Can you imagine ever being mean to Yellowman? Even before he was famous?! He seemed so humbled, alone & vulnerable in his youngest years. I’m glad he rose above and was blessed and respected with age. Those times did shape his character and made him stronger. Damn.... that’s inspiring. God bless Yellowman. He took yellow lemons and made them into yellow gold!
Thank you daddy u Roy for taking dancehall internationally and never got the credit for it... He's responsible for so many artists careers, long live the great king daddy u Roy !! ❤❤✨🙌
Loving this one thanks for sharing very important information giving thanks blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work 🙏🙏🙏🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲💪💪💪
The day that Jamaicans realize that Jamaica is our home , and not Africa is the day we will finally be free.. Free to make Jamaica the paradise that it is.....
It looks like a lot of the footage (esp. with subtitles) has been stabilised electronically so the picture looks good but the subtitles are difficult to read sometimes.
In my lifetime I have followed Jamaican music from Callypso to Ska, Bluebell, Rocksteady, Lovers Rock, Reggae, Dub,Tighten up Toast, Dance Hall...off the top of my head, not in correct order. I have over 700 tracks on my computer. You can still find compilations of old school original reggae tracks. I am in my mid 70's and still get the same thrill listening to West Indian music as I did back in early 60's and adding to my collection. (PS: I am white cockney).
i was there in north london in the 60s in the basement parties , i was in jamaica in the 70s for the dance hall parties , i was in the audience in 1975 when bob marley and the wailers upstaged the jackson 5 , i'am just saying welcome to the club my brother , those of us who know what we are talking about , this documentary (on ja. dancehall) for some reason left out who most jamaicans consider to be the king , BEENIE MAN , having won that title for eight consecutive years .lol .
Its all; black music, there's Soca/Trinidad, R&B/Hip-hop/USA, Haitian music, don't know what its called, but sound very good, now trending we have Afro-beat, it is no secret that people of Afro descent has more than a jolting talent for this aspect of life, Jamaican got a better start ''World-wide than other developing Countries, because of the audacious nature of the people
@@MakeSomeNoisePlaylists Really? Which religion? Seriously, man. Stop writing shit to sound edgy. The dumbest kind of idiot is the one that sees himself as an inteligent man.
The girl who song ''Champion lover no easy up tonight'' is a Jamaican female name Chevelle Franklyn, she now sings Jamaican gospel, so that narrator was wrong she is no R&B Singer.
Thats not correct either. The singer of that song was Deborah Glasgow, a British born Reggae singer with Guyanese roots. She did the song solo first and it was later remixed with Shabba Ramkin.
Royston Brown yes. And there was two versions. The remix with deborahe and the one with Chevelle Franklin which is the version that was played in the documentary
I'm sure the popular Champion lover song was Chevelle Franklin, I know her voice, one of the best female voice out of Jamaica now singing popular World-class Gospel, she also song (she's a Dancehall Queen for life) with Beanie-man
Big difference between the humble beginnings of reggae and the Dancehall culture that ended up engulfing it. I grew up with the reggae that had positive influence, positive messages. When the violence and the slackness took over, I left it alone. It is a fact that "bad company(associations) corrupts good morals".
This documentary is good, and I love all of the interviews. Pretty thorough with the evolution of Jamaican music up until mid 70's when there is a missing representation of the foundation and crucial development of dancehall. Nuff respect to Studios , producers and engineers like , Randy's,the great King Tubby's ( they don't even mention him once), Channel One, Joe Gibbs, etc. Too much time on Cockney Uk Dj style and not any mention of the Kingstonian Dj's of the late 70's that paved the way such as Big Joe, Tapper Zukie, Trinity, Ranking Trevor, Clint Eastwood, Ranking Joe, Nicodemus, U Brown, General Echo, Brigadier Jerry, Massive Dread, Jah Thomas, etc. It is the BBC . I prefer the more inward Deeper Roots documentary for the real magic
These series of documentaries (3) truly depict the journey of reggae, on a timeline, and how it traveled across to international waters to the UK and eventually the US. I loved and really appreciated how artists that carried the international torch were mentioned, even when times were not so great, thanks for illustrating the truth. Now I see the relationship with the UK and its great influence from reggae. This really makes me a proud jamaican and fan of reggae music, forever...one love..🎶🎵🌍♥🥁✨..#jamaica #reggae #ukreggae #reprezentradio #bbcradio1x #bbcradio1 #afrobeatsuk #afroboss #rootsreggae #dubjamaica #miamidub #dubwise #lovereggae #lovedub #dubheaven #rototom
Why do they talk about Cocaine and dancehall?? I was there in the 80's, all dancehalls and performers were anti coke (except Josey Wales later in his career) although Tiger was on it big time.
feckyoo2 ::: listen , yes The white Stuff was around. It was not Weed carrying the thing again. 1980 Election was real first showing of Coke. High on Coke the gunmen political hired did what they wanted to do
feckyoo2 . Most Entertainer never even smoke Weed. Jamaica slide downward started in and around 1969/76. There was no Coke . Not even Chemical Inlaced Weed. Weed was called ( ITAL.) Naturally grown.
Cocaine changed the black community in a bad way, I lived in Hackney Eaet London and many years ago cokeheads and smackheads were barred from Jamaican areas because they brought down too much heat that swept weed, previously ignored by police. Where as coke was a white man's drug who freebased it, news reports were talking about in US black community a new drug called crack was more addictive and ruining neighbourhoods. The trend was copied over here and turned good friendly blacks into violent nasty people, of course crack was Freebase coke the whites were using many years earlier.
Black Uhuru,Steel Pulse,Peter Tosh ,Third World, Israel Vibration, Burning Spear,Toots and the Maytals,Inner Circle, Dennis Brown, Junior Tucker, Dawn Penn,Barbara Jones,Cynthia Schloss and Judy Boucher..!
@@kiwitrainguy It's a shame that you are so deeply dumb to know that this video is the third part of a series. If you want the old school, watch the other parts.
When comes the time in which every skincolor does no matter at all???It does NOT matter ....why is this so important for some?? I still dunn get it....????
I can't believe that you made this comment one year ago and I'm the first to give it a like. I try to relate to people as the individual they are rather than their race, sex, religion, etc, etc.
Star everyone know that ,on the right thing is to say it's Gregory songs OK can't I live I any what they saying man I need to get that so I can show my kids on lady they know I is the one billing these songs so why other saying it's them so tell the truth to keep jah world living that this boy Gregory who some know as Leon Rabey billing up a strongly thing in new York city but people don't like yard man or like to know that this yard man is still billing more vibes on still not looking good so when they going to do Leon Rabey good bx the vybz kartel here so am in the Bronx saying when them people will come fine me but they in Jamaica waiting my time on there's well is what the time is it's them people WHO like to mess up the thing man is looking better life what man would not get in that man smoke gangia the sensei OK Greg heights
And this music would have been bigger, had it not been so violently homophobic. Why do Jamaicans hate gay people so much? I love reggae and ska, but I do not love its homophobic attitudes.
Let me answer that for you my dear because we are a god fearing people and that believe that man must multiply and the only way them a ago multiply is with a woman man a man caa have kids dem only ago contract aids get that
I dont care how much shaggy's sell he cant represent Jamaica and our music with that american accent u can speak perfect english with ur jamaican accent same like the Brits, Australian etc
Can you imagine ever being mean to Yellowman? Even before he was famous?! He seemed so humbled, alone & vulnerable in his youngest years. I’m glad he rose above and was blessed and respected with age. Those times did shape his character and made him stronger. Damn.... that’s inspiring. God bless Yellowman. He took yellow lemons and made them into yellow gold!
Respect KING yellowman…tunes still blasting today🙌🙌🙌🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🔥🔥🔥
Yellow a True Fenix not even cancer could defeat him ❤
I love Jamaican reggae, ragamuffin and the people. 12 October,2020. Greetings from the Fiji Islands.
1 💛
Bob Marley was an activist and shaba he is a entertainer..
Any music weh come outta Jamaica now them call reggae
Thank you daddy u Roy for taking dancehall internationally and never got the credit for it... He's responsible for so many artists careers, long live the great king daddy u Roy !! ❤❤✨🙌
This is why I am so proud to be a Jamaican I love the old school
Loving this one thanks for sharing very important information giving thanks blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work 🙏🙏🙏🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲💪💪💪
The day that Jamaicans realize that Jamaica is our home , and not Africa is the day we will finally be free.. Free to make Jamaica the paradise that it is.....
The subtitles when Shabba was singing on stage 😂😂.
It looks like a lot of the footage (esp. with subtitles) has been stabilised electronically so the picture looks good but the subtitles are difficult to read sometimes.
In my lifetime I have followed Jamaican music from Callypso to Ska, Bluebell, Rocksteady, Lovers Rock, Reggae, Dub,Tighten up Toast, Dance Hall...off the top of my head, not in correct order. I have over 700 tracks on my computer. You can still find compilations of old school original reggae tracks. I am in my mid 70's and still get the same thrill listening to West Indian music as I did back in early 60's and adding to my collection. (PS: I am white cockney).
i was there in north london in the 60s in the basement parties , i was in jamaica in the 70s for the dance hall parties , i was in the audience in 1975 when bob marley and the wailers upstaged the jackson 5 , i'am just saying welcome to the club my brother , those of us who know what we are talking about , this documentary (on ja. dancehall) for some reason left out who most jamaicans consider to be the king , BEENIE MAN , having won that title for eight consecutive years .lol .
Reggae fantastic!
Its all; black music, there's Soca/Trinidad, R&B/Hip-hop/USA, Haitian music, don't know what its called, but sound very good, now trending we have Afro-beat, it is no secret that people of Afro descent has more than a jolting talent for this aspect of life, Jamaican got a better start ''World-wide than other developing Countries, because of the audacious nature of the people
Facts
Reggae seems to be just music from Jamaica. Other West Indian islands probably have music that is just as good if not...?better?
@@kiwitrainguy Better? LOL
I think this lady got it right. Politics was Jamaican downfall.
Joe Moe... Agreed.
RELIGION yo mean....
@@MakeSomeNoisePlaylists Really? Which religion? Seriously, man. Stop writing shit to sound edgy. The dumbest kind of idiot is the one that sees himself as an inteligent man.
The girl who song ''Champion lover no easy up tonight'' is a Jamaican female name Chevelle Franklyn, she now sings Jamaican gospel, so that narrator was wrong she is no R&B Singer.
Thats not correct either. The singer of that song was Deborah Glasgow, a British born Reggae singer with Guyanese roots. She did the song solo first and it was later remixed with Shabba Ramkin.
@@roystonbrown1474 fact!
Royston Brown yes. And there was two versions. The remix with deborahe and the one with Chevelle Franklin which is the version that was played in the documentary
I'm sure the popular Champion lover song was Chevelle Franklin, I know her voice, one of the best female voice out of Jamaica now singing popular World-class Gospel, she also song (she's a Dancehall Queen for life) with Beanie-man
Big difference between the humble beginnings of reggae and the Dancehall culture that ended up engulfing it.
I grew up with the reggae that had positive influence, positive messages.
When the violence and the slackness took over, I left it alone.
It is a fact that "bad company(associations) corrupts good morals".
I don't understand why we don't have this program here in the states we need it
Don't Peckham rye North London Peckham host's coxson sound system BASS WILL BUCKEL YOUR KNEENS
Legend Shabba Ranks Legend Bounty Killer Legend King Yellowman
best Dancehall Background video i have watched bleessssss
This documentary is good, and I love all of the interviews. Pretty thorough with the evolution of Jamaican music up until mid 70's when there is a missing representation of the foundation and crucial development of dancehall. Nuff respect to Studios , producers and engineers like , Randy's,the great King Tubby's ( they don't even mention him once), Channel One, Joe Gibbs, etc. Too much time on Cockney Uk Dj style and not any mention of the Kingstonian Dj's of the late 70's that paved the way such as Big Joe, Tapper Zukie, Trinity, Ranking Trevor, Clint Eastwood, Ranking Joe, Nicodemus, U Brown, General Echo, Brigadier Jerry, Massive Dread, Jah Thomas, etc. It is the BBC . I prefer the more inward Deeper Roots documentary for the real magic
The comments on the second programme of this series also note the absence of King Tubby.
Daddy U-Roy...was the original creator...and also like Billy Boyo...
Absolutely
O
Yellow man, shabba ranks too Legends of dancehall music!!!
These series of documentaries (3) truly depict the journey of reggae, on a timeline, and how it traveled across to international waters to the UK and eventually the US. I loved and really appreciated how artists that carried the international torch were mentioned, even when times were not so great, thanks for illustrating the truth. Now I see the relationship with the UK and its great influence from reggae. This really makes me a proud jamaican and fan of reggae music, forever...one love..🎶🎵🌍♥🥁✨..#jamaica #reggae #ukreggae #reprezentradio #bbcradio1x #bbcradio1 #afrobeatsuk #afroboss #rootsreggae #dubjamaica #miamidub #dubwise #lovereggae #lovedub #dubheaven #rototom
Why do they talk about Cocaine and dancehall?? I was there in the 80's, all dancehalls and performers were anti coke (except Josey Wales later in his career) although Tiger was on it big time.
feckyoo2 ::: listen , yes The white Stuff was around. It was not Weed carrying the thing again. 1980 Election was real first showing of Coke. High on Coke the gunmen political hired did what they wanted to do
feckyoo2 . Most Entertainer never even smoke Weed. Jamaica slide downward started in and around 1969/76. There was no Coke . Not even Chemical Inlaced Weed. Weed was called ( ITAL.) Naturally grown.
Cocaine changed the black community in a bad way, I lived in Hackney Eaet London and many years ago cokeheads and smackheads were barred from Jamaican areas because they brought down too much heat that swept weed, previously ignored by police. Where as coke was a white man's drug who freebased it, news reports were talking about in US black community a new drug called crack was more addictive and ruining neighbourhoods.
The trend was copied over here and turned good friendly blacks into violent nasty people, of course crack was Freebase coke the whites were using many years earlier.
Because cocaine affected our artists.
You were not there in the 80's. Words are not a proof.
So much to learn
Music is love
As RaW as uR JaW!! Natural MysticaL
beatiful mi seh
Dancehallers!!
cool stuff :)
Black Uhuru,Steel Pulse,Peter Tosh ,Third World, Israel Vibration, Burning Spear,Toots and the Maytals,Inner Circle, Dennis Brown, Junior Tucker, Dawn Penn,Barbara Jones,Cynthia Schloss and Judy Boucher..!
It's a shame that we have to go to the comments to see those names.
@@kiwitrainguy It's a shame that you are so deeply dumb to know that this video is the third part of a series. If you want the old school, watch the other parts.
I didn't know Mark Lamarr did that interview, every time I see him do something I like him more
Excellent ending to this documentary.
Yellow man....🇱🇨🇹🇹
10:40. Stone that the builder refuse.
Yes!!
Isssssss macka diamond lady mackerel?!?!
Yes
What is name of Eek a Mouse's song on 5:14?Thanks people!!!
+Vladimir Demkovic Track is called Anorexel, your welcome.
My great niece was named for Bob Marley.
What, Bob?
@@jeffinnocent1623 no, MARLEY!!!!
@@darlenegoodwin6467 Just joking Darlene X
@@jeffinnocent1623 ok Mr. Innocent you're welcome
@@darlenegoodwin6467 Thanks, I just couldn't resist it I'm afraid. East London, UK.
Shelly Thunder was before Patra...
What Happened To Part Two?
ua-cam.com/video/ioOGVplB13A/v-deo.html
🔊🇯🇲💃🏾🕺🏽🇯🇲🔊
can anyone point me to part 2???
Look for history of jamaican music.
ua-cam.com/video/rYOwqXmcfcg/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/ioOGVplB13A/v-deo.html - But I enjoyed part one the best.
(Hook me up) , . . . What was Black Uhuru's song at 3:32?
Why don't they ever talk about Ninja Man?
Nice
Brooklyn AllDay!!! Ninja man is an idiot!!
Different league
@@joedex6222 LOL.
Reggae birthed hip-hop!
N. Montague No it didn’t. Funk & R&B did. DJ Kool Herd couldn’t even play reggae in the states because Americans didn’t like it 🤷🏾♂️
R&B influenced Reggae
N. Montague r and b influenced real reggae music
@@glokid6318 Americans always dumb
5:36 Ee-ka Mouse 🤘🏿
What the hell is the short snippet at 31:50? Please!
Cecile and Tantro Metro live
Whats the name of the song Cocoa Tea sings at 54:00????
Can you feel I
When comes the time in which every skincolor does no matter at all???It does NOT matter ....why is this so important for some?? I still dunn get it....????
I can't believe that you made this comment one year ago and I'm the first to give it a like.
I try to relate to people as the individual they are rather than their race, sex, religion, etc, etc.
Tell that to the black people who suffer prejudice every single day.
“Reggae is the mother of hip hop”
This is how a lie starts.
Then you really dont know much about the 2 cultures... it obvious your not from New York
StylistecS I'm from the UK. Born to a Jamaican family and I agree with you 💯
youre right it is a lie. Reggae is the FATHER and Funk is the mother of hip hop 😎🙃
Word man, glad that some educated people are here
This is how your dumbness started.
N!!!!CE
Star everyone know that ,on the right thing is to say it's Gregory songs OK can't I live I any what they saying man I need to get that so I can show my kids on lady they know I is the one billing these songs so why other saying it's them so tell the truth to keep jah world living that this boy Gregory who some know as Leon Rabey billing up a strongly thing in new York city but people don't like yard man or like to know that this yard man is still billing more vibes on still not looking good so when they going to do Leon Rabey good bx the vybz kartel here so am in the Bronx saying when them people will come fine me but they in Jamaica waiting my time on there's well is what the time is it's them people WHO like to mess up the thing man is looking better life what man would not get in that man smoke gangia the sensei OK Greg heights
does any one know the name of the riddim at 17:54 ?
eli jamois ..Sleng Teng by Wayne Smith & King Jammys
It's by Tenor Saw, called Pumpkin Belly.
+eli jamois Sleng Teng
@@martin__murray Epic fail
Slackness lyrics over great beats....dancehall.
brexit
Fuckit.
bbc!!!! ketch muta!!!! #4:38
Dancehall is too nude
And you're too virgin.
And this music would have been bigger, had it not been so violently homophobic. Why do Jamaicans hate gay people so much? I love reggae and ska, but I do not love its homophobic attitudes.
simple answer religion is very important to them
Coseted little princes brought up by mammy n Nanny....so homophobic but check out their obsession wit fashion, bling, manicures n hair products seen?
Most of Africa too, it's a conservative church upbringing
Let me answer that for you my dear because we are a god fearing people and that believe that man must multiply and the only way them a ago multiply is with a woman man a man caa have kids dem only ago contract aids get that
Excuse u sound like u are gay
I dont care how much shaggy's sell he cant represent Jamaica and our music with that american accent u can speak perfect english with ur jamaican accent same like the Brits, Australian etc
Só que ficou horrivel o reggae...parece rap ..e inventaram um tal de trap...SOCORRO acabaram com o reggae
Jah me livre de ser burro assim.