King Jammy & Sleng Teng: 40 Years of Digital Reggae That Shook Jamaica
Most people think reggae’s story ended with Bob Marley. But the true digital revolution began in a Kingston ghetto when Lloyd “King Jammy” James programmed a $200 keyboard to “make the machines dance.” The result—“Sleng Teng,” the first fully computerized reggae riddim—turns 40 this year and still rocks dancehall, hip‑hop, reggaetón, and EDM.
In this episode we uncover:
- How a homemade demo split Jamaica’s music scene in two—pioneers vs. purists.
- Why King Jammy democratized production, launching hundreds of artists while threatening old‑guard studios.
- The untold truths behind Sleng Teng’s global impact, from Kingston sound‑systems to Bronx hip‑hop and Lagos Afrobeats.
- Who writes Caribbean history—and who gets erased—when black, island‑born innovators break the mold.
Join our panel of Caribbean history experts as we trace the beat that rewired Jamaican music, explore the cultural resilience of Kingston’s communities, and ask: Should the man who changed world music get a statue…or an apology? Hit follow, leave a review, and share your own dancehall memories—because the next untold story might rewrite music history again.
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