ‘church clothes’. Live ya life Ms. Hall.”

The backlash is pretty much déjà vu for the church owner who came under fire in February 2021 for posting a photo of herself wearing a v-neck blouse that bore enough cleavage to anger some members of the Christian community.

Hall came under fire for showing her “girls” in this 2021 photo.

She eventually removed the photo but posted a video response labeling herself a sexy Christian who won’t always be cloaked due to Miami’s hot weather. The uproar returned in April when she posted a beach pic of herself wearing a two-piece bikini.

Beyond this, she previously received backlash for the fashion worn in promo photos of her 2021 single If I Was Famous. Her full glam, silk blouse and blue fur coat had many, again, likening it to a Lady Saw aesthetic, though she hung up her secular shoes in 2015.

While the internet goes back and forth on what constitutes Christian adornment, Hall has been busy readying the music video for I’m Doing Better. In a recent live video, she spilled that popular director and one of her favs Jay Will is shooting the project which will see her living it up on yachts and at fancy restaurants. 

Hall worked with Grammy-winning musician and producer Gramps Morgan,Shannon Sanders (producer for India Arie and John Legend), and Downsound Records’ Joe Bogdanovich on the record which she is declaring a “definite hit”.

Released on March 16, the song is described as a testament to Hall’s “calling as an artist and her ability to reinvent herself time and time again.”

(From left) Joe Bogdanovich, Minister Marion Hall and Gramps Morgan

“I told you from last year (that) God is doing a new thing,” she said. “When I did If I Was Famous, I told you God was up to something big. The enemy came with distractions and shut it down, but this time, this song won’t be

She’s already pleased about the buzz the single is creating, especially as it relates to her intended audience. 

“It’s already reaching young people – those are the people we want to reach. Yes, we want to reach the rejects. There’s a line in this that God gave to me: ‘Jesus loves the rejects’, and that’s what I want you to hold on to. It doesn’t matter who rejected you, God will never turn His back on you. When you seek ye first the kingdom of God and all His righteousness, everything else will be added on to you.”

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Morgan Heritage To Release New “World Music” Album In April

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: DanceHallMag

 

Grammy award-winning Reggae band Morgan Heritage will be releasing what it has described as a “World Music” album titled The Homeland, on April 21.

Positive Vibration artist Roy “Gramps” Morgan and his brothers Peter “Peetah” Morgan and Memmalatel “Mr. Mojo” Morgan made the announcement on their respective Instagram pages on Monday morning.

“The new @morganheritage album The Homeland drops April 21st. This is the groups First World music album and they combine the sounds of Africa with the sounds of Jamaica on this Afro-Fusion album that features legends and future legends from both places,” the three artists noted.

The album’s description as “world music” means it could be a contender in the GRAMMY’s Global Music category for next year.  

The term World Music was initially used in the UK in 1987 to help differentiate music from non-western artists. However, over the years, the term has been shunned, with The Recording Academy (GRAMMYS) changing the name of their “best world music” album category to “best global music” album in 2020. 

At the time, the Academy said that the change was done in a bid to avoid “connotations of colonialism” and “Non-American, and to make the category more “relevant, modern, and inclusive”.

Established in 1994, Morgan Heritage, which is composed of some of the late Reggae singer Denroy Morgan’s 29 children, began initially as a recording octet, then a quintet.  However, it has morphed into a trio comprising the three brothers since then.

Morgan Heritage had released their debut album dubbed Miracle for MCA back in 1994, just months after making their first appearance on the main stage at the Reggae Sunsplash music festival. 

More Teachings, their follow-up album, peaked at #6 on the reggae charts, while Mission in Progress, which was released in 2008 spent 24 weeks on the charts after peaking at number one.

In 2015 their album Strictly Roots ascended to number one and spent 44 weeks on the charts.   That album has the distinction of taking home the Grammy Award for Best Reggae Album, over other successful albums such as Jah Cure’s The Cure, Luciano’s Zion Awake, and Barrington Levy’s Acousticalevy in 2016.

The Down By the River band, which at the time comprised of five children of reggae artist Denroy Morgan, were also nominated for Best Reggae Album in 2017 for their Avrakedabra.

The upcoming album, which comprises 21 tracks, consists of collaborations with Popcaan, Youssou N’Dour, Shaggy, Beenie Man, Shatta Wale, Mádé Kuti, among others.

“This album is described as “a project of rebirth for the Morgan brothers, built upon a lineage that has lasted decades and one that will continue to forge forward”.  Musically, they take the listener on a journey that not only reminds them of days past, but the future ahead,” the group said in a  release.

So far, Morgan Heritage has shared the album’s first single Just A Number, Headline Fi Front Page with Jahshii, Rytikal and I-Octane, and I Will Never Forget with Ariel, Esh Morgan, and Jemere Morgan. 

The lead single Who Deh Like U, featuring Bounty Killer, Cham and Stonebwoy, was released today (March 20). “It’s hard to find anyone to compare to you. Even from a million miles away your value will never diminish because you are so unique…” Mojo Morgan said about the meaning of the track. 

“It will be hard to find another like you anywhere in the world.”

In August last year, Morgan Heritage had announced that it would be embarking on its first full-scale African tour, and that there were plans to join forces with some of the “freshest and biggest talents in each country”, to produce a collaborative album.

The tour, which was to take place over an eight-week period, had been dubbed the Island Vibes Africa Tour and would have seen the trio trekking across several countries in West, Central, East and Southern Africa for performances.

In elaborating on the tour, a release from the group, noted that their stint in the Motherland, was a gift to its people and a means of “strengthening the shared bonds between Africa and the Caribbean”.  That tour was later rescheduled for sometime later this year.

On March 28, Morgan Heritage will perform at the Grammy Museum (at LA Live) as guests of The Drop Series, which is expected to start the band’s global promotional tour, with concerts in Los Angeles, New York, England, Germany, France, Uganda and Ghana.

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