claude

Claude Mills is a news journalist for DancehallMag based in Jamaica. In 1998, Claude Mills won his first Press Association of Jamaica (PAJ) award for an article he wrote about his experience flying into the eye of Hurricane George in a military plane, alongside scientists measuring the force of the storm as it hit the north coast of Cuba. He won a second PAJ award in 1999 for a series of articles called ‘Hourglass Kids’, about children dying from childhood cancers. He won a third PAJ zaward in 2000 for a series called ‘Daddy’s Little Girls’, comprising interviews with survivors of incest. In 2001, Claude gave a memorable first-hand account of a shoot-out with police that occurred in the Braeton Phase III community in St. Catherine, where he has lived for over 20 years. He placed second in the Caribbean Broilers’ annual Fair Play awards with that account. He won a scholarship to attend Massey College at the University of Toronto where he spent a year hanging out with esteemed Canadian journalists traveling to locations in Finland, Mexico, Russia and the province of Albertha in Cananda. He has also written witty off beat articles for Gleaner supplements, including Youthlink, and the Outlook magazine. He left the Gleaner in 2006 and began working with dancehall artistes such as Beenie Man, Vybz Kartel, Khago, Macka Diamond and a host of other artistes. He continues to write for a variety of online publications.

1006 articles since 6th October 2020

About DancehallMag

DancehallMag is the leading independent news outlet covering Reggae and Dancehall music and Jamaican artists. We reach over one million people each month via our website and social media. Learn more about DancehallMag!

Crawford

Damion Crawford Rips PM Holness As A “Hypocrite” Over Gun-Glorifying Election Dubplates

Controversial Opposition Senator and former Minister of Entertainment, Damion Crawford, has branded Prime Minister Andrew Holness, as a “hypocrite” for suggesting that Dancehall artists were contributing to the country’s crime rate through their lyrics which often glorify violence when Holness himself used the lyrics of the said artists to make dubplates during the last general election campaign.

Goldenvoice

Golden Voice Unearths ‘Hidden Treasure’ EP

St. James-based dancehall singjay Golden Voice loves women. He cannot fathom the fact that Jamaica has become a nation with the second-highest rate of femicides in the world, according to United Nations data from last year.

Tashina Muzik

Dancehall Songstress Tashina McKenzie Talks ‘Injustice’

Dancehall songstress Tashina Muzik should be on everyone’s radar with her latest single Injustice. The track, a collaborative project with US-based indie label JB Production, asks serious questions of the political system, and calls out local Reggae artists on their continued, surprising silence in the face of rampant injustice, gun violence and social inequities.