Bounty Killer On Why Afrobeats Has Taken Over The World And Dancehall Is Still Stuck In His Country

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  • Опубликовано: 21 мар 2023
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    In this reasoning dancehall legend Bounty Killer praises Afrobeats for its creativity and speaks about issues plaguing the dancehall industry in Jamaica.
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Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @INEVERKNEWTV
    @INEVERKNEWTV  Год назад +61

    ➡️ Sign Up Today To Join The 'I Never Knew Tv' Movement:
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  • @smokescreenFromThe6ix
    @smokescreenFromThe6ix Год назад +1044

    Nothing can touch 80's and 90's Roots Reggae and Dancehall!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🇯🇲🇯🇲

    • @thecigaremperorreviewsciga7723
      @thecigaremperorreviewsciga7723 Год назад +13

      🔥🔥🔥🔥💯💯💯🇭🇹🇭🇹 🇯🇲 🇯🇲

    • @babyhoneybunch5547
      @babyhoneybunch5547 Год назад +59

      We’re in 2023 my friend stop living on past glory and tell y’all artists to go in the studio and make hits

    • @AS-xl9gb
      @AS-xl9gb Год назад +24

      And early and mid 2000s

    • @Jac735
      @Jac735 Год назад +10

      ​@@AS-xl9gbsome early 2000s dancehall riddims were decent but started to sound like techno

    • @Maleekthegreat2023
      @Maleekthegreat2023 Год назад +18

      @@babyhoneybunch5547 right we in 2023 ninjas talking about nothing can touch 80s and 90s raggae lmao 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @emprezzz
    @emprezzz Год назад +624

    Bounty has evolved so much. I have truly grown to appreciate him so much more. He has a lot to offer. A true teacher and genius in his field. 👑

    • @calijahbelizean549
      @calijahbelizean549 Год назад +19

      I call him dancehall prophecy

    • @petergreen5337
      @petergreen5337 Год назад +7

      Well said.

    • @minik47music
      @minik47music Год назад +5

      Factss

    • @simba7149
      @simba7149 Год назад

      ​@@calijahbelizean549 u know a fr

    • @kifajoiner8322
      @kifajoiner8322 Год назад

      Killer can't even find the right words to sound eloquent. Still a dunce in my opinion. No vocabulary.

  • @ace4lyphe425
    @ace4lyphe425 Год назад +392

    Koffee is a perfect example of this, her music needs no censorship and her lyrics has brought her to the international stage… that’s where dancehall and reggae needs to be again 💯

    • @bloodline2ntfour
      @bloodline2ntfour Год назад +21

      I agree 100%, the 1st time I heard toast I played it too my 9 year old and tell her this is your culture. Big up koffee

    • @reggaefan2700
      @reggaefan2700 Год назад +10

      I have to disagree with Bounty on this. Here in Chicago drill music started and it was based on local street beefs within the hoods. Now the Drill music has gone international, you got everybody saying that they smokin on opps; or smoking Tooka. Tooka was a kid in Chicago...now everybody around the world know who Tooka is.

    • @Metaworldwide
      @Metaworldwide Год назад +8

      @@reggaefan2700 Drill started in the UK, Ops is British slang. (Edit I was wrong, but I still believe ops originated in the UK Drill slang)

    • @willardmatsaudza3101
      @willardmatsaudza3101 Год назад +30

      @@Metaworldwide Bro im from the UK and i know chief keef started drill pretty much its from chicago and we took and changed it into what it is today. But its originally from chicago just like garage was as well, chicago has influenced UK rap scene like crazy.

    • @reggaefan2700
      @reggaefan2700 Год назад +6

      @@Metaworldwide I doubt Drill Music started in the UK. There's no one in the UK that inspired the founding drill rappers (Chief Keef, Jojo, Durk, etc.); they were all inspired by US rappers (50, Gucci, Diplomats, etc.). So you can miss me with Drill rap starting in the UK. Also I think Ops is a video game reference similar to "Game Over."

  • @erickt9415
    @erickt9415 Год назад +67

    I’m Latino and I love reggae and afrobeats. Reggae is abundant in Latin America, and slowly Latin artists are starting to sing Afrobeat in Spanish. Thank you Nigeria and Jamaica for such good music 🙏🏽

    • @troya.8094
      @troya.8094 6 месяцев назад

      Can’t forget Ghana’s role as well my friend.

    • @erickt9415
      @erickt9415 6 месяцев назад

      @@troya.8094 thank you Ghana 🇬🇭🙏🏽

  • @mrchris6684
    @mrchris6684 Год назад +589

    This has to be rated as one of the honest interviewers by a Dance Hall artist I’ve ever seen. Straight from the heart, straight to one’s head top.

    • @valentineanthony5615
      @valentineanthony5615 Год назад +22

      Honest? Saying Afrobeat got no lyrics just melody and topics. Wow bcos he doesn't understand the language. Jamaican music all talking about dirty words that youths shouldn't even listen to but we don't discriminate we still embraced it. Remember Africa is too large. Jamaica is just a state in Nigeria.

    • @mrchris6684
      @mrchris6684 Год назад +25

      @@valentineanthony5615 You took what he was saying out of context. He was giving Afro Beat props. I’m a huge fan of Afro Beat, and this is just a reminder Burna Boy went to Jamaica and shut the place down, it was road block. So there is no need for a shady comment, Jamaica is just a State in Nigeria, grow up.

    • @illrizzocgg1009
      @illrizzocgg1009 Год назад

      @@mrchris6684 Stop it , dudes a low key hater as the people cheering on this rant.

    • @vyble4615
      @vyble4615 Год назад

      Uh huh

    • @vyble4615
      @vyble4615 Год назад +12

      ​@valentine anthony you misunderstand what he is saying. Listen again without defense.
      💜

  • @bioenergymedwithdennisharu7723
    @bioenergymedwithdennisharu7723 Год назад +558

    I am a Nigerian🇳🇬 and I agree with everything he said. Dancehall will rise again I know.

    • @illrizzocgg1009
      @illrizzocgg1009 Год назад

      Your a fool dude was dissing afrobeats pay attention.

    • @lulzak2591
      @lulzak2591 Год назад +41

      NO IT WONT... DANCEHALL IS DEAD

    • @egenzie
      @egenzie Год назад

      You are not Nigeria and it’s nonsense he was saying, you can say shit about everyone Burna boy is a lyricists.

    • @andreedwards9893
      @andreedwards9893 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/eL0RWh6xJqs/видео.html

    • @essencemil
      @essencemil Год назад +9

      I HOPE SO!

  • @ngonivere8738
    @ngonivere8738 Год назад +60

    Bounty Killer is such a wise man offering mature, constructive advice to young dancehall artists. Much respect to this king for embracing and celebrating Afrobeats, hopefully this will pave the way for more Carribean and African collaborations. Africa loves dancehall, most of us bere grew up listening to dancehall and still appreciate it. Hopefully the younger /newer artists will heed Bounty's advice. Thank you Bounty and the interviewer, stay blessed. God bless Dancehall 🙏🏾

    • @jaylam
      @jaylam Год назад

      Taura hako 🙌🏾 so true.

    • @Streetpirate087
      @Streetpirate087 Год назад

      He’s wrong hip hop is full of beef, metaphors, and its world wide

    • @DucatsDinero
      @DucatsDinero Год назад +1

      Bounty killer is the goat!!!!!!

    • @DucatsDinero
      @DucatsDinero Год назад +1

      Compared to reggae rap beef is a joke honestly! They do more yappin than clappin!! It’s not a bad thing, they’re Jay not as gully has Jamaicans!

  • @melmhnd13
    @melmhnd13 Год назад +67

    Beautiful interview. Jamaicans need to heal as a nation then see the magic that will come out of its people. Raise up Jamaica!

    • @brentduanefoster
      @brentduanefoster Год назад +1

      That’s a pretty strong statement. In what ways do you feel Jamaica needs to heal?
      I ask in real curiosity.

    • @melicah2479
      @melicah2479 Год назад +1

      @@brentduanefoster sir are you jamaican because if you are and ask this question you are part of the problem. Lets start the healing from violence against women, how about selling everything while the people suffer. unnu wicked nuh rass.

    • @melicah2479
      @melicah2479 Год назад

      @@brentduanefoster did you know jamaica is third in femicide. last year they were number 2. A little fucking island leading the whole world in the murder of women.

    • @brentduanefoster
      @brentduanefoster Год назад +1

      @@melicah2479 No, I am not Jamaican. That’s why I asked. I wanted to know so I can what the country is going through.

    • @fjdstudios4485
      @fjdstudios4485 Год назад +1

      This guy in the interview is just an hater. You need to be happy for others in other to grow. That's why we don't even know you as an Artist. All these Black music came from Africa. Period. Instead of you to keep your pride and see how to use the Genre to bring out your star , you are busy dissing .That's why you are still a local champion.

  • @jayaustin1939
    @jayaustin1939 Год назад +501

    As a Nigerian growing up in the 90’s and early 2000’s dancehall was all I knew and it was quite big not just in my household and region but probably the whole of Nigeria. Till this day I still love dancehall and the memories that musicians like Maxi Priest and Shabaranks gave to me will live with me for the rest of my life. I hope to see this genre back on top some day.

    • @olumideonigbogi1765
      @olumideonigbogi1765 Год назад +1

      I was in the African Shrine....

    • @rykson161
      @rykson161 Год назад +23

      Dancehall is nonesense ! Leading the youth astray !

    • @anthonymcken6050
      @anthonymcken6050 Год назад +21

      I think that the world is so dumbed down now that Black youth music like dancehall and rap lacks genuine story tellers.

    • @lolknight4364
      @lolknight4364 Год назад +3

      You would need conscious enough lyrics or just stupid easy lyrics combined with creativity for dancehall to keep on roaring instead of focusing only on easy mainstream topics like party money girls and alcohol with lame melodies that remind commercial reggaeton. Part of dancehall evolved into a bland commercial thing : flashy, easy to listen to despite it won't make you travel nor won't hit you, won't make you think, so you stay a docile consumer happily drugged by entertainment without trying to have a true blast. Hence why the babylon masters like culture to turn that way, glorifying human weaknesses and basic pleasures without any form of revolutionnary thinking nor morals nor deep philosophy. Never bring deep inspirations, just make "politically correct" music, so the sheeple stay attached to it and docile, blocked by the fear of discovering the unknown and rather complimented for staying into their zone of comfort.
      Whether in dancehall, afrobeats, reggaeton, electronic music or any genra, we are lucky that some real artists like Bounty stay faithfull to their highest inspirations instead of going the easy way broadcast everywhere mainstream by the merchants of the temple.
      When it comes to gun lyrics, it is people's duty to interprete them and be educated. A good gun lyrics song should have strong enough meanings connected to ethics.

    • @lolknight4364
      @lolknight4364 Год назад

      As a european I can tell you many white people love dancehall and reggae for being so incredibly conscious, inspiring, optimistic and relaxing. It is sad though the plants they consume grow indoor and make them stupid, a plant that never sees the sun is sick and can't be called medecine anymore.

  • @Wizzlejames875
    @Wizzlejames875 Год назад +392

    Facts someone needed to say it thank you 5 star 90's Dancehall still undefeated

    • @lyonosze1josephine122
      @lyonosze1josephine122 Год назад +2

      What's fact lol! Jelosusy

    • @voselinecooper6510
      @voselinecooper6510 Год назад +4

      Buz i haven't listen to more than 5 DH songs in a day since 2015/16 buz i don't understand it no more n am from the Bahamas

    • @andreedwards9893
      @andreedwards9893 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/eL0RWh6xJqs/видео.html

    • @rickyfrancois6548
      @rickyfrancois6548 Год назад

      ​@@lyonosze1josephine122 you spelled jealousy wrong.. and you cannot fight good music sir.. it gave birth to your generation. You just had to be there.. if you weren't? You missed out on some of the best times of your life

    • @Wizzlejames875
      @Wizzlejames875 Год назад

      @@voselinecooper6510 it's call evolution we speak unity but we have none too much pride and fight down but people took Killa statement out of context basically he's giving afrobeat their flowers for what they're doing in the world of music today and he's saying what Dancehall should've been doing in order to get back on top of the world in music simple nothing hard to comprehend

  • @DMarcoTheBeast
    @DMarcoTheBeast Год назад +10

    *It's not about the regional thing at all:*
    1. Afrobeats is a purely regional music. Half of the chorus of "Last Last" isn't even in English, it's in Igbo. So the regional argument is not really valid.
    2. Afrobeats is fun. Dancehall is dark now - Artists calling themselves demons and only talking about violence and unusual sexual acts. They need to make dancehall fun again like the late 90's and early 2000's.
    3. All music genres have their "15 minutes of fame" so to speak. No genre stays on top forever. Rock and Roll was the big thing in the 80's. Then pop. Now hip hop is the new pop, but afrobeats is next up.
    Burna Boy is even doing songs with the reggaeton artists now, smart move, that will make his presence even bigger on the international scene.
    Dancehall and reggae artists need to take note and follow suit.

    • @mediamen7690
      @mediamen7690 Год назад +1

      Real

    • @DMarcoTheBeast
      @DMarcoTheBeast Год назад

      ​@@mediamen7690 💯

    • @mimi831711
      @mimi831711 Год назад

      Yoruba lol, not Igbo. Also the song was predominantly in Pidgin English (broken/Creole English spoken in West Africa).

  • @TheJaqueenvn1
    @TheJaqueenvn1 Год назад +8

    What is destroying dancehall is the violence in the music. People are sick of it we want to hear music that uplift us.

  • @juliocorrea2552
    @juliocorrea2552 Год назад +186

    “Put ego aside and do it for the music and people” powerful words

    • @sistersofvirtue5506
      @sistersofvirtue5506 Год назад +7

      When you realize the POWER you have and choose to use it for good 🎖️

  • @jayg3189
    @jayg3189 Год назад +227

    I always felt and still feel that the 90's and 2000's were the best time for dancehall music. The artists style and the riddims were on a different level.

    • @Jac735
      @Jac735 Год назад +6

      I like the 90s and down dancehall riddims di best after 00 I feel like everything changed and the newer 🎨 didn't get too much shine because some of the popular artists were overshadowing them

    • @Cahtame
      @Cahtame Год назад +2

      Nope there more talented now it's just the chap topic an gun lyrics is on trending now

  • @bigbee213
    @bigbee213 Год назад +39

    Every genre has its time, it’s afrobeat time. I love dancehall, rap, funk, pop, bashment

    • @geraldgreauxjr.7106
      @geraldgreauxjr.7106 Год назад +3

      It's not their time! They are just smart! I've complained about the dancehall genre I used to lovel and their new topic of drill music for years. It is the topic they choose to sing about and mixing jazz, funk and old school to their somewhat traditional song and some of their native instruments. If you listen to many of the Afrobeat songs I love there is a song from the past (60's, 70's, 80's and 90's mixed with smooth jazz) that is very very dam close to previous American songs from the past.....why because it's familiar to us and the topic is what many, not the few desire and some are already familiar subliminally already use to! You can sell out a bar or club, but think bigger. Sell out a stadium, how......topic......I don't want music I need to go to war to, I want music I can pick a woman and dance with. One or two badman songs ok, but all night will lead to a shooting and death. Now how many people will run to by tickets for that. Same thing he stated here I said a long time ago about dancehall and drill music. Fad is one thing but it has gone on way to long to kill off the dancehall genre. Who brave enough to bring it back!!!!!!🇻🇮🇻🇮🇻🇮🇻🇮

    • @misc7407
      @misc7407 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@geraldgreauxjr.7106 It's actually their time if you know anything about historical and present music trends. Bye hater!

    • @misc7407
      @misc7407 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@geraldgreauxjr.7106And dancehall/reggae/calypso mixes all the same genres as Afrobeat, including using African instrumentations and melodies since their inception. They, like Afrobeats, have not maintained their original form and even when they did, it sounded very similar to some traditional village African music.

    • @paulturner8372
      @paulturner8372 8 месяцев назад

      Acrobeat is everywhere now.

  • @stufftobuy2524
    @stufftobuy2524 Год назад +4

    I have been saying this about dancehall music but Bounty Kill articulate it better than I could. I feel this Bounty Killer, good interview!

  • @seanq9884
    @seanq9884 Год назад +214

    Bounty told us over 10 years ago where dancehall would end up if the culture doesn't change and he was absolutely right. He predicted the future.

    • @Konfidential1
      @Konfidential1 Год назад

      He surely did, nail pon di head 🔨

    • @patriots6552
      @patriots6552 Год назад +6

      What ? Clown this man could of unite dance hall he didn’t yet complaining 😂 make it make sense nuh him name war lard lord ? Who sing more gun song like bounty killer stop being bias this man has said nothing but crap he show the young generation why the need to stay in school

    • @dfaro8453
      @dfaro8453 Год назад +3

      @@patriots6552 what I believe that’s what people were asking for me. Even me I am guilty of that cause when I was a kid I wanted bad man songs. 😅 but time change every 5 to 10 years and now I don’t want to hear that. I just want to party without songs turning into a fight. 😅

    • @upintime
      @upintime Год назад

      Up💯Str8

    • @simonemathew4422
      @simonemathew4422 Год назад +4

      And they were saying he was badminding , smh

  • @thesilentdiva_
    @thesilentdiva_ Год назад +491

    I'm a jamaican and 💯 agree, I've stopped listening to Dancehall for over a decade due to the violence and lyrics degrading women. Afrobeat is relatable and has a vibe, everyone can listen to it. It can be played at every occasion. I'm gutted these young uneducated dancehall artist taking advantage of the road paved by these OG's.
    Schools and industry can't help these hot headed artist. All on their minds is war and quick money. Very very sad!

    • @omoakin5619
      @omoakin5619 Год назад +39

      Dexta Daps just did a mock remix of Ayra Starr song Rush and it was all laced with words like Pum Pum and Cocky etc and Jamaicans were salivating wanting him to release it. That’s exactly the problem. These musicians are a reflection of their audience. It’s easy to point fingers at the artists.
      Dexta took a wholesome song that talks about financial blessings (that can be played in any setting) and decides to sexualize it(and reduce the play power to a minority demographic)
      Nigerians think $$. This music thing is now a business and the world ain’t seen anything yet.

    • @indigoGoddess7
      @indigoGoddess7 Год назад +27

      I'm Canadian-Jamaican and I agree with you. I remember when Pon Di River came out and even Granny RIP was kicking up a little dance. As time went on and Kartel got more recognition, I stopped listening to it. Even to this day, Bob Marley (mixed man) gets more recognition than Dennis Brown and everyone else. Even my generation doesn't appreciate the greats who paved the way for Bob.
      That's also why the dating scene has gotten worse. Guys listen to these songs and make it their lifestyle and it reflects how they treat women. In addition to their mother's not teaching them how to properly treat a woman and respect her.

    • @chevonwilliams9424
      @chevonwilliams9424 Год назад +8

      Same her the moment they start disrespecting women.. I said ok that's it..

    • @Facts-Over-Feelings
      @Facts-Over-Feelings Год назад

      @@omoakin5619 WE DON';T WANT DISGUSTING LYRICS THAT DEGRADE THE BLACK RACE..PERIOD

    • @newhamentertainments1355
      @newhamentertainments1355 Год назад

      Same here I Agree with everything u said last 11 years I've been on the afrobeats hands done I can play it in my car with my kids without worrying about cock key in the belly pumpum this and that 😂😂😂😂

  • @teralecole316
    @teralecole316 Год назад +1

    I didn’t know what to expect when I saw this thumbnail but I’m sure glad that I clicked on to watch. Hands down one of the best interviews! Bounty should be in artist development with his knowledge. Big ups!!

  • @cleopatra5104
    @cleopatra5104 Год назад +26

    Oh man this is such an good interview. He is so on point with everything he said. At the moment I don't listen to the new dance hall its not relatable, too much violence, hypersexualized and full of negative energy. I love 90s and 2000s dancehall, they are legendary. I have been mostly listening and to afrobeats. Although I don't understand everything they say its just easier to vibe with it. Bounty is so right! Hats off to him for highlighting this.

  • @RHWWFT
    @RHWWFT Год назад +93

    Afro beats don't talk about offing people and marrow fly.... Just pure vibes...

    • @Imzz_.6
      @Imzz_.6 Год назад +2

      But you would still listen to American hip hop

    • @RHWWFT
      @RHWWFT Год назад +11

      @@Imzz_.6 I listen to what I like.

    • @FinancialHealth-ku1ry
      @FinancialHealth-ku1ry Год назад

      What is marrow fly?

    • @RHWWFT
      @RHWWFT Год назад

      @@FinancialHealth-ku1ry brains being shot out...

    • @T3kNician
      @T3kNician Год назад

      @Financial Health it means bone marrow flying . Basically people getting shot up

  • @Dzidzeme
    @Dzidzeme Год назад +81

    Afrobeats also does not need to be censored. Most Dancehall does. I love them both❤

  • @HurricaneLisa
    @HurricaneLisa Год назад +1

    I LOVED every word he said and the accent made it that much better. Also I appreciate how the interviewer just allowed him to speak without interrupting.
    Amazing video

  • @smithmccaulsky
    @smithmccaulsky Год назад +17

    He touched on something more deeper than just the music here. I hope people hear the message.
    1❤

  • @bigsweetie25
    @bigsweetie25 Год назад +194

    💯 I wish we could come together and make dancehall great again!🇯🇲🇯🇲

    • @vicgabanna1816
      @vicgabanna1816 Год назад +10

      You need afrobeat to push you not a problem we got you’ll

    • @crownjohnson8153
      @crownjohnson8153 Год назад +14

      As a Nigerian and African I think dance all still stands and noting shaken it . We all should believe that is Afro beat time and that will not stop other genres from flourishing.
      It’s all about time ... 🇳🇬🇯🇲💯🔥🙏🥰🥰

    • @markmendez1014
      @markmendez1014 Год назад +12

      In some African countries like Kenya and Uganda Dancehall and Reggae are still bigger than Afrobeat.
      Afrobeat is like 90s dancehall. Clean and melodic. Maybe dancehall just needs to look backwards for inspiration.

    • @dblessed7860
      @dblessed7860 Год назад +2

      ​@@vicgabanna1816 no

    • @lulzak2591
      @lulzak2591 Год назад +8

      NEVER GONNA HAPPEN... WE JAMAICANS ARE THE BLOODCLOT WORST

  • @alphonsemwamachimj1809
    @alphonsemwamachimj1809 Год назад +8

    That Ye Ye Ye Part Killed This Interview Long Live Dancehall Music....I 💯 percent With You Bounty Killer

    •  Год назад

      Listen...I came to the comment section first. So I read this and I'm like...Ok, he probably made a Burna reference. Me now watchin di interview...😂 I get it now.

  • @LouinelMaximizeJeanprweb
    @LouinelMaximizeJeanprweb Год назад +1

    Great analysis , I hear maturity, wit, consciousness, global insights, outstanding command of the issue. Haiti loves you King! Stay positive!

  • @sherodparkinson4003
    @sherodparkinson4003 Год назад +228

    As a Guyanese who grew up on 90 dance-hall music i fully agree with Bounty. One of the things that made dance-hall strong is when all of the top performers got on one beat...that was killer... under water beat, show time beat, anger management beat, penthouse beat.... bring back those days.

    • @ocampbell1954
      @ocampbell1954 Год назад +18

      The producer is dancehall fell off. Can't tell the last time I heard a great riddim.

    • @chevonwilliams9424
      @chevonwilliams9424 Год назад +18

      Diwali riddim one a the biggest thing

    • @Mikey_Murphy
      @Mikey_Murphy Год назад +1

      @@chevonwilliams9424 🔥🔥🔥

    • @cyproniebascoe1554
      @cyproniebascoe1554 Год назад +2

      Real talk mi general mi last listen to dancehall 2011

    • @MsCarnival
      @MsCarnival Год назад +4

      🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾 💯

  • @thomasbillclintondione5073
    @thomasbillclintondione5073 Год назад +110

    I wish all artists had the chance to watch this. One luv from Senegal 👌🏾🇸🇳

  • @sabotaaajofficial6803
    @sabotaaajofficial6803 Год назад +12

    Best interview for the next 25 years he's not only the best lyricist.. also the best of putting words together, you don't have to be a genius to understand,,, every black artis should see this interview 🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇯🇲🇯🇲🇭🇹

    • @Gotti.G0tEm
      @Gotti.G0tEm Год назад

      Best lyricist, I beg to differ. Vybz Kartel is, bounty killer is right under him though. Vybz Kartel is way more globally known and streamed, the man is behind bars and still creating a global wave musically.

  • @jayh6227
    @jayh6227 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this interview!!. Until now, I never knew BountyKilla Thought beyond the borders of his country. His mind shines here.

  • @essencemil
    @essencemil Год назад +122

    I agree 100%!! I love 90s dancehall, that's the only dancehall I listen to when I do. Afrobeats to me is positive, high vibrational music this is why it's so big now. I'm proud of my Jamaican heritage but when it comes to the music we need to do alot better. Most people don't want to go to a party and hear music that talks about violence and vulgar sex!

  • @gregoryspevack2263
    @gregoryspevack2263 Год назад +162

    Afro-Beats are fun for the most part. It's like we don't see any screw face cuss cuss, in the videos. I still love dancehall, but the Afro-Beats feel is a whole different vibe

    • @PeterL6743
      @PeterL6743 Год назад +57

      Agreed. But there's one thing no one has touched on with Afrobeats. There's no slack lyrics, with dance hall it's violence or sex, not much balance. That's played out now.
      Very little fun, love or pure vibes. The Riddms are good but it's not family friendly. You can play Afrobeats anywhere, a toddler or elderly person can dance, sing along and enjoy. You can't really say that about dancehall and this is where Afrobeats is excelling!!

    • @BeastSpedUP
      @BeastSpedUP Год назад +13

      No gvns or gyal a shake up azz in videos….. they music is just clean

    • @theworkethic
      @theworkethic Год назад

      Afro beats is trash

    • @ariamason9324
      @ariamason9324 Год назад +4

      @Peter Livingstone exactly 💯. And we don't even understand most of the African lyrics. It's the easy positive vibe.

    • @BeastSpedUP
      @BeastSpedUP Год назад

      @AB y’all dance like Jesus is coming compare to Jamaica females….. in Jamaica pxxxy get skin out

  • @angellahall1880
    @angellahall1880 Год назад +12

    You make a lot of sense.. The afro beats have really come alive. I love it and I am a Jamaican. They tell a simple story with expressive dance moves that are great. The Spanish beats are also coming up strong. I think some of the dance hall should listen to some of the beautiful sounds coming out of afrobeats.

    • @OtheDaddy
      @OtheDaddy Год назад +2

      Sister, I am a long time reggae fanatic. I stopped listening to Dancehall around 2000 when that Jamaican Music Genre stopped having any SENSE and MELODY. Bounty is 1000% correct. Nigerian Afrobeat takes a good number of elements fron Ragagamuffin. Listenening to reggae for some time now I easily recognize this.
      I feel sad for the development of JA music. Jamaicans seem to be unaware of how big Reggae is. Dub Music is one such case. In Jamaica almost unnoticed, abroad Dub is massive! Why is Shaggy so sucessful? He keeps it simple and melodic!
      Jamaica used to have DJs like sand grains in the dessert, My favourite being I-Roy. And now? What happened? And why has the Island been killing so many of its artistes? Slim Smith, ..., Prince Fari, ...., Style Scott, all murdered!
      Africa. Many Jamaicans don't want to see what in essence they are. They hate relating to Africa. How foolish! In contrast the Sisters and Brothers from and in the hills embrace their Africanness and they have a different attitude. Respect to head boy Mutabaruka! Many of the young artists are ignorant about when the main market of reggae music was Nigeria. Where did U-ROY register a huge success with the classic album "Natty Rebel"? In Africa! Africa is more than a market for reggae. It is home mentally and physically to every black person on the globe. And the earlier Jamaicans internalize this the better. It is a world of a difference between Burning Spear, Bob, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Freddie McGregor, Johnny Clarke, I-ROY, ...., and people like Vybz Kartel and the rest of the bunch.
      Lee Scratch Perry! King Tubbys! Black Ark Studio! Channel One Sounds! Skengdon! ... Henry Junjo Lawes! Gussie Clarke! Roots! Rockers! Lovers Rock! Dub! ... I wish Jamaicans were fully aware of what that tiny Island has given the world musically and thus what they need to do with that heavy a legacy.

  • @TuttusTelevision
    @TuttusTelevision Год назад +13

    Dancehall is not stuck in Jamaica, it's worldwide and it definitely influences afrobeats 100%

    • @TuttusTelevision
      @TuttusTelevision 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mikem4481 don't be silly

    • @Beatstockpile127
      @Beatstockpile127 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@TuttusTelevision As an old man I can tell you Afrobeat started in the 60s. What we hear today is a more modern version of Afrobeat, but its origins are back in the 1960s.

    • @BlessedAdams-yo2ww
      @BlessedAdams-yo2ww 10 месяцев назад +3

      All music (Riddim) came from Africa

    • @christopherugo9710
      @christopherugo9710 9 месяцев назад +2

      Stop playing..Dancehall originated from the motherland Africa..the Jamaicans and large parts of the Caribbeans are from Africa.

    • @OtheDaddy
      @OtheDaddy 8 месяцев назад

      African music genres always inluenced each other. New Afrobeat is very much influenced by Raggamuffin and reggae, not ths foolish "Dancehall". I am a longtime listener of reggae music but that which is coming out of Jamaica in the past 2 decades called dancehall is unbearable. How can you make music without melodies? And the oversexed videos.
      Do they listen to music from their own National and international legends like I-Roy, U-Roy, Big Youth, Dillinger, Supercat, Nicodemus, Cutty Ranks, ,,,,? Or music from Frankie "Dancehall" Paul, Michael Palmer, "Jux" Junior Delgado, ....?
      It is telling, that instead of honouring the many Stars that this tiny Island has produced, many of these stars have instead been murdered: Style Scott, Prince Fari, ...., Slim Smith, .... Where is the respect?
      I wish the Jamaican youth can understand, that no genre has influenced World music like Reggae. And what was the main ingredient? These artists, in general identified with Africa. Today no one below the hills of Jamaica wants to feel African. If black Jamaicans refuse to feel African then what will they identify culturally to? And so what will they produce?

  • @DrWuDoc
    @DrWuDoc Год назад +58

    No lies told - 90s dancehall was the best, full of creativity

  • @goldwealth2402
    @goldwealth2402 Год назад +81

    20 yrs from now this interview gonna be more relevant

  • @philb.1502
    @philb.1502 Год назад +11

    Shout out to Bounty! Wise words were spoken. We need more unity as Black people across the board. Jamaicans have to be more united and have that togetherness.

  • @tebogopekane1418
    @tebogopekane1418 Год назад +6

    Bounty speaks the truth. 90's Dancehall was on 🔥. Shaba Ranks, Chaka Demars & Piers, Patra, etc brings back many memories. Respect to Bounty. Respect from South Africa 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦

  • @PastorBlessU
    @PastorBlessU Год назад +178

    As a Jamaican it hurts to see other nations, even Albanians Romanians and Bulgarians..pick up the sound run with it and get successful whilst the originators cannot find it in their hearts to unite..."if you don't use it you will lose it"

    • @nsudatta-roy8154
      @nsudatta-roy8154 Год назад +7

      That comes down to race.

    • @BlackGirlUnsolved
      @BlackGirlUnsolved Год назад

      It’s because of competition, but once it hits America, they’ll profit the hell out of it and you’ll be left fucked like a whole bunch of black groups in 90s and dating back.

    • @yoriminamotobey1139
      @yoriminamotobey1139 Год назад +12

      @@nsudatta-roy8154 Um, no. The person mentioned Jamaican, Albanian, Romanians etc…. That is Nationality!

    • @nsudatta-roy8154
      @nsudatta-roy8154 Год назад +1

      @@yoriminamotobey1139 Umm, no! The thing about life is that we all have our own perspectives.

    • @joshbonds0073
      @joshbonds0073 Год назад

      @@yoriminamotobey1139 Jamaicans are our brothers their the same race. It’s a problem only if it’s another race. Stop fighting like your slave master wants you to

  • @chrisdadda
    @chrisdadda Год назад +75

    Wicked interview. I’m Jamaican and love my old school dancehall and the singers. Today’s dancehall is not cutting it for me.

  • @sickandloose
    @sickandloose Год назад +2

    Much respect to this side of you Killa. You're definitely a student of your industry

  • @markkawanguzi6814
    @markkawanguzi6814 Год назад

    May the almighty bless yah for louding it out. In each and everyway

  • @foempire5216
    @foempire5216 Год назад +197

    I am an African, from The Gambia. Bounty Killa is truly and very right about dancehall. The energy of dancehall is no match for afrobeats, not even for any other musical platform. Dancehall yesterday and dancehall are on a different road map. He talked about the artist fighting each other, which is going to be the real downfall of dancehall music because they will lose focus of the real picture for the future of what the elders have worked very hard for.

    • @michaelldn
      @michaelldn Год назад +12

      Same I’m an African and I love dancehall, i want to see it get the same world wide love Afrobeats is getting. Maybe a new outlook on how to deliver their message will help the music get there

    • @coleyounger6498
      @coleyounger6498 Год назад +8

      Speak for yourself. I prefer Roots Reggae from my people. DanceHall now is trash but nothing can top 80's DanceHall.

    • @nellydavis7645
      @nellydavis7645 Год назад +5

      @@michaelldnI believe they got that love… it’s just that Afro beats is the new thing now.

    • @plizo69
      @plizo69 Год назад +3

      Dancehall is equivalent to Newyork rap music in the 80’s.. its was the Mecca. But, with the shift in time. The world continues to evolve. Once Newyork lost it, it never returned. New Orlaeans has it , the Miami, then Atlanta . It will never go back to Jamica.. Africa is a continent of 56 countries. Dance hall is gone never to return

    • @andreedwards9893
      @andreedwards9893 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/eL0RWh6xJqs/видео.html

  • @ronaldthompson2144
    @ronaldthompson2144 Год назад +100

    I am so impressed with these latest interviews with Bounty… His points are on target and his arguments and analysis are incredibly invaluable. He has transitioned from a DJ into an ardent Musician. Congratulations. Bright and mature 💥

    • @justingreenidge9684
      @justingreenidge9684 Год назад +5

      Bounty knows what’s he talking about having expose most the top dancehall artist.

  • @ToyaG86
    @ToyaG86 Год назад

    Thank you Bounty, love how you just kept it real. But said with love and no animosity.

  • @NICKEYBLACK35
    @NICKEYBLACK35 Год назад

    This is a great discussion. Very profound.

  • @handsoneverthing3759
    @handsoneverthing3759 Год назад +79

    We need more bounty interviews like this. It'd classic

    • @courtspromo3art728
      @courtspromo3art728 Год назад +1

      Absolutely brilliant.

    • @patriots6552
      @patriots6552 Год назад

      😂 you have to be a Dunce to agree to anything this man said

    • @patriots6552
      @patriots6552 Год назад

      @@courtspromo3art728 nothing was brilliant about this interview he contracted his self so many times , dance hall artist stupid because they have no TOPIC what??? Yey yeah that’s not a topic fool , bounty killer have a big roll to play why dancehall mash up

    • @patriots6552
      @patriots6552 Год назад

      @@courtspromo3art728 Dunce batt , listen how he use his words if you could of read and write you would know he talking straight crap

    • @bobnewhart4318
      @bobnewhart4318 Год назад

      @@patriots6552 100% facts as a grown adult listen to the way he speaks and butchers the language

  • @SeekingTheTruth1
    @SeekingTheTruth1 Год назад +117

    You can tell he had this on his heart. He spoke the entire time without the interviewer asking another question. Dancehall artists today have to recognize that up until the late 2000’s to 2010’s Dancehall was a big genre in the world. The new artists haven’t pushed it forward and they don’t seem to care.

    • @trillnyc5397
      @trillnyc5397 Год назад +1

      This just not y’all time no more

    • @nicholasgreen339
      @nicholasgreen339 Год назад +2

      The new school guys r not trying to be original
      To be honest the 1980s and early to mid 90s is the last eras of originality
      Afrobeats has the energy dancehall used to have
      Maybe they need to teach the next generation how to make riddims
      The other problems is dancehal
      Was built on sound system culture
      And live performances
      Years before the artist were given the chance to make songs
      After years of live performances the artist new how to work the stage and move the crowds
      ..
      Meaning by the time they made records they had the energy to be able to make music that is still being played 50 years later
      It has to do with the radio stations in Jamaica as well
      They don't promote
      New artists who need promotion
      Only promote them when they have made it themselves

    • @trillnyc5397
      @trillnyc5397 Год назад +5

      @@nicholasgreen339 Afro beats will never have the energy dancehall have how dare you … Afro beats artist say clearlyThey
      Learn from dancehall stop it …. & the 1990s & 1980s are gone … Dj’s ain’t learn no training from coming on stage … Jamaican people been confident & doing dubs and singing in circles in corners and dj battling till dj cool herc bought it to Bronx & create rap & hip hop … you need to know your history cus what said up there is foolishness

    • @thec5875
      @thec5875 Год назад +6

      @@trillnyc5397 then why are you not running the game now if you are soo confident hahahaha...

    • @andreedwards9893
      @andreedwards9893 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/eL0RWh6xJqs/видео.html

  • @iamguylaire247
    @iamguylaire247 Год назад

    Dropping such gems

  • @quentintaylor1016
    @quentintaylor1016 Год назад

    Great to hear the legend talk about technical aspects of music

  • @JohnAnderson-bq2ui
    @JohnAnderson-bq2ui Год назад +54

    Bounty killer you talking facts ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @dawiskid187
    @dawiskid187 Год назад +100

    I’m American and bounty killer is on point I’m still banging 2000 dancehall it’s easy to understand & relatable..

    • @criticalthinking2018
      @criticalthinking2018 Год назад +8

      The stuff from the 80's especially 90's was the best

    • @lawboss9962
      @lawboss9962 Год назад +2

      The best era to date ✊🏽💯

    • @Abstract.Noir414
      @Abstract.Noir414 Год назад

      I dont think it has anything to do with being able to understand because non spanish speakers listen to reggeton

    • @dawiskid187
      @dawiskid187 Год назад +1

      @@Abstract.Noir414 Reggeton comical the Jamaicans should sue all these pirates..

    • @michael43567
      @michael43567 Год назад

      Does sean paul count as dancehall?

  • @MarciaSantos-ox1fk
    @MarciaSantos-ox1fk Год назад +82

    Fully agree Bounty- nobody could’ve said it better. “Afro artists don’t fight each other”- real talk 💯 %

    • @babyhoneybunch5547
      @babyhoneybunch5547 Год назад +15

      Who told you that? Burna boy and Davido are not cool . Africans just don’t want to hear violence in their songs especially when it comes to our enjoyment. Plus our parents and grandparents listen to the music, so they can’t be insulting or promoting violence.

    • @MarciaSantos-ox1fk
      @MarciaSantos-ox1fk Год назад +7

      @@babyhoneybunch5547 I guess you missed the quotation marks 😒

    • @inQueH
      @inQueH Год назад

      @@babyhoneybunch5547 burns talking bout drugs. Your granny and mother rocking to that 🤣🤦🏾‍♀️

    • @blackmagik6544
      @blackmagik6544 Год назад +2

      Yea cause them afro beat man will cape for the white man but won't pay homage to all the dancehall artist who came before them.

    • @1dazaraza1
      @1dazaraza1 Год назад

      🧢

  • @clarenscourtois8927
    @clarenscourtois8927 Год назад +1

    Topic - Argument - Melody - technicality on low - thanks sensei!

  • @sabotaaajofficial6803
    @sabotaaajofficial6803 Год назад +1

    Say no more legend always love and respect from Haiti 🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇯🇲🇯🇲

  • @Ona176
    @Ona176 Год назад +28

    About time someone touch these topic that why people don’t like bounty killa because he speak 🗣 truth and fact, Bigup Bounty Killa

  • @juliamcghie2018
    @juliamcghie2018 Год назад +69

    I love the Rodney Pryce edition of Bounty. He always has something to teach

  • @jesselbleu
    @jesselbleu Год назад

    There were so many points made in this video!! I wish I could like it 100x!

  • @whoisOldboy
    @whoisOldboy Год назад +3

    The first time I heard Bounty Killah I literally got shivers. Never heard such a voice bussin out such an amount of energy. The "Guns out" clash album netween him and Beenie Man is a treasure of my youth. Still play it to this day.

  • @nancyandanias3973
    @nancyandanias3973 Год назад +14

    This is why I love this man!!! Thank you so much for this interview!!!!

  • @bellymus1
    @bellymus1 Год назад +83

    One thing I wish was that they could have the era of One Riddim, and 5-10 different artists on it. It leveled up everyone and created a better cohesive vibe.

    • @mattblack9720
      @mattblack9720 Год назад +4

      💯

    • @Beatstockpile127
      @Beatstockpile127 10 месяцев назад

      That's a good idea but it will never happen again like that because it's too easy for a teenager to create a riddim in his bedroom and get an artist to ride on top of it. There is no need to share riddims anymore.

  • @jeanmarc3146
    @jeanmarc3146 Год назад

    Preach ... Bounty be dropping gems. Topics ! Seasoning that sonic food with ptsd, anger, fear or better vybes. Tired of war reports & lust in lyrics to be honest. I hope ogz will lead the ways with undisputed bangers from young producteurs. They have so many songs in the volt that never been heard, arranged, remixed ...

  • @keekeecomrie9292
    @keekeecomrie9292 Год назад

    Great interview 🔥

  • @joeficent50tvreactions71
    @joeficent50tvreactions71 Год назад +87

    He’s so right. Everything he said is spot on. Dancehall is losing its good vibe energy.

    • @boobiephilips97
      @boobiephilips97 Год назад +10

      Cause the new artists them selling the soul an making the music sound like drill music when back then it wasn't like that

    • @lulzak2591
      @lulzak2591 Год назад +1

      lOST FOREVER

    • @patriots6552
      @patriots6552 Год назад

      😂 y’all just stupid as bounty killer he said skeng and niki minaj taking over skeng who sing bout poping molly like who he talking about if he keep contracting every thing he said 😂 plz listen this man need to go back to school

    • @omoakin5619
      @omoakin5619 Год назад +2

      Dexta Daps just did a mock remix of Ayra Starr song Rush and it was all laced with words like Pum Pum and Cocky etc and Jamaicans were salivating wanting him to release it. That’s exactly the problem. These musicians are a reflection of their audience. It’s easy to point fingers at the artists.
      Dexta took a wholesome song that talks about financial blessings (that can be played in any setting) and decides to sexualize it(and reduce the play power to a minority demographic)
      Nigerians think $$. This music thing is now a business and the world ain’t seen anything yet.

  • @KingSimonPresents
    @KingSimonPresents Год назад +23

    Bounty Killa has definitely been a significant part of Dancehall. May Dancehall unite and become great again

  • @p7272
    @p7272 Год назад

    From New Jersey... I'm 56 and he hit it on the head when he mentioned 90's Dancehall!!!

  • @marcusdavidson5776
    @marcusdavidson5776 Год назад +14

    Afrobeat,Reggae and Dancehall for life 🙏🏾✌🏾❤️❤️❤️

  • @margueritaclunis8170
    @margueritaclunis8170 Год назад +16

    Very honest interview from the impressive Mr Price well said about the music scene. Thanks for all you do for the poor people of Jamaica as a fellow Jamaican am very proud that someone put themselves out to help. Hope things change soon on the travelling scene. Well done sir.

  • @marvelouss719
    @marvelouss719 Год назад +9

    BK you are correct. The pandemic has fueled the emergence of Afrobeats. Globally, we needed a reason to smile and dance and Afrobeats has risen to the occasion. Afrobeats also comprises multiple languages and dialects, but the rhythms connect with people all over the world.. One more point, recently Afrobeats was a part of an NBA event and several black Americans said they couldn't understand the Afrobeats performers. I said, who cares, just dance and be happy.

  • @vfergi8196
    @vfergi8196 Год назад +1

    Bounty is one of the realest inna da business.. everything he said was well analyzed and worded 👊🏼🔥🔥🔥why my 90s dancehall stays on replay

    • @ernestfreeman8079
      @ernestfreeman8079 Год назад

      We cannot deny bounty killer is a great artist, but we can't keep talking about 90's here like it's not over 30 years ago, everything changes, and it's either you change with the times or get left behind complaining, it's 2023 for crying out it's like saying we should still be listening to 2pac instead of j Cole 😂😂 adjust

  • @lmnop636
    @lmnop636 Год назад +61

    Yes man! 90's dance hall is everything!! I love it❤

  • @geemon3y23__4
    @geemon3y23__4 Год назад +92

    POWERFUL‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️
    All these people disrespecting Killa during the Vegas war need to realize this man is a walking Legend a major pillar in dancehall history Vegas can not be compared no disrespect to Vegas a good talent. One of the greatest ever to do it, this what Vegas want to get cancelled out of dancehall SMH.

    • @bongonice
      @bongonice Год назад +5

      Real talk

    • @andreedwards9893
      @andreedwards9893 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/eL0RWh6xJqs/видео.html

    • @johngrant6032
      @johngrant6032 Год назад +1

      Mr Vegas could NEVER EVER EVER WALK IN MR. BOUNTY KILLA SHOES OR SHADOW ...

  • @isaacjoshua4643
    @isaacjoshua4643 Год назад

    Much love from Uganda❤️❤️🇺🇬
    I totally agree with bounty

  • @williamshakespeare9815
    @williamshakespeare9815 Год назад +6

    It's not a competition. We should be proud that black music is doing well.

  • @rmak2950
    @rmak2950 Год назад +50

    Teach dem professor Bounty. These young dancehall artistes ego bigger than the genre. That's why dancehall is diminishing.

    • @djsevenone340
      @djsevenone340 Год назад +1

      Dancehall is not diminishing. I'm in the States and we rock dancehall tough. I even have it on my channel even tho I stopped adding videos to it. Maybe later in the future when I have time.

    • @dancehalljamaicaworld4645
      @dancehalljamaicaworld4645 Год назад

      Suh yuh support Bounty when him seh dancehall artists stupid?

    • @clintrennie7707
      @clintrennie7707 Год назад

      ​@@dancehalljamaicaworld4645 killer is right call it as it is,we behave like these artist are GODS them need to do better

    • @dahbajanman7044
      @dahbajanman7044 Год назад

      @@djsevenone340 Do you understand reggaeton is bigger than Dancehall if i was to judge Bad bunny's net worth vs any Dancehall artist?

    • @djsevenone340
      @djsevenone340 Год назад

      @@dahbajanman7044 Who cares? Where did the Spanish get it from lol? Besides there are more Spanish speaking people than there people in the Caribbeans as a whole.Just saying. And reggaeton is not the same as reggae nor dancehall. It is totally different in beat and cadence. Take Daddy Yankee for example cause I never heard of Bad Bunny nor his music. But I will check it out now and see how I like it or think about it. Reggae to me is in its own league, same as dancehall. Dancehall is like hip-hop and Reggae is like RnB it just touches the soul and relaxes you. Dancehall make you want to go shoot some shet LMAO. It's a joke I make but you get the point.

  • @camcol1000
    @camcol1000 Год назад +46

    Bounty, Buju , Capleton, Beenie Man, Shaggy etc... The biggest names and the most experience yet it would seem as if no one wants guidance or follow any blueprints as to which direction to take the music. Drop the ego and analyze the thing! That's why these DJs have had such longevity

    • @gordonmckenzie2920
      @gordonmckenzie2920 Год назад +1

      For real, some of these yutes are know it alls, surrounded by scammers and murderers, comfortable with the cheers of 200 ppl. AfroBeats is clicking on 2.5 billion streams monthly...different mindset, different results

  • @misha2929
    @misha2929 Год назад

    Very well said!!!!!! ❤❤❤

  • @chrisbullock6477
    @chrisbullock6477 Год назад +6

    That's what made newer artist like Koffee so popular and engaging. Her style and different style and the songs she made was a breath of fresh air.

  • @dwightrichards3010
    @dwightrichards3010 Год назад +18

    Best dancehall artiste eva. U r irreplaceable.

  • @anthonymcken6050
    @anthonymcken6050 Год назад +20

    Dancehall music is the heartbeat of Jamaica and will never die in our souls passed down from our ancestors. The problem is that society as a whole is so dumbed down that we don't have many great story tellers today. I love you Bounty you are the truth and that is why you will always be my favourite dancehall artist of all time.

    • @timcool251
      @timcool251 11 месяцев назад

      Your Ancestors were from Africa where Afrobeats are from. It's all African.

  • @2dramaNaijatv
    @2dramaNaijatv Год назад

    He is right. Music is global. You have to make music for the world Ii still rock my dance hall music, love my 🇯🇲 family. Big love from 🇳🇬

  • @soljitsusoljah427
    @soljitsusoljah427 Год назад

    This is a very dope break down!!

  • @swaggarian9618
    @swaggarian9618 Год назад +5

    So happy this legend is still here. He talking that real right now 🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @coletteyoung9881
    @coletteyoung9881 Год назад +4

    Respect so true smh I would love to see the day we all unite together as one people.🇯🇲🇯🇲

  • @4Bashment
    @4Bashment Год назад

    Great Interview

  • @ruffsidedesigns2083
    @ruffsidedesigns2083 Год назад

    could have been longer...great interview!!

  • @joanmcvytie2333
    @joanmcvytie2333 Год назад +4

    Real good interview, Bounty hit the nail on the head straight 💯💚🇯🇲💯

  • @MacZaro144
    @MacZaro144 Год назад +6

    Bounty's speech is contextually universal and can be applied to the broader issues of life. Alot of lessons to be learnt here. Facts and Truth. Plz bless him Lord🙏

  • @abbiudabluez1750
    @abbiudabluez1750 Год назад

    I love this discussion, and Bounty is actually right... the 80s' dancehall music was a vibe bruh...
    Love your show 🇰🇪

  • @andresimpson7709
    @andresimpson7709 Год назад

    This was powerful bigup ya self Killer

  • @josephjeremaya2170
    @josephjeremaya2170 Год назад +7

    Dancehall is still Stuck in his Country.... i felt that one... dont give up Brothers... keep pushing it .

  • @rhoanmannings72
    @rhoanmannings72 Год назад +17

    Bounty is my idol ! Dancehall is more than a money making institution. Dancehall teach youth a lot about their roots and culture, we can learn from the good and the bad. Each man ad is own experience, input and contribution. Bounty killer contributions is huge he is the giant and titan that this younger generation should learn from. Bounty you need to start your own organization to educate and unify dancehall.

  • @P4JJP
    @P4JJP Год назад

    Very good points 🏆

  • @jetted_out
    @jetted_out Год назад +1

    From America and love both. Have 400 songs of afrobeat and dancehall. Love chronic law from Jamaica. And kizz Daniel from Africa

  • @petergreen5337
    @petergreen5337 Год назад +13

    Well said and well REASONED. From a man who knows.

  • @dwightrichards3010
    @dwightrichards3010 Год назад +20

    Killa reasonable ability unique. 4 some1 who some say is dunce he makes a lot of us wise up n feed us with a lot of knowledge musically. I really appreciate u killa. U were made 4 this.

  • @goldenbaby3608
    @goldenbaby3608 Год назад +1

    Love you Bounty Killer...Still bumping "Magnet and the Steel"
    in 2023....

  • @t.o.o.smooth5870
    @t.o.o.smooth5870 Год назад +1

    It's good to see a longer version of this commentary. The short made it seem like he was purely hatin' on afro beats.
    Dancehall has some classic songs that will be relevant for an eternity. Afro Beats is what the new generation is feelin', but it has a bubble-gum feel to it. I can't see many artists or songs becoming timeless classics.