Afrobeats is a touch of everything to the listening ears but a unique and natural style for the Afrobeats listening ears . Afrobeats has been out there for a long time but properly marketed now for worldwide audience and the evolution is real . Big up to my people from the motherland
Talibhans was produced by Nigerian Afrobeat producer Ej Fya. Its a youtube beat and is uploaded to youtube as an " Afrobeat type beat". Yes the vocals are in a dancehall style but this will make you understand why he said what he said.
The beat being Afro beat, is just that. The lyrics is Jamaican influence. So he was influence by dancehall. He denying that. Question is why tho. Are we that hated by our Caribbean people.
Population of Africans in Africa and world wide who streams it? 1 billion plus, population of Jamaica 2.9 million and we still get 20+ million views 30+. Pound for pound dancehall is bigger than afrobeats, afrobeats took over simply because there’s just so many Africans pushing it.
Afrobeat is where Dancehall should've evolved to sonically in my opinion. The Taliban song in my opinion, the lyrics and flow definitely gives it a strong dancehall vibe no questions asked, the riddim to me is a fuse of dancehall and afro. There are alot of elements missing tho that would've have blatantly made the riddim scream afro, but then as stated in the interview, the building blocks of Afro are pretty much rooted in Dancehall, they jus used those blueprints and sounds from their culture (referring to Africas) to make something that feels like home to them.
Unnu cut the damn foolishness now and put the damn thing in perspective. DANCEHALL DID EVERY DAMN THING AFTOBEAT IS DOING AND MORE ,.THE ARGUMENT SHOULD BE ,HOW DO WE INFILTRATE THE INTERNATIONAL MARKET AND STAY THERE,BUT TO SAY AFROBEAT IS DOING SOMETHING DANCEHALL HASNT IS NOTHING MORE THAN EXAGGERATING. Dancehall did everything!!! What Jamaicans look at disadvantage,I see it as the key element has to why dancehall can keep replenishing it self.Dancehall never got over played or over saturated on the international market ,so it always find its way to the top . Afrobeats is currently living to die ,and am laughing cause no one sees the bigger picture of what happens when something gets over expose.
Everybody is taking this thing out of proportion we know the style is dancehall flow all the kids say it's afrobeat mix the problem is no other country supposed to do dancehall and come big unless they are Jamaican and connect get the credit that is the problem is going on right now like I said St Kitts🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳 to the world
This story was worded to make it seem like Byron dissed dancehall. If you watch the clip the interviewer is the one who says the riddim has an afrobeat vibe and Byron agrees. The riddim was literally produced by an Nigerian afrobeat producer
Bredda we nuh business, him chat too much and Dancehall and Jamaica growing annoyed by this boy. Tell him to stop singing about dancehall and Jamaican lifestyle. Suck him madda
This is so true. I noticed that too. He didn’t say it and he barely answered. He didn’t sound confident abt the assumption made. Poor guy being pulled. I don’t think he thoight that. To me He didn’t want to seem like he’s dissing the genre. Watch his onstage interview. He’s saying how many dancehall artists inspire him but he said differently to ari and Naro.
The Taliban beat is afrobeat with dancehall hardcore lyrics. What connects folks is the lyrics outshine the beat. Most of these dancehall artist nowadays don’t outshine the beat because the lyrics and the way they construct the song rely on the beat. Byron got the lyrics, the melody and song construction. He also has a team behind him.
The Taliban beat was originally an Afrobeat but it definitely always gave a dancehall vibe. We dropped and released a song on the exact same beat 2 years ago.
@@MansaMusa-v5q How when Dancehall already known?Your statement don't even make sense because Byron may have the biggest song currently but Drift is Right there also Make it mek sense🤦
What is a hit song … corner music or world hit … if the answer is world hit then most of the 2012 music are still hitting outside of the Corner market …
Byron is a born Jamacian who was adopted & grew up in St Kitts. He might not be altogether too happy about that? Who knows? So if throws a few jabs at his birth place, try & empathise a little. In an interview he said, "pain won't leave"? Even though he didn't explain what he meant by that, he went on to speak about more pain. We can all hear the Dancehall influence in his music 🎶. He did apologise to Jamacian's for something he said on 'The Fix' in a Seanie B interview. You can also hear the Hip Hop, R&B, Drill, Trap Dancehall etc in Talibans. Afro Beats is a mix of many, many genres. His speaking voice is mostly Kittitian, yet his performance voice is heavily Jamacian. I'm very happy for the young man, he has done extremely well. 👏🏽 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽🎊🎊🎊🎊🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🎶🎵
I’ve noticed he’s trying to distance himself from is both place, he literally angry with Jamaica, but come on the genre have nothing to do with what has happen in his past life.
@@876mostvaluabletreasure2 I think he's angry with his mum for giving him up, she still lives in Jamaica, so he possibly associates her with Jamacia. Most humans think that way, his mum did what she thought was right at the time. Children rarely understand that.
@@876mostvaluabletreasure2 It's quite normal to feel like that when your parents put you up for adoption. Children usually feel rejected & cannot understand why they couldn't stay at home.
I agree (24:08-24:12). Byron can say he’s “Afro beats” all he wants but it’s the ppl & DJs who determine that. Shiii all his music on Apple Music is under modern reggae 🤷🏽♂️
Yes Variety is the spice of life. But never forget what spice you bring to the table. Whether or not Jamaicans created hiphop we know who developed it and which group it more belongs to or is the core. So no matter what spin you put on hiphop it is still considered a Black American influence. Same goes for reggae/Dancehall. It brought its own spice. Variety is the spice of life
Uptown people who always look down at dancehall and called it boogie yaga music.their kids you were more into foreign music but listened to dancehall because of culture They were the ones that distroyed dancehall and it started with rennesannace and delano and his elk .don carleon russian and them they started mixing hip hop with dancehall .then full circle with the choppas from mobay who work in these hotels and have to perform these hip hop songs on the entertainment shows at the hotels
Why Jamaicans soooo damn negative????????I NEVER SEE A PEOPLE WHO LOOK AT EVERY ASPECT OF THEIR CULTURE AS NEGATIVE..Just bring up a topic and all unnu can think bout is how to speak negative. A ghetto my family come from and they all thought dancehall was boogie yagga.Unnu just love fi blame "uptown" people for everything when a poor ghetto Jamaicans hold back Jamaica.FROM HOW THEY SPEAK TO THEIR DEPORTMENT.🙆
Stand corrected, the man said he's a Kittian 🇰🇳 his producers are from Trinidad 🇹🇹. He's a born 🇯🇲 left at the age of 2 months old adopted by a Kittian family so he consider himself a JamaicanKittitian #PayAttention
I have a question for all three of you at The Fix ( Especially Ari 😃) . Should the victims be considered when it comes to human rights and the punishment of the person who was convicted of the crime? Jail is not supposed to be a bed of roses. I do agree that a prisoner's health should be taken seriously because they are a property of the state. We have to have some kind of deterrent within the prison system @ solitary confinement. Jamaica is the only place that a popular prisoner is allowed to make music in jail, and make money from it at the same time. Now, it was to my understanding that the artiste was placed in solitary confinement because of cell phone use. Why all of a sudden? He has been on social media and making music for years from prison? I find that to be strange! SMH Jamaica is definitely not a real place.
That's wat ah mad uno taught when teacher got lock im ah go stop mek music dutty badmind sit an watch im mek more music freedom soon to🇹🇹😂👽👽🙏🔥☄️☄️🤑👌🌎🐐👑👑
Listen the interview this a set up he done apologize ayu want him rup up and down wid a fuckin jamaïcan flag to feel good or what. Because i jus see de man agree that the beat is afro not the song go watch on stage me no like how ayu a fight de youth. Fix glad to put bk out da clip when he done pass that. Let go man
taliban flow melodies style was coppied from young upcomming dancehall artist jeff fully auto song called big guns witch came out a year ago .. fact sover feeling google is free..
Rewatch the clip, The interviewer said the RIDDIM has a afro vibe, Byron agreed. The story is worded in a very particular way to make it sound like he dissed dancehall. And yea the beat was produced by a nigerian afro producer ej fya
How is afrobeats inspired by rap? You people just say shits online. You never been to africa (nigeria) to even know about our sounds here. Same afrobeats that is the most danceable genre. How tf did rap songs sound like afrobeats? Same afrobeat that started with african local drums in the 40’s and 50’s?
But Byron confused. Just saw him on onstage seh him look up to Masicka n chronic law. He’s young. The interviewers a confuse him. 😂 he’s overwhelmed yah man
Dancehall currently stuck on this 1-4-11-13 basicly every current Dancehall song use this Pattern Afrobeats uses this same pattern too however they also use our traditional 1-4-7-9-12-15 Pattern, fr Arya Starr's Rush to Rema. That traditional Dancehall bounce that we've abandoned long time The numbers line up with where drums hit on a 16 step sequencer.
At this point Byron need a better PR team, because the way how it’s looking his own words gonna be his downfall. Dude don’t know how to articulate himself in the correct way based on the career path that he’s on! You could be the best artist in the world! But your core will always be the FANS! Without the FANS support you aint shit! So trod lightly bredda!
@@mskila when did he disrespect? They asked who influenced him and he answers accordingly ,you guys wanted him to lie? News flash not everyone in the Caribbean is influenced by a dancehall artist it’s 2023 not the 80s
The need to make international songs not just hit song. Only a certain class of people can really relate to the nowadays dancehall. We need some songs in the major keys, however, trap music is a minor key genre so with the new genre being trap dancehall I guess we will only have dark keys music.
I'm glad Naro stick the 📌 with Jeff fully auto. He is trying to get to bigger market but going about it round. The lingering effect with his issues with Jeff fully auto is staple in his brain which continue to make him hurt
Say it loud its not the artist not the lyrics not the nationality not accent not the production its the beat that determines the genre. dancehall 70s and early 80s beat was called rub a dub then a up tempo beat came about 84 they called it sleng teng then modern dancehall was born not a opinion
Dancehall should’ve evolved to AfroFusion (elements of Dancehall & Afrobeats combined) … but the dancers run left the hall and gave way to TRAPPERS & CHOPPERS …. Hence TRAP HALL 🤷🏿♂️🎹🤫😉
Everybody is so lost of why Byron is distancing is self from dancehall. Badmind it is. Our Caribbean brothers n sisters don’t really like us n it is sad. Bcuz they only dislike us because we are the most influential people in the Caribbean n other places across the world. It’s sad to say but that is really it. Also he trying to help create a whole genre for his country n so he want to hide where that influence from us bcuz they don’t like us. Simple
Byron was born in Jamaica and Adopted by st.kitts and Nevis parents. .byron is a kittian . He does not know anything about Jamaica . He was not try to syle you guys . I think he was referring to jeff fully auto
Just wanna break it down for Ya'll Stone Boy, ruger, Patoranking and Shatta wale are influenced by dancehall artists & they do Jamaican dancehall in Africa..They are not recognized as Afrobeats artists...REMA ;OMALAY ,KISS, DANIELS ,DAVIDO? TIWA SAVAGE, FIREBOY .ASEKE & many are Afrobeats artists that don't sound like dancehall Wizkid & Burna boy make 1 or 2 dancehall song in their album for Caribbean Market No need for the division
Jamaicans are joke now a days the madness keep going saying Africans copy their style of music 😂😂😂 most of you need to go back an check your history or at least you visit Africa so that you can stop your madness without us you have no roots and culture, most of you forget your culture or maybe you are just too proud now.. but you can fight Afro or African culture that wouldn't change a thing, African cultures and the style we have is well rich, African people's are kings and Queens 👑👑 The reason your music was so big and well known is because is based on African roots like reagea and the style of reagea was completely inspired by African culture, Aftican people don't have to fight back because we know we are the original and you guys and your music are all from us, you just have the blueprint of African culture Every black man is and African you just been taking from us ,sad you loose your culture and forget who you are 😢
We see the agenda and propaganda you're trying to push about Byron. We ain't buying it. Reggae was influenced by calypso and ska music back in the 60'S. Look it up. Why aren't Trinidadians complaining that Jamaicans aren't giving them credit anytime a reggae artist becomes successful? More you try fight de yute, naturally a giant a go rise. 😂
Did this woman just say Jamaica buss Byron 😂😂😂byron came up under prince swanny and trinibad 🇹🇹 Jamaica discovered byron just like the Americans and the rest of the world , it’s all love but don’t discredit someone for there doing and hard work
Him a use we fi buss Why him even name his song MOCA and MOCA is scam thing weh jamaica sing bout in dancehall 😂plus a mostly Jamaican artiste him collab wid
Why can’t it be a mixture of different genres? Take away his accent would you still consider it dancehall? Let’s not be fooled someone’s accent doesn’t determine the genre. It’s a good song and a hit song is a hit song end of story win for the Caribbean 🇹🇹 🇰🇳 🇯🇲
Until these Trap Dancehall artists can tour places other than SOME parts of America, the UK or the Caribbean then I will say that the music is here to stay. This new so called genre is trash and they need to admit it.
@@davidscott3726 No one likes Trap dancehall except the Jamaican diaspora. When people that don't even understand english start requesting these artists then I will acknowledge them. They can't even get booked in Africa and those are black people.
@@davidscott3726 him go Paris fi a video shoot not to perform and Trap dancehall artist nah travel only place dem ago New York and Miami and small clubs
At this point I may be sounding like a scratch record We need a balance Trailer Load with Shabba Ranks R&B beat because he was toasting fast babycham and Foxy Brown tables will turn major major crossover song gimme the light by Sean Paul major major crossover song Lumidee who got a hit song on the Diwali Riddim
What really is the "dancehall sound"? Is it the sound-clash era of the 80/90's? Is it the dancing/passa passa era of the early 2000's? Is it the "gully vs gaza" era? Is the the "trap" era? You all only claim afrobeat as dancehall cause it doing numbers. Afrobeat is NOT dancehall. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
NARO is correct flex by max cobra dem style was done when they had to but it had work and Sean Paul dem broke with authenticity and even reggae with i Wayne and Sean Paul and Sasha … we have no reason to go back to trap and R&B to crossover
Give de youth a break de beat a afro beat and is the interviewer who made the suggestion all he do a agree and say how the song come up . Go watch on stage and lef de lil fuckin youth alone.. And da statement bout jamaïca buss him mus be a joke😅
@@trevormcdonald385 you pan whole other topic watch de onstage interview and even pan de same one deh tek de peace from when he agréé it pan à afro beat go listen wa he say after. All I say he say it pan a afro beat for real but he say is dancehall. So me no kno wa dis video for.
@@liburdgaston4217 the beat is not Afro ah that me point g - musically wa mek that riddim Afro? seems like people forget seh ah dancehall riddim have them beat underpinning riddim from way back
@@trevormcdonald385 I understand what you mean but. Me hear de producer who make it Afro and put it out as such. If a man make à reggaeton beat and put it out and you sing a dancehall song pan it you gon call de beat à dancehall beat? Because you sing à dancehall song on it because reggaeton derived from reggae/ dancehall ?
Why the artistsbnot complaining and credit? But the no body dem want credit. White people, black Americans came and took out a de music and a Caribbean brother who grew up with reggae, soca and dance hall, you try kill him. If the song wasn't doing as well, he would of been a no body. He already apologized and yet its mt good enough. But then again we all are entitled to our own opinion. Music is word wide. Jamaica and the entire Caribbean keeping Dancehall alive. One people.
@@yjsit Talibans was produced by a nigerian afrobeat producer Ej Fya, its a youtube beat and was uploaded as an afrobeat type beat. Thats why said its more afro
Kartel was ordering "hits"(not songs) from prison, so his solitary confinement isn't without reason. I hope dem give him some medical care still. But Graves disease is higly technical and potentially lethal...
Dem man yah anuh Jamaican if him born deh deh weh him family dem deh Caz him real mother and father should still be there so antill him fly dun deh and show his family he is lying him a rapper so stop talk a d act like Jamaican then disowned it that’s fake
This youth must stop tell lie bout him a Jamaican. Jamaican or not its still dancehall and the song hot! Dont use the theme yu "born a yaad"cause yu want to get the promotion. Dont dweet yute. We respect Swanny all when him never born a yaad . Be yourself and talk the truth. Yute nuh rate dancehall him just a eat a food
Maybe he doesn’t want to be labeled as a dancehall artist because dancehall is not global as one time, so he is trying to label himself in a genre that is more recognized or sell now
@@zfazed9655 yeah I get that but he stole Jeff flow and lyrics tbh 🤷🏽♂️ and if you really check the stats, he’s depending on jamaica artiste to push him… his album have about 7 features and 6 of them was Jamaican 🤷🏽♂️why did he even shout out jamaica in his song? Why did he name his song “MOCA” ? All of those are Jamaican dancehall things
@@kemboleegayle2029 so it’s safe to say he’s using us then? 👀 he copied Jeff, he mainly collab wid dancehall artiste, he sings about scam etc👀 why didn’t he copy an Afro artiste and collab with them? 🤔
If a did di 80s dancehall artist dem im wuda affi pay im dues..as a matta of fact certain argument cudn't a fwd outta im mouth..im wuda affi lift up..dem now a days Jamaican artist yah too nuff n tek any disrespect from sum fool!..di bwoy a get too comfortable a diss up Jamaican artist dem..run dem fi run im weh!!
@@platinumsweets 😂😂 A swear ,sometimes I feel sorry for you all.Just imagine being confined to speaking a dialect hoping others understands,or hoping it's a Jamaican so they can understand that put together bull$hilt that illiterate Jamaicans accept as a language. Blame your parents ,I could never speak like that to my parent growing up.Thats not even patois.😂
Bryon massia born ah Jamaica and move guh live ah St. Kitts wen him young. Wah him ah try prove mi nuh kno but watch him be a one hit wonder if him try diss wah buss him
@@artworkshop586 trinidad have the platform.. caribbean music usually buss three ways either through trinidad , jamaica or the diaspora. Trinidad literally buss and revive a lot of yard artiste and this is documented learn your history.
@@868Doescrack bro Trinidad doesn’t even buss their own artists much less anyone else. The term buss an artist isn’t even from there. Prince swanny is the only prominent Trinidadian artists and that’s because everyone thought he was Jamaican and now Byron is pushing the same strategy
@@factsondeck1552 our only prominent artiste is swanny because of politics and death. Who do you think was responsible for Shane, Jeff fully even Teejay mention the importance of trinidad in bussing him.
Where dance hall and reggae come from from calypso trust meh elders wouldn't tell d youth d truth foundation dat why always conflicts between Trinidad and Jamaica 🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹 meh say boom no credits research b4 yuh bs
I honestly feel he is trying to disassociate himself from dancehall which I don't respect him for, I think he has something against Jamaica being that he was adopted by st.kitts parents. In my opinion that might be his last hit, especially knowing that the flow of the chorus came from a Jamaican artist a year before his song, Big Gunz! Him still bitter that he was exposed
I would respect it if he didn’t claim Jamaica to get views but that’s the Trend. Most of these new confused foreign artists are just doing a Jamaican impression. They don’t even speak the way they do in their songs.
You see the problem you're Jamaicans want to take the credit for everything. Yes he is a Jamaican. He doesn't know nothing about the country. Just let the youth strive W🤯W SK 🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳 to the world
You are the reason this guy is going to have problem succeeding ja don’t want credit for everything u ppl from other countries don’t get it if he’s doing dancehall why discredit dancehall
flow definitely copy from the big guns song but if nah rep dancehall or even Jamaica let him be why we a fight fi claim him fi a mid or likkle above average copy song😂😂
Afrobeats is a touch of everything to the listening ears but a unique and natural style for the Afrobeats listening ears . Afrobeats has been out there for a long time but properly marketed now for worldwide audience and the evolution is real . Big up to my people from the motherland
Talibhans was produced by Nigerian Afrobeat producer Ej Fya. Its a youtube beat and is uploaded to youtube as an " Afrobeat type beat". Yes the vocals are in a dancehall style but this will make you understand why he said what he said.
Sound like Trap & RNB to me
@@kdel4272 look up the producer of the song ej fya. He is nigerian and exclusively produced afrobeats
@@benja303but which ever way you look at it, some of Afro beats influenced is from dancehall.
@@876mostvaluabletreasure2i agree but thats a different conversation all together
The beat being Afro beat, is just that. The lyrics is Jamaican influence. So he was influence by dancehall. He denying that. Question is why tho. Are we that hated by our Caribbean people.
Since 2019 - 2020 covid era, afro songs have been getting alot of attention and liking, TikTok of course helps it
AFROBEATS TO THE WORLD!! 🌍🔝🔥🔥
1) Rema - calm down - (2022) - 470 million views
2) Ckay - love Nwantiti - (2020) - 400 million views
3) Burna Boy - on the Low - (2018) - 335 million views
4) Burna Boy - Ye - (2018) - 235 million views
5) Wizkid - Joro - (2019) - 240 million views
6) Arya Starr - Rush (2022) - 170 million views
7) Wizkid - essence (2022) - 150 million views
8) Kizz Daniel - Buga (2022) - 150 million views
9) Libianca - people - (2022) - 105 million
9) kizz Daniel - Cough (2023) - 80 million views
10) 1dabanton - No wahala (2022) - 80million views
11) Fireboy DML - Bandanna - (2022) - 80 million views
12) Phleez - finesse - (2022) - 80 million views
13) Rema - soundgasm (2021) - 80 million views
14) Oxlade - Ku Lo Sa - (2022) - 70 million views
15) Lojay - Monalisa - (2022) - 70 million
Population of Africans in Africa and world wide who streams it? 1 billion plus, population of Jamaica 2.9 million and we still get 20+ million views 30+. Pound for pound dancehall is bigger than afrobeats, afrobeats took over simply because there’s just so many Africans pushing it.
Lawd you do u homework man,me never kn a soo much millions
@@chocolatema1445 That’s to show that this music has come to stay and rule the world. Nobody refuses good music
You nailed it fambo . No joke thing as the numbers says it all . 🇳🇬The motherland to the world. Have to embrace it …. Nah fight it
The Afrobeats are definitely dominating the charts and views right now. 💯🔥💪🏾
Never doubt Kartel to have a Lisa in his corner 😂 😂 😂
Afrobeat is where Dancehall should've evolved to sonically in my opinion. The Taliban song in my opinion, the lyrics and flow definitely gives it a strong dancehall vibe no questions asked, the riddim to me is a fuse of dancehall and afro. There are alot of elements missing tho that would've have blatantly made the riddim scream afro, but then as stated in the interview, the building blocks of Afro are pretty much rooted in Dancehall, they jus used those blueprints and sounds from their culture (referring to Africas) to make something that feels like home to them.
Unnu cut the damn foolishness now and put the damn thing in perspective.
DANCEHALL DID EVERY DAMN THING AFTOBEAT IS DOING AND MORE ,.THE ARGUMENT SHOULD BE ,HOW DO WE INFILTRATE THE INTERNATIONAL MARKET AND STAY THERE,BUT TO SAY AFROBEAT IS DOING SOMETHING DANCEHALL HASNT IS NOTHING MORE THAN EXAGGERATING.
Dancehall did everything!!!
What Jamaicans look at disadvantage,I see it as the key element has to why dancehall can keep replenishing it self.Dancehall never got over played or over saturated on the international market ,so it always find its way to the top .
Afrobeats is currently living to die ,and am laughing cause no one sees the bigger picture of what happens when something gets over expose.
Afrobeats predates dancehall
Everybody is taking this thing out of proportion we know the style is dancehall flow all the kids say it's afrobeat mix the problem is no other country supposed to do dancehall and come big unless they are Jamaican and connect get the credit that is the problem is going on right now like I said St Kitts🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳 to the world
@@jiggieskb I realize that with dem in Jamaica
Dancehall originate from riddim yah not dancehall
This story was worded to make it seem like Byron dissed dancehall. If you watch the clip the interviewer is the one who says the riddim has an afrobeat vibe and Byron agrees. The riddim was literally produced by an Nigerian afrobeat producer
He did diss dancehall in a previous interview so F him
Kelly Beatz isn’t Nigerian is he.
Bredda we nuh business, him chat too much and Dancehall and Jamaica growing annoyed by this boy. Tell him to stop singing about dancehall and Jamaican lifestyle. Suck him madda
This is so true. I noticed that too. He didn’t say it and he barely answered. He didn’t sound confident abt the assumption made. Poor guy being pulled. I don’t think he thoight that. To me He didn’t want to seem like he’s dissing the genre. Watch his onstage interview. He’s saying how many dancehall artists inspire him but he said differently to ari and Naro.
@@MsDarkie93 Kellz a trini
The Taliban beat is afrobeat with dancehall hardcore lyrics. What connects folks is the lyrics outshine the beat. Most of these dancehall artist nowadays don’t outshine the beat because the lyrics and the way they construct the song rely on the beat. Byron got the lyrics, the melody and song construction. He also has a team behind him.
The Taliban beat was originally an Afrobeat but it definitely always gave a dancehall vibe. We dropped and released a song on the exact same beat 2 years ago.
Idgaf Byron is smart. He sees the attention the song is getting and said ya not finna box me in 😂😂
Then only to change his mouth again😂😂😂
Jamaica trying to use him to promote dancehall and Byron not going for it
@@MansaMusa-v5q How when Dancehall already known?Your statement don't even make sense because Byron may have the biggest song currently but Drift is Right there also Make it mek sense🤦
@@MansaMusa-v5qyou 100% correct..dancahal music need a boost..
@@terrancecharles2169which boost? Dancehall been big with or without him. He is not even hot anymore 😂
The Queen is back
AFROBEATS TO THE WORLD 🌍!!🔝🔝👍🏿👍🏿🔥🔥 everyone wants something to do with Afrobeats now 🔥🔥🔥
All these old artist and producers claims what the yutes going ain’t working and the they knew what work BUT NONE OF THEM HAS A HIT SONG SINCE 2012.
What is a hit song … corner music or world hit … if the answer is world hit then most of the 2012 music are still hitting outside of the Corner market …
Byron is a born Jamacian who was adopted & grew up in St Kitts. He might not be altogether too happy about that? Who knows? So if throws a few jabs at his birth place, try & empathise a little. In an interview he said, "pain won't leave"? Even though he didn't explain what he meant by that, he went on to speak about more pain.
We can all hear the Dancehall influence in his music 🎶. He did apologise to Jamacian's for something he said on 'The Fix' in a Seanie B interview.
You can also hear the Hip Hop, R&B, Drill, Trap Dancehall etc in Talibans. Afro Beats is a mix of many, many genres. His speaking voice is mostly Kittitian, yet his performance voice is heavily Jamacian. I'm very happy for the young man, he has done extremely well. 👏🏽 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽🎊🎊🎊🎊🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🎶🎵
So maybe that why him don't rate Jamaica
I’ve noticed he’s trying to distance himself from is both place, he literally angry with Jamaica, but come on the genre have nothing to do with what has happen in his past life.
Then distance from day one. Don’t d!ck ride and pretend to be home team to push a hit and then act switch up 😂
@@876mostvaluabletreasure2 I think he's angry with his mum for giving him up, she still lives in Jamaica, so he possibly associates her with Jamacia. Most humans think that way, his mum did what she thought was right at the time. Children rarely understand that.
@@876mostvaluabletreasure2 It's quite normal to feel like that when your parents put you up for adoption. Children usually feel rejected & cannot understand why they couldn't stay at home.
I agree (24:08-24:12). Byron can say he’s “Afro beats” all he wants but it’s the ppl & DJs who determine that. Shiii all his music on Apple Music is under modern reggae 🤷🏽♂️
Di man don't live fi pple. He's an artist CHUUH
Shatta Wale and Stonebwoy are straight Dancehall artists. They call it Afrodanchall ✅
Yes Variety is the spice of life. But never forget what spice you bring to the table. Whether or not Jamaicans created hiphop we know who developed it and which group it more belongs to or is the core. So no matter what spin you put on hiphop it is still considered a Black American influence. Same goes for reggae/Dancehall. It brought its own spice. Variety is the spice of life
R&B & Trinidadian socal is mixed within Reggae by Jamacian's, so acknowledgement is a must, right across the board.
Uptown people who always look down at dancehall and called it boogie yaga music.their kids you were more into foreign music but listened to dancehall because of culture
They were the ones that distroyed dancehall and it started with rennesannace and delano and his elk .don carleon russian and them they started mixing hip hop with dancehall .then full circle with the choppas from mobay who work in these hotels and have to perform these hip hop songs on the entertainment shows at the hotels
Why Jamaicans soooo damn negative????????I NEVER SEE A PEOPLE WHO LOOK AT EVERY ASPECT OF THEIR CULTURE AS NEGATIVE..Just bring up a topic and all unnu can think bout is how to speak negative.
A ghetto my family come from and they all thought dancehall was boogie yagga.Unnu just love fi blame "uptown" people for everything when a poor ghetto Jamaicans hold back Jamaica.FROM HOW THEY SPEAK TO THEIR DEPORTMENT.🙆
True
Stand corrected, the man said he's a Kittian 🇰🇳 his producers are from Trinidad 🇹🇹. He's a born 🇯🇲 left at the age of 2 months old adopted by a Kittian family so he consider himself a JamaicanKittitian #PayAttention
Taliban producer is from Nigeria
I have a question for all three of you at The Fix ( Especially Ari 😃) . Should the victims be considered when it comes to human rights and the punishment of the person who was convicted of the crime? Jail is not supposed to be a bed of roses. I do agree that a prisoner's health should be taken seriously because they are a property of the state. We have to have some kind of deterrent within the prison system @ solitary confinement. Jamaica is the only place that a popular prisoner is allowed to make music in jail, and make money from it at the same time. Now, it was to my understanding that the artiste was placed in solitary confinement because of cell phone use. Why all of a sudden? He has been on social media and making music for years from prison? I find that to be strange! SMH Jamaica is definitely not a real place.
That's wat ah mad uno taught when teacher got lock im ah go stop mek music dutty badmind sit an watch im mek more music freedom soon to🇹🇹😂👽👽🙏🔥☄️☄️🤑👌🌎🐐👑👑
Listen the interview this a set up he done apologize ayu want him rup up and down wid a fuckin jamaïcan flag to feel good or what. Because i jus see de man agree that the beat is afro not the song go watch on stage me no like how ayu a fight de youth. Fix glad to put bk out da clip when he done pass that. Let go man
Dem a fight the young artist bad. These 3 are clowns. Pushing a false narrative to portray Bryon in a bad light. Dem badmind di youth
taliban flow melodies style was coppied from young upcomming dancehall artist jeff fully auto song called big guns witch came out a year ago .. fact sover feeling google is free..
Masicka is the Man fi the mission
The riddim for taliban is afro dancehall beat i got the same beat as well but he's spitting dancehall on it so wtf is he talking about 😂🤦
Rewatch the clip, The interviewer said the RIDDIM has a afro vibe, Byron agreed. The story is worded in a very particular way to make it sound like he dissed dancehall. And yea the beat was produced by a nigerian afro producer ej fya
Uno love pic up fee telly tuby to much he ah go fall off jus now 1 hitt wonder 😂😂😂
This is what happens when you copy someone else's work.... you can't provide consistent explanation of how you arrived at the answers 😅
Facts
Yeah because he was Onstage saying something else
😅
Exactly. When you tell a lie you need to continue telling lies to cover the first one and after a while you make no sense.
Chuupz 🤨🙄😒 the ignorance is really Bliss
One of the confusion also is that afrobeats is also inspired by “rap” and rap comes from dancehall
How is afrobeats inspired by rap? You people just say shits online. You never been to africa (nigeria) to even know about our sounds here. Same afrobeats that is the most danceable genre. How tf did rap songs sound like afrobeats? Same afrobeat that started with african local drums in the 40’s and 50’s?
I don't think Shaggy it wasn't me was dancehall either
Truth is a dancehall sound and lyrics me hear why it catch me so good a swear the patois ina it wull me
Burna boy recently said that he is no longer interested in Genres. He just wants to make good music for his fans as he deems fit from whatever genre
But Byron confused. Just saw him on onstage seh him look up to Masicka n chronic law. He’s young. The interviewers a confuse him. 😂 he’s overwhelmed yah man
I guess the fix doesn't realize how much Jamaican people live in NYC even 2nd and 3rd generation born there..
It’s strictly “ AFRICAN “
Ari u r wrong. They are still solitary confinement in the state ...the practice of solitary confinement remain constitutional in the state...
He also said in previous interviews that massive influence him
If you steal something you’re not gana say where you got it from!! But if e dawg say mi wi gwan like mi believe 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅. E bwoy wicked yf!
Yeah true
Until it’s your own that’s when you feel it.
Big red😂😂😂😂Shoes 🤣🤣🤣bro
Afrobeats is more Dancehall than Dancehall 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂
True
So technically.. afrobeats is dancehall😂😂😂
Safe to say Afrobeat spring from dancehall (vise versa)😂😂
@@dmetrihylton2130 am no afrobeats was never made by dancehall go do your research afrobeats was made by its own people just like how we made reggae
dancehall only made hip hop
Dancehall currently stuck on this
1-4-11-13 basicly every current Dancehall song use this Pattern
Afrobeats uses this same pattern too however they also use our traditional
1-4-7-9-12-15
Pattern, fr Arya Starr's Rush to Rema. That traditional Dancehall bounce that we've abandoned long time
The numbers line up with where drums hit on a 16 step sequencer.
At this point Byron need a better PR team, because the way how it’s looking his own words gonna be his downfall. Dude don’t know how to articulate himself in the correct way based on the career path that he’s on! You could be the best artist in the world! But your core will always be the FANS! Without the FANS support you aint shit! So trod lightly bredda!
Byron will always be relevent. Because he is in a class by himself..
This kid is confused poor him
Poor him ? Bro got one of the biggest songs for the year thus far doesn’t matter the genre a hit is a hit
@@kyl0svlogs127 but a mek a clown of himself every interview is a different story of him talking some bull shit
@@kyl0svlogs127 The man fi give respect. ! Dat a dat! KMFT
@@mskila when did he disrespect? They asked who influenced him and he answers accordingly ,you guys wanted him to lie? News flash not everyone in the Caribbean is influenced by a dancehall artist it’s 2023 not the 80s
@@kyl0svlogs127 News flash his entire style & pattern is DANCEHALL. Not to mention the words he uses is Jamaican Patios. Dat a dat !
The need to make international songs not just hit song. Only a certain class of people can really relate to the nowadays dancehall. We need some songs in the major keys, however, trap music is a minor key genre so with the new genre being trap dancehall I guess we will only have dark keys music.
That clown a try avoid giving credit to Jamaica because him afraid Jeff Fully Auto sue for copy right infringement.
I'm glad Naro stick the 📌 with Jeff fully auto. He is trying to get to bigger market but going about it round. The lingering effect with his issues with Jeff fully auto is staple in his brain which continue to make him hurt
Say it loud its not the artist not the lyrics not the nationality not accent not the production its the beat that determines the genre. dancehall 70s and early 80s beat was called rub a dub then a up tempo beat came about 84 they called it sleng teng then modern dancehall was born not a opinion
He’s Jamaican born that was raised in St Kitts
He jus doing this to avoid the fact is jeff fully auto style 🤷🏿
Him just a use Jamaica fi reach far…. Caz Yk there’s no dancehall without jamaica
@@MadKidEnt exactly
Dancehall should’ve evolved to AfroFusion (elements of Dancehall & Afrobeats combined) … but the dancers run left the hall and gave way to TRAPPERS & CHOPPERS …. Hence TRAP HALL 🤷🏿♂️🎹🤫😉
Even reggaeton was inspired by dancehall and reggae
It's not really about the beat or hit songs it's really the marketing , and have an image
Everybody is so lost of why Byron is distancing is self from dancehall. Badmind it is. Our Caribbean brothers n sisters don’t really like us n it is sad. Bcuz they only dislike us because we are the most influential people in the Caribbean n other places across the world. It’s sad to say but that is really it. Also he trying to help create a whole genre for his country n so he want to hide where that influence from us bcuz they don’t like us. Simple
But he's singing dancehall and using Jamaican language, he is wounding his career by doing that
This chop, Byron gunna use 'corniness and kill a good thing 😂
Byron was born in Jamaica and Adopted by st.kitts and Nevis parents. .byron is a kittian . He does not know anything about Jamaica . He was not try to syle you guys . I think he was referring to jeff fully auto
Just wanna break it down for Ya'll
Stone Boy, ruger, Patoranking and Shatta wale are influenced by dancehall artists & they do Jamaican dancehall in Africa..They are not recognized as Afrobeats artists...REMA ;OMALAY ,KISS, DANIELS ,DAVIDO? TIWA SAVAGE, FIREBOY .ASEKE & many are Afrobeats artists that don't sound like dancehall
Wizkid & Burna boy make 1 or 2 dancehall song in their album for Caribbean Market
No need for the division
Pato and Ruger are mostly Afrobeats. They also do some Afro Dance Hall songs and speak in patwa
Jamaicans are joke now a days the madness keep going saying Africans copy their style of music 😂😂😂 most of you need to go back an check your history or at least you visit Africa so that you can stop your madness without us you have no roots and culture, most of you forget your culture or maybe you are just too proud now.. but you can fight Afro or African culture that wouldn't change a thing,
African cultures and the style we have is well rich, African people's are kings and Queens 👑👑
The reason your music was so big and well known is because is based on African roots like reagea and the style of reagea was completely inspired by African culture,
Aftican people don't have to fight back because we know we are the original and you guys and your music are all from us, you just have the blueprint of African culture
Every black man is and African you just been taking from us ,sad you loose your culture and forget who you are 😢
Him need fi get release out a prison immediately
We see the agenda and propaganda you're trying to push about Byron. We ain't buying it. Reggae was influenced by calypso and ska music back in the 60'S. Look it up. Why aren't Trinidadians complaining that Jamaicans aren't giving them credit anytime a reggae artist becomes successful? More you try fight de yute, naturally a giant a go rise. 😂
Did this woman just say Jamaica buss Byron 😂😂😂byron came up under prince swanny and trinibad 🇹🇹 Jamaica discovered byron just like the Americans and the rest of the world , it’s all love but don’t discredit someone for there doing and hard work
I’m with Naro on this one… make hit songs
Painful to hear about His condition
there are alot of instrumentals that sounds the same nowadays
I think byron messia song is more dancehall
He is one of those who take from dancehall but don’t give the credit
@@kemboleegayle2029 same so but him did affi give credit pon a interview lately
Him a use we fi buss
Why him even name his song MOCA and MOCA is scam thing weh jamaica sing bout in dancehall 😂plus a mostly Jamaican artiste him collab wid
@@MadKidEnt him just have too much ego but deep down him use dancehall style him just a hype up himself
@@makeamakertvthe song was produced by nigerian afrobeat producer Ej Fya. Its literally an afrobeat riddim with dancehall vocals
Why can’t it be a mixture of different genres? Take away his accent would you still consider it dancehall? Let’s not be fooled someone’s accent doesn’t determine the genre. It’s a good song and a hit song is a hit song end of story win for the Caribbean 🇹🇹 🇰🇳 🇯🇲
The song was literally produced by a nigerian. The song is indeed a blend of the 2 genres
Because jamaicans in they fuckin feelings that's why.😅
The Element is Afro but the mixing is a dancehall mix.
Just like trap Dancehall,the beat sounds hip hop but the song is mixed like a dancehall song .
Yes I would
Does the panel actually realise that Byron Messia is not Trinidadian?
The other interview He said sth different now He saying dHall never influence him. Looks funny🤔
Until these Trap Dancehall artists can tour places other than SOME parts of America, the UK or the Caribbean then I will say that the music is here to stay. This new so called genre is trash and they need to admit it.
Skeng was in Paris the other day..A few artist can't tour the world most can .
THEY THOUGHT DISCO WOULD NEVER DIE ........
@@davidscott3726 No one likes Trap dancehall except the Jamaican diaspora. When people that don't even understand english start requesting these artists then I will acknowledge them. They can't even get booked in Africa and those are black people.
@@wehavewhatyouwantentertain7337 Oh please,
@@davidscott3726 prove me wrong
@@davidscott3726 him go Paris fi a video shoot not to perform and
Trap dancehall artist nah travel only place dem ago New York and Miami and small clubs
Ah poison dem ah poison di boss mon kmt
KARTEL issues are side effects of skin bleaching. No one is talking about
At this point I may be sounding like a scratch record We need a balance Trailer Load with Shabba Ranks R&B beat because he was toasting fast babycham and Foxy Brown tables will turn major major crossover song gimme the light by Sean Paul major major crossover song Lumidee who got a hit song on the Diwali Riddim
Jamaicans dont even know where St Kitts is.
What really is the "dancehall sound"?
Is it the sound-clash era of the 80/90's?
Is it the dancing/passa passa era of the early 2000's?
Is it the "gully vs gaza" era?
Is the the "trap" era?
You all only claim afrobeat as dancehall cause it doing numbers. Afrobeat is NOT dancehall. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Afrobeats is dancehall son we birthed your whole Afro movement
@@trevormcdonald385 whatever makes you sleep at night.
NARO is correct flex by max cobra dem style was done when they had to but it had work and Sean Paul dem broke with authenticity and even reggae with i Wayne and Sean Paul and Sasha … we have no reason to go back to trap and R&B to crossover
Give de youth a break de beat a afro beat and is the interviewer who made the suggestion all he do a agree and say how the song come up . Go watch on stage and lef de lil fuckin youth alone.. And da statement bout jamaïca buss him mus be a joke😅
Learn fi yuh history yout and stop give weh credit to afrobeats weh copy Dancehall from inception
@@trevormcdonald385 you pan whole other topic watch de onstage interview and even pan de same one deh tek de peace from when he agréé it pan à afro beat go listen wa he say after. All I say he say it pan a afro beat for real but he say is dancehall. So me no kno wa dis video for.
@@liburdgaston4217 the beat is not Afro ah that me point g - musically wa mek that riddim Afro? seems like people forget seh ah dancehall riddim have them beat underpinning riddim from way back
@@trevormcdonald385 I understand what you mean but. Me hear de producer who make it Afro and put it out as such. If a man make à reggaeton beat and put it out and you sing a dancehall song pan it you gon call de beat à dancehall beat? Because you sing à dancehall song on it because reggaeton derived from reggae/ dancehall ?
@@trevormcdonald385alright my brother let's agree to disagree but that a your opinion still. Me no jus born and dat riddim ano dancehall riddim ..
the beat is afrobeats not dancehall been saying this to people
This proves more that Afro beat was fused from dancehall
@@Leggobeest7107 rubbish
@@Leggobeest7107it wasn’t fused from nothing… you hear a kittian copying afrobeats sound and you still trying to claim what you can never make
A Jeff style mi nu rate him
🔥
That ute a try style danchall in every point
So Naro still believe its topic when Taliban is a typical dancehall song?
Why the artistsbnot complaining and credit? But the no body dem want credit. White people, black Americans came and took out a de music and a Caribbean brother who grew up with reggae, soca and dance hall, you try kill him. If the song wasn't doing as well, he would of been a no body. He already apologized and yet its mt good enough. But then again we all are entitled to our own opinion. Music is word wide. Jamaica and the entire Caribbean keeping Dancehall alive. One people.
Feel like a diss Byron a diss we enuh. Why u never say u ak shake like tems den
Yzt fam, and him mostly collab wid jamaica artiste…. The dawq a use jamaica
@@MadKidEnt true him bite Jeff style him nuh wah say a dancehall. Craft him a try
@@yjsit Talibans was produced by a nigerian afrobeat producer Ej Fya, its a youtube beat and was uploaded as an afrobeat type beat. Thats why said its more afro
@@benja303 oh ok got u
Kartel was ordering "hits"(not songs) from prison, so his solitary confinement isn't without reason. I hope dem give him some medical care still. But Graves disease is higly technical and potentially lethal...
You have proof of that sir?
@@beans2605 of course not. He's a model citizen and never does any crime.
🤷🏾♂️
Did he oreder a hit on u suk hood boy 🐟😂
@@aaronroderick6045 your dad, your bro and your son talks too much. You're next. 🤷🏾♂️
Dem man yah anuh Jamaican if him born deh deh weh him family dem deh Caz him real mother and father should still be there so antill him fly dun deh and show his family he is lying him a rapper so stop talk a d act like Jamaican then disowned it that’s fake
You are 100 percent right
This youth must stop tell lie bout him a Jamaican. Jamaican or not its still dancehall and the song hot! Dont use the theme yu "born a yaad"cause yu want to get the promotion. Dont dweet yute. We respect Swanny all when him never born a yaad . Be yourself and talk the truth. Yute nuh rate dancehall him just a eat a food
To me a good music video and production matters
Byron just nuh wan give jamaica/dancehall any credit👀🤔I wonder why
Beacause he was adpoted by sk parents and also jeff auto try style him .but he still rate Jamaica
Maybe he doesn’t want to be labeled as a dancehall artist because dancehall is not global as one time, so he is trying to label himself in a genre that is more recognized or sell now
@@zfazed9655 yeah I get that but he stole Jeff flow and lyrics tbh 🤷🏽♂️ and if you really check the stats, he’s depending on jamaica artiste to push him… his album have about 7 features and 6 of them was Jamaican 🤷🏽♂️why did he even shout out jamaica in his song? Why did he name his song “MOCA” ? All of those are Jamaican dancehall things
@@kemboleegayle2029 so it’s safe to say he’s using us then? 👀 he copied Jeff, he mainly collab wid dancehall artiste, he sings about scam etc👀 why didn’t he copy an Afro artiste and collab with them? 🤔
@@MadKidEnt good question ⁉️
He got saint kitts paasport. So.
If a did di 80s dancehall artist dem im wuda affi pay im dues..as a matta of fact certain argument cudn't a fwd outta im mouth..im wuda affi lift up..dem now a days Jamaican artist yah too nuff n tek any disrespect from sum fool!..di bwoy a get too comfortable a diss up Jamaican artist dem..run dem fi run im weh!!
TAnd you really expect people with sense to understand you
@@davidscott3726 yuh have sense suh dats y yuh understand..right?..suh why di rest weh have sense won't understand ? 🤔
@@platinumsweets 😂😂 A swear ,sometimes I feel sorry for you all.Just imagine being confined to speaking a dialect hoping others understands,or hoping it's a Jamaican so they can understand that put together bull$hilt that illiterate Jamaicans accept as a language.
Blame your parents ,I could never speak like that to my parent growing up.Thats not even patois.😂
Bryon massia born ah Jamaica and move guh live ah St. Kitts wen him young. Wah him ah try prove mi nuh kno but watch him be a one hit wonder if him try diss wah buss him
Jamaican never buss Byron hive that to St Kitts and Trinidad
Them have music platform Fi buss anybody it's on Jamaican platform log off mon
@@artworkshop586 trinidad have the platform.. caribbean music usually buss three ways either through trinidad , jamaica or the diaspora. Trinidad literally buss and revive a lot of yard artiste and this is documented learn your history.
@@868Doescrack bro Trinidad doesn’t even buss their own artists much less anyone else. The term buss an artist isn’t even from there. Prince swanny is the only prominent Trinidadian artists and that’s because everyone thought he was Jamaican and now Byron is pushing the same strategy
@@factsondeck1552 our only prominent artiste is swanny because of politics and death. Who do you think was responsible for Shane, Jeff fully even Teejay mention the importance of trinidad in bussing him.
@@artworkshop586 what jamaican platform to be exaxt?
The man delusional don’t him know afrobeats borrow from dancehall not the other way around????? Genesis
A bet yuh say dah Ute deh Weh name Byron nah guh get no more hit song from dancehall ? Unu a bet ?
😂 I wouldn’t even know because I won’t be listening
Where dance hall and reggae come from from calypso trust meh elders wouldn't tell d youth d truth foundation dat why always conflicts between Trinidad and Jamaica 🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹🇹 meh say boom no credits research b4 yuh bs
I honestly feel he is trying to disassociate himself from dancehall which I don't respect him for, I think he has something against Jamaica being that he was adopted by st.kitts parents. In my opinion that might be his last hit, especially knowing that the flow of the chorus came from a Jamaican artist a year before his song, Big Gunz! Him still bitter that he was exposed
I would respect it if he didn’t claim Jamaica to get views but that’s the Trend. Most of these new confused foreign artists are just doing a Jamaican impression. They don’t even speak the way they do in their songs.
th-cam.com/video/dpU4mdHNQL0/w-d-xo.html
Summa Banga⬆️💯
Dancehall producers are a bit lazy their beats sound like they don’t by weed heads but this taliban beat is done with proper sonics
Produced by a Nigerian 🇳🇬 producer as well
Hey man based on his interviews and contradictory comments he’s lost trying to identify himself
Award for most confused Dancehall artist goes to Byron Messia💯🤣😄🤣🤔
Is he a dancehall artist? 🤔 is Byron really his name ? 😂 the world may never know.
@@factsondeck1552 🤣😄😆
@@factsondeck1552 😂😂😂😂
@@factsondeck1552 😂😂😂😂😂
What sad about de boy
You see the problem you're Jamaicans want to take the credit for everything. Yes he is a Jamaican. He doesn't know nothing about the country. Just let the youth strive W🤯W SK 🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳 to the world
We're not taking credit we are due credit
There is a major difference between the two
@@exlllive7487Tell them again 🎉
Tell me which part ova Africa MOCA exist
You are the reason this guy is going to have problem succeeding ja don’t want credit for everything u ppl from other countries don’t get it if he’s doing dancehall why discredit dancehall
Don’t be jealous of 🇯🇲 we are proud ppl work hard to build our music and everything we make our name for so cut your bullshit
This dude from trinidad trying to copy a jamaican accent and saying beenie man dont influence him 😅
An him deven cum from Trinidad.. a st.kitts
Do you know any Trinidad “dancehall” artists that make music in their own language ? It’s all unmistakable Jamaican patois.
flow definitely copy from the big guns song but if nah rep dancehall or even Jamaica let him be why we a fight fi claim him fi a mid or likkle above average copy song😂😂
Cant be average if its doing 20m in 4 months
@@868Doescrack did seh likkle above average still but it can still be average to a specific person taste
🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳🇰🇳