As a Jamaican bro u are absolutely right bro like i hate this current generation of dancehall bro. Have to be listening to older songs. Dancehall needs structure there isn’t any. Dancehall dead bomboclaat dead!!!
I can't thank you enough for making me discover 'nuthin Nuh go so' again.. I grew up listening to this song but didn't know the name or any of the lyrics... I have been trying to discover the song for years now.. I can't tell you how many random 90's playlists I have streamed hoping it'd come up somewhere.. Thanks a lot 🙏🙏🙏🙏
Dancehall has inspired the whole world even many of our African artists like Stonebwoy, Burna Boy, Flavour, Shatta Wale, Dallas Bantan, Redsan and many more but the truth is Dancehall needs to make way it’s Afrobeat time now
@@tylergriffin2499 yeah man I know it's not all African but the most famous do that it's not like they're making bad or coping Dancehall was just part of how they're grow up And Jamaica and Africa alot in common anyway compared to black Americans for example
I have been listening to dancehall music since the early 90s and must say,since the last good era of dancehall which was movado,kartel and alkaline and even they weren't as good as the early 2000s and 90s,dancehall music within the last 5 years is total rubbish ,it's has lost its flavour and essence smh it's a shame
Why dance hall seem to have repetitive beats is cos the dj’s made a rhythm and it was given out to different artists to put their lines on it an that’s the tradition on dancehall
And that's one of the most beautiful things about dancehall. Everyone gets a chance to share their talent on a riddim. Not only that, BUT you never get sick of the riddim. Ever because there are multiple songs on it. I'm sad my favorite is dying out.
@@keturahgolding2368 yes that was indeed its 0riginal Vibe !!! eveyr0ne gets t0 put s0me fire 0n the beat and an0ther great thing 0f that was the VIP's 0f th0se Dancehall Beats. it was like RELIVING THE BEAT FRESHLY AGAIN.
I do agree for the most part , this new dancehall stream has not really caught the attention of its own fans for a while now , the sound needs to join on the new afro-sounds like Afrobeats and Amapiano , they will win I promise you but as always artist will be shy or afraid to go all the way to explore this new sound .This mentality of fighting what is " Hot Now " is wrong and a waste of time and effort , you wont win in most cases , join it and take advantage that's my advice to dancehall artists .
After loving this for 36 years I found myself listening 95 % of the time the old music and is not only for memories, I constantly looking for something new from dancehall and their is mostly nothing, I think this afrobeats is the new thing for the next 5 and more years, so yes dancehall is dead until resurrection.
For me personally, popcaan is dancehall, he introduced me to dancehall and since then it’s almost the only genre I’m listening to because I fell in love with it. I mean I am still a teenager and I am not from Jamaica, but I still grew up knowing who Gyptian, Sean Paul, Beenie Man, Serani or Charly Black etc. were but for me personally my definition of dancehall are Popcaan, Vybz Kartel, Mavado, (still Gyptian !), Alkaline, Tommy Lee Sparta, Busy Signal, Dexta Daps, Jah Vinci, Jahmiel, Vershon, Masicka, Shenseaa, Demarco, Christopher Martin and Teejay. They talk about Love, Money, Sex, Life and God. And these artists are the "new" generation from the dancehall most people used to know, but I actually like how dancehall evolved. I think it’s nothing wrong with it.. but I understand that when you are older and you didn’t grew up with these artist, you don’t “identify “ yourself with these new artist anymore because it’s not the same vibe and beats anymore…
Vybz Kartel killed dancehall. His extremely explicit music paved way for the genre standard. This heavily turned off audiences who were interested in the less explicit dancehall.
Vybz didn't kill Dancehall! Dancehall started dying when Trap influence came in and that was about 2018. The first big hit was Rygin Kings Tuff, and then Squashes Trending in 2019. These in my opinion are the songs that influenced this new generation of Dancehall. I blame producers and not Vybz Kartel. We need more riddims from producers like Chimey Records, and Anju Blaxx. These producers are modern yet still keep the base of Dancehall.
Vybz was popular in Caribbean community but had no cross market value. His whole shtick was adding hip hop swag and lyricism with content about sex and guns to dancehall which might be eye opener to fans of the genre but to the wider community who already got that via Hip hop, he didn't bring anything new. International community wanted that tropical warm and friendly party vibe music Jamaica was known for, but since dancehall artists think locally and not globally, so the decline began.
@@keturahgolding2368 he kinda did. even though he was a great artist he basically set the bar for success real low. he couldn't travel to much places cause he was banned from a lot of places and that caused many new artists to feel as though they didn't need to be international to be great plus the bleaching thing made him look like a clown to many foreigners who heard about him. trap dancehall just dealt the death blow.
As you rightly said different genres of music are going through different stages in their "lifecycle". I don't think or believe dancehall music is dead because there are too many of us westerners, who still love to listen to that type of music. I also believe why Burna Boy is rocking the international scene is because his music is more synced with reggae and dancehall to a certain extent. When I heard his name, I honestly thought he was Jamaican, but it was only this year 2023, I became familiar to him and started to watch his videos and listened to his songs. He never meant anything to me before that, because we in the West, were maybe uncomfortable with music coming from Africa (because we can't understand the dialect), but Tik-Tok and RUclips have enabled us to have a better appreciation for songs and entertainers coming from Mother Africa. As always, I was in stitches listening to your commentary and watching your visuals😂😂😂; job well done❤❤👏👏👏
Год назад+3
Lol don't take your ignorance for a something common... African artists have been winning grammys and touring since the 1950's...from Myriam makeba to fela kuti, oumou sangare, salif keita, Mory Kante, angélique kidjoKhaled, magic system, psquare, Alpha blondy ..i can go on for an entire day.... Google is your friend please document yourself.
@Négusfirst the only person on the list that I recognize is Miriam Makeba. Remember the world's richest economy, which is America, the beautiful and as an American, you don't expect us to know or be familiar with what you're saying. The truth is that the average American would never relate to what you stated because it would mean nothing to us. We now know about Wizz Kid and the rest. Obviously, Africans who emigrated to the US would know this but not generational Americans. We are not apologizing for not knowing your history, lol. We are struggling to remember what the capital cities are in different states. Do you really think that we would know your artists, really? lol lol. Don't humor me.
No sh*t dumxxx. Jews created a media empire that extends globally then funded and controlled black American music which was exported everywhere via Jews infrastructure. Same thing with Caribbean music which was irrelevant till artists started tapping into American networks all ran by Jews. Same thing with West Africans who tap into American Jewish infrastructure which is exposing their music globally. If you don’t have the means to export your music no one will know it, that’s common sense if you aren’t a Down syndrome child brain
Problem with most Americans is this idea the world begins and ends in America or the world revolves around you- reason why the rest of the world see you lot as ignorant and other words I can't write here.... Europeans are more enlightened and exposed than you people, they know what's going on in the rest of the world- they've been vibing to African music for decades while you people thought Africa was one huge jungle with the inhabitants running around naked throwing spears at each other, lol. I bet you there are some in America today who still think that way about Africa. . In this Internet age there's no excuse for such ignorance; there's a huge world out there, go out and explore and wean yourself of the mentality that US is the centre of the universe which it is not....
How can dancehall be dead if afrobeats incorporate reggae/ dancehall to their music. Thats what i like about afrobeats its taken all melanin people music and put it together. Thtas what i hear when i hear afrobeats . Just because a genre isnt as popular as another at the moment doesn't mean its dead. As long as someone is making dancehall and someone is listening then dancehall still alive.
Some people want the death of dancehall, nothing has to make way for another genre to grow. Different tastes for different people. Dancehall is a space not necessarily a genre. Rap, afro beats etc were inspired by Jamaican djs so it lives through that also. Politics in the industry also stifles the growth of dancehall.
Bro every full of repetition, even afro beats, it lacks substance like burna boy, said it has no consciousness behind it, on top of that it soon be stolen like hip hop today, I was watching a few videos and saw Chinese influences, European influences, dude y'all soon lose that shit
Dancehall in 80s eak a mouse, yellowman, burro banton, nicodemus, early b.sugar minnot, ranking dread, popa toyan jose wales sister nancy frankie paul the old veterans massive
its exactly THAT they klled it with their stupid trap bullshit n0t that i h8 trap and fusi0ns im a pr0ducer myself but i deff d0 n0t agree with exchanging the REAL DANCEHALL RIDDIM beat structure with hip h0p. LEt jamaica have its 0wn s0und ... and let America have their hiph0p....
Afrobeats is the father of all black music, it has so much genres, melodies, rhythms, sounds, languages, diphthongs to last a life time, and its just barely scratching the surface.
foolishness, just 15-20 years ago there was only zouk similar to to afrobeat and it sounded very cheap (not to say afrobeat is a complex music), while dancehall was a ruling genre, there was NO african music that was ever bigger than reggae or dancehall or even merengue. just research music and you will see there was NOTHING comparable. illuminati put in afrobeat to dumb down the masses and replace political dancehall (capleton sizzla bounty etc)
Hip hop created before afro beats the hell you talking about even dancehall came before afro beats, jazz, soca, reggae, Rap before Italian cultures got mixed into create gangsta rap, which hip-hop is the biggest of all genres and will continue to be the biggest based on the influence, its so influential that the very dressing of people is influenced by it the concept of DRIP, SWAG. So I don't know what the hell you smoking but stop
As a Jamaican bro u are absolutely right bro like i hate this current generation of dancehall bro. Have to be listening to older songs. Dancehall needs structure there isn’t any. Dancehall dead bomboclaat dead!!!
I swear the riddim dem have all the same beat and drum sample ,so boring
Today's dancehall music is total BS thanks to artiste like skeng and skillibeng BS ARTISTE
@@Og74223trap influence annoying beats.
I can't thank you enough for making me discover 'nuthin Nuh go so' again..
I grew up listening to this song but didn't know the name or any of the lyrics... I have been trying to discover the song for years now..
I can't tell you how many random 90's playlists I have streamed hoping it'd come up somewhere..
Thanks a lot 🙏🙏🙏🙏
Dancehall has inspired the whole world even many of our African artists like Stonebwoy, Burna Boy, Flavour, Shatta Wale, Dallas Bantan, Redsan and many more but the truth is Dancehall needs to make way it’s Afrobeat time now
What are you talking about?
@@tylergriffin2499 he is not Wrong Since 2010 every African club/party has a dancehall song 😅😂
@@Apman99 not all African artists ?
@@tylergriffin2499 yeah man I know it's not all African but the most famous do that it's not like they're making bad or coping Dancehall was just part of how they're grow up And Jamaica and Africa alot in common anyway compared to black Americans for example
Dancehall and reggae set the trend for you’ll. So don’t be ungrateful. Jamaica is a little island people keep comparing to a continent. Smh
I'm from New Zealand, the only dancehall I listen too is from 90's and early 2000s! Such a vibe 🔥
I have been listening to dancehall music since the early 90s and must say,since the last good era of dancehall which was movado,kartel and alkaline and even they weren't as good as the early 2000s and 90s,dancehall music within the last 5 years is total rubbish ,it's has lost its flavour and essence smh it's a shame
Dancehall music is wild! However there’s still a portion of the population that subtly enjoy dancehall(with AirPods) no one has to know 🤣
More than comedy show 🤣, such a unique talent 👏. Thanks bro for putting smiles on my face 😅
Why dance hall seem to have repetitive beats is cos the dj’s made a rhythm and it was given out to different artists to put their lines on it an that’s the tradition on dancehall
And that's one of the most beautiful things about dancehall. Everyone gets a chance to share their talent on a riddim. Not only that, BUT you never get sick of the riddim. Ever because there are multiple songs on it. I'm sad my favorite is dying out.
@@keturahgolding2368 yes that was indeed its 0riginal Vibe !!! eveyr0ne gets t0 put s0me fire 0n the beat and an0ther great thing 0f that was the VIP's 0f th0se Dancehall Beats. it was like RELIVING THE BEAT FRESHLY AGAIN.
Sadly, these current dancehall reggae artists are horrible. Why?. Horrible lyrics an stage performance.
I do agree for the most part , this new dancehall stream has not really caught the attention of its own fans for a while now , the sound needs to join on the new afro-sounds like Afrobeats and Amapiano , they will win I promise you but as always artist will be shy or afraid to go all the way to explore this new sound .This mentality of fighting what is " Hot Now " is wrong and a waste of time and effort , you wont win in most cases , join it and take advantage that's my advice to dancehall artists .
Wtf is “Afro sounds”
@@Tu51ndBl4d3
Err Sounds from Africa duh.
Why??I think it's ok if we have a null period Nothing in life last forever,but dead?Naaa
Sean Paul's music was majorly influenced by Super Cat
I can never skip one of your video
Ur good
Much love bro 🔥
Same here💯
After loving this for 36 years I found myself listening 95 % of the time the old music and is not only for memories, I constantly looking for something new from dancehall and their is mostly nothing, I think this afrobeats is the new thing for the next 5 and more years, so yes dancehall is dead until resurrection.
*Head Kontrolla killed this..*
📌 thoroughly researched like a Netflix documentary
📌 nostalgic samples of childhood jams
📌 seamless storyline
☺️💃🏽💃🏽😃💖💖💯💯
Broooooooooo…. Thanks for shaking this table, the nostalgia is enjoyable. 🥹🥹🥹🥹
😌😌
I'm a 2002 born buh I can tell u that I've heard most of this Dance Hall songs, All thanks to my Grandfather's Radio😂
don't you have school or something 😂?
I just googled Jamaican 🇯🇲 daggering dance and wow 😮was I surprised 😲
8:50 Dancehall legends! Bro, why dem eyes on Shatta like that ? 😂🤣 #SM4L❤
For me personally, popcaan is dancehall, he introduced me to dancehall and since then it’s almost the only genre I’m listening to because I fell in love with it. I mean I am still a teenager and I am not from Jamaica, but I still grew up knowing who Gyptian, Sean Paul, Beenie Man, Serani or Charly Black etc. were but for me personally my definition of dancehall are Popcaan, Vybz Kartel, Mavado, (still Gyptian !), Alkaline, Tommy Lee Sparta, Busy Signal, Dexta Daps, Jah Vinci, Jahmiel, Vershon, Masicka, Shenseaa, Demarco, Christopher Martin and Teejay. They talk about Love, Money, Sex, Life and God. And these artists are the "new" generation from the dancehall most people used to know, but I actually like how dancehall evolved. I think it’s nothing wrong with it.. but I understand that when you are older and you didn’t grew up with these artist, you don’t “identify “ yourself with these new artist anymore because it’s not the same vibe and beats anymore…
Love you so much for touching different genres ❤
It's on life support
Bro you didn't mention Kranium. He is really doing well for himself .nice video Bro, I am coming back for the next upload
Ikr He still the one I am listening to now but he is not entirely Dancehall though
The "swanseea foreplay" search killed me🤣🤣🤣
Hmm... I've been busy but now I'm back and this video gives me memories despite the fact that I'm a computer baby, I still enjoyed these classics
Been thinking about the "death of reggae" for a while
Reggae is not dead holds a space where it can't
reggae cant dead it was pronounced dead in 80s alreaday but still alive and kickin
i just feel like afrobeat has more light thrown on
Nah before Afrobeats Dancehall was the go to especially in Africa
I love your hair boss 😂🔥♥️
The way bring Don Shatta saf dae funny me 🤣🤣🤣🤣 king of Ghana Dancehall..1Don
Vybz Kartel killed dancehall. His extremely explicit music paved way for the genre standard. This heavily turned off audiences who were interested in the less explicit dancehall.
Vybz didn't kill Dancehall! Dancehall started dying when Trap influence came in and that was about 2018. The first big hit was Rygin Kings Tuff, and then Squashes Trending in 2019. These in my opinion are the songs that influenced this new generation of Dancehall. I blame producers and not Vybz Kartel. We need more riddims from producers like Chimey Records, and Anju Blaxx. These producers are modern yet still keep the base of Dancehall.
Vybz was popular in Caribbean community but had no cross market value. His whole shtick was adding hip hop swag and lyricism with content about sex and guns to dancehall which might be eye opener to fans of the genre but to the wider community who already got that via Hip hop, he didn't bring anything new. International community wanted that tropical warm and friendly party vibe music Jamaica was known for, but since dancehall artists think locally and not globally, so the decline began.
@@keturahgolding2368 yup 2015-2018 was the last peak
@@keturahgolding2368 he kinda did. even though he was a great artist he basically set the bar for success real low. he couldn't travel to much places cause he was banned from a lot of places and that caused many new artists to feel as though they didn't need to be international to be great plus the bleaching thing made him look like a clown to many foreigners who heard about him. trap dancehall just dealt the death blow.
@@keturahgolding2368Dancehall is not dead
As you rightly said different genres of music are going through different stages in their "lifecycle". I don't think or believe dancehall music is dead because there are too many of us westerners, who still love to listen to that type of music. I also believe why Burna Boy is rocking the international scene is because his music is more synced with reggae and dancehall to a certain extent. When I heard his name, I honestly thought he was Jamaican, but it was only this year 2023, I became familiar to him and started to watch his videos and listened to his songs. He never meant anything to me before that, because we in the West, were maybe uncomfortable with music coming from Africa (because we can't understand the dialect), but Tik-Tok and RUclips have enabled us to have a better appreciation for songs and entertainers coming from Mother Africa. As always, I was in stitches listening to your commentary and watching your visuals😂😂😂; job well done❤❤👏👏👏
Lol don't take your ignorance for a something common... African artists have been winning grammys and touring since the 1950's...from Myriam makeba to fela kuti, oumou sangare, salif keita, Mory Kante, angélique kidjoKhaled, magic system, psquare, Alpha blondy ..i can go on for an entire day.... Google is your friend please document yourself.
@Négusfirst the only person on the list that I recognize is Miriam Makeba. Remember the world's richest economy, which is America, the beautiful and as an American, you don't expect us to know or be familiar with what you're saying. The truth is that the average American would never relate to what you stated because it would mean nothing to us. We now know about Wizz Kid and the rest. Obviously, Africans who emigrated to the US would know this but not generational Americans. We are not apologizing for not knowing your history, lol. We are struggling to remember what the capital cities are in different states. Do you really think that we would know your artists, really? lol lol. Don't humor me.
@@brndcooper01 we also don't know some of your artistes and music so no wahala
No sh*t dumxxx. Jews created a media empire that extends globally then funded and controlled black American music which was exported everywhere via Jews infrastructure. Same thing with Caribbean music which was irrelevant till artists started tapping into American networks all ran by Jews. Same thing with West Africans who tap into American Jewish infrastructure which is exposing their music globally. If you don’t have the means to export your music no one will know it, that’s common sense if you aren’t a Down syndrome child brain
Problem with most Americans is this idea the world begins and ends in America or the world revolves around you- reason why the rest of the world see you lot as ignorant and other words I can't write here....
Europeans are more enlightened and exposed than you people, they know what's going on in the rest of the world- they've been vibing to African music for decades while you people thought Africa was one huge jungle with the inhabitants running around naked throwing spears at each other, lol. I bet you there are some in America today who still think that way about Africa. .
In this Internet age there's no excuse for such ignorance; there's a huge world out there, go out and explore and wean yourself of the mentality that US is the centre of the universe which it is not....
4 dis one no comment to the topic being addressed...jxt lol to the comic reliefs 😅🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣you be too creative bruhhh🔥🔥❤️mad love bruh
I swear you make my day 😂
Mine us well ooo boy too good 🤣
How can dancehall be dead if afrobeats incorporate reggae/ dancehall to their music. Thats what i like about afrobeats its taken all melanin people music and put it together. Thtas what i hear when i hear afrobeats . Just because a genre isnt as popular as another at the moment doesn't mean its dead. As long as someone is making dancehall and someone is listening then dancehall still alive.
What kill's me is the way you say
Stiiiiii🧑🚒🥰
Please react to "breaking the yoke of love" by blaqbonez
Very 🔥 song.
@@gettona facts👍
I 100% agree
Like your graphics.
If you get to, try and watch this movie "Yardie (2018)"
Some people want the death of dancehall, nothing has to make way for another genre to grow. Different tastes for different people. Dancehall is a space not necessarily a genre. Rap, afro beats etc were inspired by Jamaican djs so it lives through that also. Politics in the industry also stifles the growth of dancehall.
Stop with this hip hop and Afropop forced inclusion. Focus on yourself
Rap didn't come from dancehall kill the noise. What's with everyone trying to claim start of something? We all black, all African, it's all our music.
I used to be a fan of yours.
Dancehall ain't dead
Do a review and analysis on alkaline….more dancehall vids
❤ Insightful
For me I stopped around 2014-13
Hip pop is also full of repetition
Bro every full of repetition, even afro beats, it lacks substance like burna boy, said it has no consciousness behind it, on top of that it soon be stolen like hip hop today, I was watching a few videos and saw Chinese influences, European influences, dude y'all soon lose that shit
You didn't mention ruger's name
Afro fusion=ruger but Afrobeats is fusion music therefore ruger is Afrobeats
Dancehall in 80s eak a mouse, yellowman, burro banton, nicodemus, early b.sugar minnot, ranking dread, popa toyan jose wales sister nancy frankie paul the old veterans massive
Alkaline is bringing back Dancehall.
Intelligent video
VYBZ KARTEL NEED TO BE FREE , & You’ll see , 🇯🇲
So you just left stonebwoy out like that😂
🏃♂️🏃♂️case 😂😂
Please Do a Reaction Video Patoranking ABOBI❤😢
Yea Dancehall is dead thanks to skelibeng and the artists want to be Americans
its exactly THAT they klled it with their stupid trap bullshit n0t that i h8 trap and fusi0ns im a pr0ducer myself but i deff d0 n0t agree with exchanging the REAL DANCEHALL RIDDIM beat structure with hip h0p. LEt jamaica have its 0wn s0und ... and let America have their hiph0p....
Too westernized with this garbage drill and trap.
do not lie on no black Americans from long time this gang shit has been our culture just not as big as it is today, so stop that
Afrobeats is the father of all black music, it has so much genres, melodies, rhythms, sounds, languages, diphthongs to last a life time, and its just barely scratching the surface.
😂😂😂 that's a lie.
foolishness, just 15-20 years ago there was only zouk similar to to afrobeat and it sounded very cheap (not to say afrobeat is a complex music), while dancehall was a ruling genre, there was NO african music that was ever bigger than reggae or dancehall or even merengue. just research music and you will see there was NOTHING comparable.
illuminati put in afrobeat to dumb down the masses and replace political dancehall (capleton sizzla bounty etc)
Hip hop created before afro beats the hell you talking about even dancehall came before afro beats, jazz, soca, reggae, Rap before Italian cultures got mixed into create gangsta rap, which hip-hop is the biggest of all genres and will continue to be the biggest based on the influence, its so influential that the very dressing of people is influenced by it the concept of DRIP, SWAG. So I don't know what the hell you smoking but stop
Y'all know black people, this is just gonna make dancehall artist turn up more. The same Will be for Hip Hop.
That good let it 😂
Skillibeng???
i like your videos
Love is wicked 🔥
I disagree with the repetition you talking about
maybe it cuz yall stole it and it worked cuz youre seen as cooler than jamaicans
Ur hairrrrr
This guy is 27years old😂
more like 47
"I'm sorry Lucky Dube!"
This video is overly edited and taking video to get to the point
Please Do a Reaction Video Patoranking ABOBI❤😢