Grammys Reggae -

Moreover, the nomination process often unearths gems. Each year, a list of five albums forces casual fans to look beyond Bob Marley compilations and dive into the works of Protoje, Chronixx, or Jesse Royal. In that sense, the Grammy functions as a useful, if imperfect, filter.

Similarly, the posthumous awards to Bunny Wailer (2018) and the perpetual nominations of Marley family members create a perception of nepotism and nostalgia. It often feels like the voters—many of whom are not reggae specialists—simply scan the list, recognize one name (usually Marley or a Wailer), and check the box. This discourages risk-taking and buries the dancehall and dub fusion artists who are actually pushing the genre forward. grammys reggae

When the category works, it shines a necessary spotlight on roots and culture. The recognition of artists like Steel Pulse (1987), Burning Spear (2000), and Buju Banton (2011’s Before the Dawn ) felt like just corrections to history. The 2025 win for Kabaka Pyramid’s The Kalling was a notable shift—a victory for the new guard, blending the lyrical dexterity of hip-hop with authentic, militant roots production. It proved the Academy could acknowledge evolution. Moreover, the nomination process often unearths gems

The category’s narrow definition of "reggae" is its greatest weakness. Dancehall, the genre’s massively popular, energetic sibling, is routinely ignored. Artists like Sean Paul , Spice , or Skillibeng have defined Caribbean pop culture for decades, yet they rarely crack the nomination list unless they release a "roots" album. The same goes for dub poetry and experimental electronic reggae. By clinging to a purist, mid-70s roots sound, the Grammys risk turning reggae into a museum piece rather than a living art form. Similarly, the posthumous awards to Bunny Wailer (2018)

Implement specialized committees of active reggae musicians and journalists to filter nominations. If you cannot nominate dancehall or modern fusion without flinching, remove the category and fold reggae into the Global Music field. Either commit to the genre’s present or stop pretending a gold-plated trophy from an LA ballroom understands what "forward ever, backward never" truly means.

However, for every step forward, the category takes two shuffling steps back. The most glaring flaw is its chronic case of "veteran favoritism." The Academy has a notorious habit of awarding the artist with the longest career over the best album. Ziggy Marley has won eight times—more than any other artist. While his work is solid, eight wins suggest a category devoid of competition rather than a dynasty of genius.