Posts

Showing posts with the label ReggaeHistory

Black History Contemporary Icons

Reggae Hour Podcast on B.O.S.S. Radio

Reggae Hour Podcast on B.O.S.S. Radio
Subscribe Today!!!

Reggae-Hour

Bob Marley at 81: The Bullets, the Peace, and the Sacrifice That Changed the World

Image
At 81 years since his birth, Bob Marley is no longer just a musician remembered by playlists and posters. He is a historical force—one whose life reads less like a biography and more like a reckoning. Behind the slogans of “One Love” and “Peace” lies a far more complex truth: Bob Marley lived through violence, carried political power without office, and ultimately chose his message over his own survival. This is the story we don’t tell often enough. The Man Who Wasn’t Stopped by Bullets On December 3, 1976, gunmen stormed Marley’s home in Kingston, Jamaica. He was shot twice—once in the arm and once near the chest. Doctors advised rest. Friends begged him to cancel his upcoming performance. Two days later, Marley walked on stage at the Smile Jamaica Concert anyway. When asked why, his answer became legend: “The people who are trying to make this world worse aren’t taking a day off. How can I?” That moment redefined courage—not as fearlessness, but as responsibility. Marley unde...

Seth Caro on Music, Thinking for Yourself, and Why the Journey Is the Message

Image
 Seth Caro on Music, Thinking for Yourself, and Why the Journey Is the Message On February 10th, 2026, at 7:00 p.m. Central Standard Time (5:00 p.m. Pacific), Reggae Hour hosted a long-form conversation with Seth Caro of Venice Beach Dub Club—a discussion that moved well beyond genre labels, releases, or promotion. What unfolded was a reasoning-driven dialogue about music as communication, humility as a creative discipline, and why real growth can’t come from chasing scenes, slogans, or surface-level narratives. Seth explains that music, for him, has always been a way to communicate complicated ideas—ideas that are difficult to express directly in everyday conversation. Rather than telling people what to think, he prefers to let listeners discover meaning on their own. That process, he says, is what creates a genuine and lasting connection between artist and audience. The conversation traces his early exposure to hip hop in New York, his first encounters with dancehall on the radio...

✊🏾 Mystic Revealers: A Reggae Legacy Rooted in Truth, Upliftment & the Power of JAH

Image
  In a soul- stirring interview on the Reggae Hour Podcast , host Mr. E sat down with none other than Billy Mystic , frontman of the legendary Mystic Revealers , to trace the band’s profound journey through the ever- evolving soundscape of reggae. Formed in Bull Bay, Jamaica in 1977, Mystic Revealers has carried the torch of roots reggae for over four decades— delivering timeless messages of justice, unity, spiritual freedom, and resilience . “ We weren’t trying to replace anyone. We just wanted to sing what we believed— and what we thought could make a difference.” — Billy Mystic 🎶 From Sound Systems to Global Stages Growing up outside Kingston’s core reggae hubs, Mystic Revealers cut their teeth in Jamaica’s sound system culture . With no major labels knocking, they built their own studio, pressed their own records, and created their own space in reggae’s history. “ It was brave of us as youngsters to say, okay, if no one wants to help us, we’re going to do it ourselve...