UK-BASED producer Reece Dry says he is impressed with the work ethic of producer Ainsley "Notnice" Morris, whom he met during a recent tour by Jah Vinci in the United Kingdom.
Morris was part of.
Boom Boom
Billboard selector Boom Boom says the issue of Dancehall artists refusing to voice for certain producers and vice-versa, has worsened with time.
Boom Boom was speaking during an interview with veteran journalist Anthony Miller on Television Jamaica’s The Entertainment Report, which was aired on Friday night.
His comments came after Miller told him he thought the days of polarization between the artist and producers were over. According to him he has had personal experience in observing the bitterness and the covetous behaviours of some of the players in the industry.
“Mo man, it nuh ova. It wickeda now man… Jealousy, bad mind, envy and grudge,” he said.
Khago, DJ Frass
Weeks after Dancehall artist Khago declared him one of his key targets in his next round of copyrights litigation, DJ Frass skirted away from discussing the issue, when asked about it, during an interview at his studio with Television Jamaica’s
The Entertainment Report.
During the interview with Frass, TVJ’s entertainment journalist Anthony Miller had brought Khago’s name into the picture in a follow-up question, after the producer had mentioned that he and NotNice were now on good terms, after the
Kyng Midas producer exposed him as not being the creator of the beats released by his music label.
DJ Frass
A ‘less-than-nice’ accusation made by Dancehall producer NotNice years ago about DJ Frass not being the creator of the riddims under his DJ Frass Records label, was admitted as true, after a cleverly administered line of questioning by Television Jamaica’s no-nonsense entertainment journalist Anthony Miller.
Miller’s pointed questions which he aimed at DJ Frass during an interview for Television Jamaica’s
The Entertainment Report which was aired on Friday night, saw the record label founder buckling under the directness for which Miller is well-known, and admitting that he was not the composer of the beats put out by his label.