Sean Paul blasts Drake and Justin Bieber for 'appropriating' dancehall music
Sean Paul has criticised Drake and Justin Bieber for appropriating the sound of Jamaican dancehall reggae music.
The Grammy-award winning reggae star, whose 2002 album Dutty Rock propelled the popular dancehall sound - the upbeat, digital reggae sound characterised by faster rhythms - into the mainstream, criticised artists who borrow the sound but don't acknowledge where the music originated from.
Paul singled out chart-topping rapper Drake and singer Justin
Bieber as some of the worst offenders, as both have had recent hits
- Controlla and Sorry - which borrowed heavily from the musical
genre.
"It is a sore point when people like Drake or Bieber or other
artists come and do dancehall-orientated music but don't credit
where dancehall came from and they don't necessarily understand
it," he blasted in an interview with The Guardian. "And I know
artists back in Jamaica that don't like Major Lazer because they
think they do the same thing that Drake and Kanye did - they take
and take and don't credit."
The Gimme the Light singer's comments echo those made by dancehall
artist Mr. Vegas in May (16), who slammed Drake as a "fake" for not
fully crediting the Jamaican artists he collaborated with on his
album.
However Major Lazer, whose track Light it Up features Jamaican
singer Nyla and afrobeats singer Fuse ODG, recently hit back at
criticisms of cultural appropriation.
"When I grew up, no one told me what I was supposed to listen to.
On the radio, Miami bass was always the thing for me, and heavy
metal - that was big in Florida too. My parents listened to
country. Rap was on the radio," Major Lazer member Diplo recently
told NME magazine. "I didn't think: 'Oh, I'm white, I've got to
play a guitar.' I never had a guitar... I wish I got a guitar, then
I wouldn't have so much criticism."
Paul recently made a return to the top of the charts on singer
Sia's hit single Cheap Thrills, her first ever Billboard Hot 100
number one. He is also working on his new album in Los Angeles and
plans to "bring back some authentic dancehall".