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Beres at his best
Bounty will not "Sizzle"
Bramma "bombing" the dancehall
Deafening screams for Akon
Mr Vegas delivers explosive performances
BET filming Top 20 Greatest Moments in Reggae
Mavado takes dancehall night
Beenie Explains Unpaid Hotel Bill
Sumfest The Real Hype
Da-Ville endorses Cooyah
HOTELS BLACKLIST : Beenie, Mavado and Ninja banned before Sumfest
Lil Wayne gets Sumfest Saturday
Konshens Blows Up
The unveiling of dancehall-s first biography
BEENIE WON-T BE SUED
Condom, Carlene, cash and "jacket" in Who Am I?
Who Am I?: The Untold Story of Beenie Man
Beenie sorry for jerk fest absence
Mavado still at large in Caribbean
Shaggy hits major European pop music charts
The Ultimate Reggae Dancehall X-perience delivers
DOCTOR, D-ANGEL FIX ISSUES?...
Lady Saw off on European tour
Beenie Man-s tax evasion trial put off
Tanto Metro mourns loss of sister
Ziggy Marley helps local children-s hospitals
Rap mogul Lil Wayne to heat up Sumfest
Gargamel-s Jamrock Classics Volume 1
First-timers for Reggae Sumfest
Features
Lutan Fyah - Rasta Still Deh Bout
Cezar - Reggae Soul
Ras Kassa - Music Is I
Aidonia - Next Level
Tafari - Rude Bwoy Warning
Collie Buddz - Finally
Shaggy - Liberated
The Man From Mars
QQ - Stukie
Bramma - Red Hot
Sizzla - Do You Overstand?
Sly Dunbar - Revolutionary
Buju Banton - Too Bad
Chuck Fenda - Gash Dem
This is My Ghetto Story - Baby Cham Pt.1
Jay Wil - Game Over Pt. 2
Jay Will - Game Over Pt. 1
This is My Ghetto Story - Baby Cham Pt.2
Beenie Man - Setting The Trend
Beenie Man - Setting The Trend Pt.2
Wayne Marshall - Chu Chu Chu
KMC - Soul On Fire
Q&A with Bascom X - Part 1
Q&A with Bascom X - Part 2
Soul On Fire
Cooyah Cooyah Cooyah
Tanto Metro & Devonte: Musically Inclined
Good Love with Cherine Anderson
Chico - It Go So Now
Idonia: The New Age Flow
Alozade - Bad Out Deh
Alozade - Bad Out Deh [Lyrics]
Is Shaggy Underrated?
Lyrikal: De Gyal Dem Specialist
Tami Chynn - Major Debut
Annetta Brewster-Aitken: The Trendsetter
Kehv - Masquerade
The Pulse
Dancehall @ The Grammys?
Sean Paul Helping Push Reggae
Sound Di Big Ting Dem!
Beenie Man Undisputed - A Man of Hits
CelebrityFest Part One: Di Ting Sell-Off!!!
Reggae Industry Awards - Time For A Change?
Talk Di Truth
Professionalism in the Dancehall: Is it lacking?
Jamaica Explode
Dancehall: a street ting?
Tek the wha? And lef the wha?????
The Other Woman
Pirates of the Caribbean - The Music Edition
Beenie Man Undisputed - A Man of Hits

Beenie Man rightly proclaimed himself, King Of The Dancehall, a couple years ago and no one in the battle-based culture batted an eye-lash. Why? Because when it comes to chats and riddems, Beenie Man is the alpha and the omega. That is, the 33-year-old Kingston native, born Moses Davis, but better know round the world as Beenie Man, is the dancehall movement personified.

Releasing his first record, "Too Fancy" at the tender age of 7-years-old in 81, Beenie has not only been at the forefront of the genre ever since, but has been largely responsible for growing it into the international phenomenon it is today. And it is exactly this legacy which his latest release, Undisputed, serves to maintain. "This album is all about the title," he says. "It wasn t a concept, but more of a theme.

However, is it really any surprise that the man behind over 1000 songs would be able to make an LP with such a cocksure title? "Music is in me since I was little," he says. "My uncle had a DJ set up and I got my start doing that before I was 6 years old." Perhaps in part due to the fact that he still spins to this day. Consequently by 7 he had recorded his first single, and by 10 he had released his first long-player, The Invincible Beenie Man. Throughout the 80s he continued to record, perform and DJ. In 92 Beenie made a splash at the famous Reggae Sun Splash by going after rival Bounty Killer in what would become an infamous back-and-forth. Though the following year they would squash it and record a split album, Gunz Out.

Shortly thereafter Beenie release a remake of Bob Marley s "No Woman, No Cry", titled "No Mama, No Cry", which was produced by legendary tracksmen Sly and Robbie. It was during this collaboration that Beenie was enlightened to the Rastafarian doctrine and eventually converted. A slew of national hits ensued through out the mid nineties, including "World Dance" and "Slam." But it was in 1997, on the strength of his crossover smash of his Grammy-nominated Many Moods Of Moses and it s single "Who Am I?", that Beenie exploded as an international superstar. And in doing so for himself, he opened ears and doors for everyone in his genre around the world.

Around the same time Beenie made his acting debut in the critically acclaimed Dancehall Queen. He then went on to The Doctor and Y2K, in 98 and 99, for VP Records. Both considered dancehall classics in their own rights, solidified his core base. Virgin records responded to Beenie s breakout success and signed him. Art And Life, his debut on the new label, truly broke him stateside. Monster hits like the Neptunes produced "Girls Dem Sugar" featuring Mya, and the Wyclef-guested, Saalam Remi produced "Love Me Now" took him to the top of the pops.

From there Beenie continued to churn out hits at home and abroad. "I still do singles, and DJ," he says. "Because it is important to never lose touch and stay in what s going on. And I still love it, as well." His 2002 set, Tropical Storm only further solidified him in the with it s brilliant collaboration with Janet Jackson, "Feel It Boy". However it was his latest, Back-To-Basics, which is arguably the closest thing dancehall has seen to a summer-blockbuster-esque album a la Get Rich Or Die Trying. The LP yielded hit after hit after hit. Undeniable anthems like "Dude" and "King Of The Dancehall" served to coronate Beenie as truly undisputed in every sense of the word.

"I ve broken down every barrier and broken every record," says the man who s been nominated for 3 Grammys and won multiple MOBOs in the ,in a tone of absolute humility, referring back to Undisputed. "So this album is just one more step forward." Was there ever any doubt?

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