Before the recording studios. Before the international labels. Before the world knew what Jamaica was capable of — three men were running speaker systems in Kingston's open yards, competing for the loyalty of a working-class community that needed music the way it needed air. Tom The Great Sebastian. Duke Reid. And King Edwards — the foundational figure the written record has been slowest to reclaim. This episode tells the story of the man who helped build the world's first DJ culture, who disappeared from the documentation before the cameras arrived, and whose mystery — a record he played at every dance but never let finish — has never been solved. Part of the History of the Caribbean series. New episodes weekly.
History tells us the Transatlantic Slave Trade was a story of silence, but the archives of the Danish West India Company tell a much...
Caribbean Women’s Voices dives into caribbean history, black history, and the enduring resilience of island communities—stories too often muted by colonization and media gatekeeping....
Before the world embraced Sean Paul, Vybz Kartel, or Popcaan — there was one man who stormed through the gates of global music and...