Mr. Lexx Says ‘Dancehall Flooded By People Pretending To Be Artists And Producers’
Dancehall artist Mr. Lexx has complained that the genre is being infiltrated. “This industry is too easy to enter,” Mr.
Dancehall artist Mr. Lexx has complained that the genre is being infiltrated. “This industry is too easy to enter,” Mr.
Mr. Lexx has been released after he was detained upon arrival in Panama City yesterday. The Full Hundred deejay thanked Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport Olivia ‘Babsy’ Grange, Judith Edwards from the consulate for Panama, and his fans for their help after he was detained by Panamanian Immigration officials at the Tocumen International Airport in Panama City.
Following the car crash this morning which led to the death of Pastor Kevin O. Smith, the man at the epicenter of the recent bizarre human sacrifice saga in Montego Bay, members of the Dancehall fraternity have reacted to the passing of the clergyman.
Members of the Dancehall and Reggae fraternity have expressed horror at Sunday night’s bizarre incident in Montego Bay, where two people were killed as part of a human sacrifice during a ritual by members of what the police theorise to be a religious cult.
Mr. Lexx’s throwback photos of a costume-clad Ninjman and caption which lauded the Don Gorgon for being always dressed in “Met Gala” garb, long before the fundraiser became globally popular, evoked not only laughter but praises for the entertainer’s use of avant-garde couture to accentuate his performances.
Minister of Health Dr. Christopher Tufton, met the ire of Mr Lexx, who is now calling for his resignation, after seeing a video of the Minister in a rural community, suggesting that persons prioritise getting vaccinated instead of focusing on getting water in their pipes first.
Major Lazer’s Essentials—a 25-track compilation album featuring Dancehall artists Vybz Kartel, Busy Signal, Sean Paul, Kranium, Tarrus Riley, Mr.
Bounty Killer has placed his bet on his Seaview Gardens compatriot Dexta Daps, as the artist who will be Dancehall’s next global superstar.
Thirty-three years after Major Mackerel released his monster hit Dutty Bungle, effectively embedding the term in the Jamaican lexicon, A’mari DJ Mona Lisa might just be following in his footsteps with the release of her infectious, though bizarre single, (Rise) Dutty Bungle.
The mystique surrounding the enigmatic Dancehall producer Dave Kelly, was demystified somewhat, on his birthday by one of, if not his biggest aficionados, Ainsley “Notnice” Morris.
Reggae singer Robert Minott is ecstatic about his latest project, Can’t Hold Back featuring deejay Mr.
From Shaggy to Spragga Benz, VP Records has honed Dancehall’s most distinct voices, but none whose staying power or commercial appeal rivals Sean Paul.
Jamaica’s Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett is being taken to task by Dancehall artists and their music industry colleagues after he, according to the Jamaica Observer, “claimed that local players in the entertainment sector have earned some $500 million for the provision of services to hotels” from January to May.
Bounty Killer took to Instagram on Wednesday to make it clear that he has no regrets, but instead delights in the fact that he has lived up to his name Warlord, by engaging in a long string of high-profile lyrical and personal feuds with his own mentees, rival artistes, former friends, collaborators, and even his mentors.
Over the weekend and admittedly after having had too much to drink, Full Hundred Dancehall artist Mr. Lexx called out a publishing deal he signed with VP Records more than 20 years ago, which gave the company full ownership of his masters.
Mr. Lexx has doubled down on his stance that DJ Khaled has been using the wrong methodology to incorporate Dancehall music in his productions, and says what he should do is establish an arm of his We The Best label in Jamaica, or otherwise his bid to get Dancehall hits under his belt will remain an elusive dream.
Numbers don’t lie and that’s something Dancehall artist Bounty Killer understands and appreciates, as he showed off the impressive YouTube views his Where You Come From collab raked-in, in the space of just two days.
Veteran Dancehall artist Mr. Lexx respectfully called out American producer DJ Khaled for working with only a few Jamaican Reggae and Dancehall artists.
Veteran Dancehall deejay Mr. Lexx wants to know why his music doesn’t get the same engagement on Instagram as his posts about funny memes.
One of the more popular artistes of the 90s, Mr. Lexx is confident that his new project, Touch Down, released last Friday, August 14, will remind dancehall fans of what he is capable of.