15 Years of Fire: Blaz’em on Rastafari, Roots Reggae & Walking the Righteous Path
Some interviews feel like marketing.
Others feel like a moment you’re supposed to hear.
This conversation with Blaz’em belongs to the second category.
For over 15 years, Blaz’em has lived Rastafari—not as a look, not as a trend, but as a discipline. In his exclusive Reggae Hour interview, he speaks with a clarity that cuts through noise, ego, and industry illusions. He talks about faith, elders, mistakes, music, youth, and why conscious reggae still matters when so much feels disconnected.
What follows isn’t just a recap.
It’s a reasoning—with the artist, and with yourself.
“I Always Knew I Was Going to Be a Rasta”
Blaz’em’s journey didn’t begin on a stage or in a studio.
It began quietly—as a youth watching, listening, absorbing.
“Looking at the elder Rastaman dem, it interest me.
The picture of Selassie—I used to just stand and stare at it.
I knew one day… I was going to be a Rasta.”
At just 14 years old, he embraced Rastafari—not because it was popular, but because it felt like home.
“Rastafari keep me living. It keep me civilized.”
🟢 Pause for a moment:
How many of us felt a calling before we even had the language to explain it?
Locks, Lessons, and Accountability
One of the most powerful moments in the interview comes when Blaz’em speaks about his locks—not symbolically, but honestly.
“This is my third set of locks.
I had to cut the first two because of trouble in life.”
There’s no romanticizing the past here—only growth.
“This one will never get cut.
I learned from my mistakes.”
His locks are not decoration.
They are witness.
“They seen everything with me.
They not going nowhere.”
🟢 Question for the reader:
What parts of your journey prove your growth—even the parts you don’t post about?
The Role of Elders: “They Kept Me Straight”
When Blaz’em lost his mother, it wasn’t punishment that shaped him—it was guidance.
“When they see me about to do something wrong, they say,
‘Come here. Let me teach you.
Read this verse. Eat this. Listen to this music.’”
This wasn’t religion as control.
This was community as protection.
“We born Rasta. Every man, woman, and child born Rasta.”
🟢 Reflect:
What would change if guidance replaced punishment in how we treat our youth?
Bobo Shanti: Discipline Over Image
When asked about the Bobo Shanti order, Blaz’em doesn’t mystify it or dress it up.
He simplifies it.
“Read the Bible three times a day.
Speak good words.
Keep a clean heart.”
Then comes the truth many avoid:
“Living in this world today is very hard.
That’s why Rastaman rent the hills.”
Yet even in Babylon, the mission remains clear:
“Don’t give Satan no joy.”
🟢 Check in with yourself:
What does “keeping a clean heart” actually look like in your daily life?
Why He Stays Away from the Night
Blaz’em doesn’t speak in metaphors here—he speaks from experience.
“At night, that’s where the devil hang out.”
This isn’t fear.
It’s earned wisdom.
“I got in trouble hanging out two or three in the morning.
I don’t want to be in that number again.”
Now, at 52 years old, his focus is unwavering.
“Righteousness is a must.”
🟢 Honest question:
What environments pull you away from the person you’re trying to become?
“Reggae Is Not Entertainment”
One of the most shareable moments of the interview comes when Blaz’em defines his mission in one sentence:
“Reggae is not entertainment.
It’s testimony.”
He explains why music reaches where lectures fail.
“Individually talking to the youth won’t work.
But when they hear the music—they understand.”
That’s why he refuses slackness.
“I don’t write about pum pum, gold chains, or slackness.
I write warrior songs.”
🟢 Be real:
Does the music you listen to build you—or distract you?
On the Youth: “They Headed for Destruction”
Blaz’em doesn’t sugarcoat what he sees.
“The youth today don’t want to listen.
They headed for destruction.”
But he hasn’t given up.
“All we can do is pray—and spread the word through the music.”
His Message in One Song
When asked which of his own songs could change a young life, Blaz’em answers without hesitation:
“Praise Rastafari.”
He explains why it still moves him.
“I still get eye-watered when I hear my own song.”
That emotion traces back to structure.
“I had my mother and father.
No slackness.
Church. Structure.”
🟢 Reflection:
What song reminds you who you really are—when everything feels off?
Five Years From Now: Same Mission, No Compromise
Blaz’em isn’t chasing fame or industry validation.
“I’m not doing this for money.
I call it donations.”
His concern is spiritual survival.
“Money is the root of all evil.”
Five years from now?
“Doing the same thing.
Walking righteous.”
Where to Follow Blaz’em
Stay connected with Blaz’em and his music:
📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/christopherhale123/?locale=zh_CN
▶️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQF526Y108wb7R5EUgL05XA/about
Final Words
Blaz’em doesn’t claim perfection.
He claims commitment.
Through every chant and every verse, he reminds us that roots reggae is not nostalgia—it’s a living mission, grounded in righteousness, discipline, and truth.
👉 For more conscious music, exclusive interviews, and authentic reggae culture, visit ReggaeHour.com
🔔 Stay locked. Stay righteous. Keep the fire burning. One Love.
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