Mistah Rapsey is my name..
staying underground
is the experience..

I’ve been traveling since my youth searching for experiences of truth. An old soul back again to discover what I left uncovered. I love to love and live to laugh. Enrolled in a school called Knowledge of Self. Paying attention is my drug. Learning to live Life like music and flow with the rhythm, careful not to miss a beat. A renaissance man, Life is my art project. An habitual nomad, I roam to evolve. Music and cannabis are my constant companions. Interested in people, i’m always searching for my tribe. The beauty of the wilderness is the closest i’ve come to experiencing Truth.

musicgraffiti, vinyl, treeplanting, & mixtapes..

Love is an Action. Love is the Answer. Love is the Movement.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Method Man ft Redman, Damian ‘Jr Gong’ Marley - Lyrical 44

Time to party, Meth, Stephen Marley and Jr. Gong
So selecta, come with it, awww shit it
Now y’all done did it, supper ready y’all come get it
Now who ‘gon stop me block me pop lock me knock me
Jamaica posse most high Haile Selassie
Allah willin, another sound boy killin
I’m hot bitch I don’t catch cold or catch feelings
The truth be the ghetto youth
And Def Jam y’all know the Meth Man take care of his fam

-Method Man

Rastafari 

Rastafari 

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
  • 50 Plays

Sonya Spence // Talk Love

Another song from the soundtrack to my life.  This one is a beautiful reggae song from the ‘81 album Sonya Spence ‘Sings Love’. I would be thrilled to add this to my record collection, unfortunately it is extremely rare.  I have seen in online for almost 200 euro’s!

Derrick Morgan is a legendary Jamaican artist who has worked with the likes of Desmond Dekker, Bob Marley, and Jimmy Cliff.

Derrick Morgan is a legendary Jamaican artist who has worked with the likes of Desmond Dekker, Bob Marley, and Jimmy Cliff.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
  • 66 Plays

Ijahman Levi // I’m a Levi

Born Trevor Sutherland in manchester, jamaica - Ijahman Levi’s integral role in mid seventies english roots reggae has been undeservedly overlooked.

Watch the words you all speak mind misinterpretation
It is for free share I tendency with I

It is better for a man to conquer himself
Than a King to conquer and capture many city”

- iJahMan

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Hopeton Lewis // Take It Easy

Lewis began recording in the mid-1960s, and had one of the earliest rocksteady hits with “Take It Easy” in late 1966. His rich baritone has had a profound impact on Jamaican music, and his mixture of gospel and soul elements helped set the template for early rocksteady.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Toots & The Maytals // Take Me Home, Country Roads

A cover of John Denver’s classic hit, “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” in which Toots replaces the lyric West Virginia with West Jamaica. I like this version better than the original.