A crooner with a voice that evokes the great falsettos of Curtis Mayfield, Eddie Kendricks and Slim Smith of the Uniques, Jamaica’s Courtney John brings his distinctive timbre to “Strangers,” a brand-new track which could pass for a 40-year-old one. French musician Guillaume “Gee” Metenier’s anachronistic production has a classic feel that evokes roots reggae’s mid-70s heyday — a suitable canvas for John, who we last heard applying a futuristic touch to Errol Dunkley’s “Black Cinderella.”
The track, from an upcoming album release also called Strangers, is a welcome return from a singer who often falls under the radar, but sounds good whenever he emerges.
The one-time Ward 21 protégé is back in the dancehall conversation with the uplifting “Can’t…
Hip-hop’s master storyteller returns with a reggae/dancehall-flavored collaboration
Africa's dancehall ambassador on the cultural connections between Ghana and Jamaica.
From Illinois to Kingston, Jamaica, comes a story of fierce determination.
Rhea 'Rheezus' Prendergrast is a young woman from Jamaica, living in New York City, working…
LargeUp is bringing Caribbean sounds to Long Island's North Fork Saturday, July 29.
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