King Jammy
King Jammy - reggae producer
Person from Jamaica
Genres: reggae, dub, dancehall, jamaica, chill
Similar artists via Last.fm
About King Jammy
Lloyd James, (born in Kingston, Jamaica), better known as Prince Jammy or King Jammy, began his career as a protege of dub legend King Tubby. For the first few years of his career, Jammy almost exclusively made Dub. In the 1980s, he became one of the most influential producers of dancehall music. His biggest hit was 1985's "(Under Me) Sleng Teng" by Wayne Smith, with an entirely-digital rhythm hook. Many credit this song as being the first "Digital rhythm" in reggae, leading to the modern dancehall era.
Taken from Last.fm
14,041 listeners · 85,676 plays via Last.fm
On RadioStar
Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation
WTSQ 88.1 The Status Quo - Charleston's Community Radio Station
King Jammy — Top 16 songs
| Artist | Song title | Like / Dislike | |
|---|---|---|---|
| King Jammy | Lockdown Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Quarantined In Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Closed Border Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Cry For The Youths | ||
| King Jammy | Little John : Nuff A Dem A Gwan (Dub Plate Special) | ||
| King Jammy | Black And White Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Messenjah Version | ||
| King Jammy | The Right To Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Ten To One Dub [ radiojah.ru ] | ||
| King Jammy | Liberation Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Track & Trace Dub | ||
| King Jammy | Dubbing From Home | ||
| King Jammy | Chain Robbery Version | ||
| King Jammy | Come Do It to Me Version | ||
| King Jammy | Ten To One Dub | ||
| King Jammy | United Nations Dub |