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    9

    Good Love

    Gyptian [Good Love - Single]

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      Good Love Gyptian

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    9

    Finally

    Romain Virgo [Finally - Single]

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      Finally Romain Virgo

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    8

    Reggae World

    Busy Signal [Reggae World - Single]

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      Reggae World Busy Signal

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    8

    Lottery (feat. Jeremih)

    Shaggy [Lottery]

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      Lottery (feat. Jeremih) Shaggy

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    7

    Love Is Overdue

    Cravert Sterling [Love Is Overdue - Single]

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      Love Is Overdue Cravert Sterling

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    5

    Feel It

    Protoje [Feel It - Single]

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      Feel It Protoje

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    Hills Of St. Ann

    Stephen Marley [Hills Of St. Ann - Single]

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      Hills Of St. Ann Stephen Marley

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    3

    Goddess (feat. Shenseea)

    Protoje [Goddess - Single]

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      Goddess (feat. Shenseea) Protoje

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    9

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    Butterflies

    Buju Banton [Butterflies - Single]

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      Butterflies Buju Banton

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    Touch By An Angel

    Maxi Priest [Touch By An Angel - Single]

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      Touch By An Angel Maxi Priest

On Skyline Radio, we’ve been tracking a fascinating moment in reggae’s ongoing evolution: a scene that’s proudly rooted in tradition, yet nimble enough to speak to today’s streaming-era listeners. The latest crop of singles proves the genre is not just surviving in the global pop conversation — it’s sharpening its voice. From the breezy romanticism of Maxi Priest’s Touch By An Angel to the contemporary cross-generational pull of Protoje, these tracks remind us why reggae remains one of music’s most adaptable forms.

Let’s start with Touch By An Angel, the standout here and a very on-brand move from Maxi Priest, a singer who helped define reggae’s crossover era. The song leans into his trademark silk-smooth delivery, pairing warm melodies with a devotional tone that feels both timeless and quietly current. In an age where listeners are drawn to sincerity and mood, Priest’s gift is his refusal to force the moment; he lets the groove do the talking. That understated elegance is exactly why his catalogue still lands with audiences spanning generations.

Buju Banton’s Butterflies brings a different energy — reflective, polished, and steeped in the authority of an artist who has long understood how to balance gravitas with accessibility. Meanwhile, Protoje’s Goddess featuring Shenseea is built for the present tense: a collaboration that bridges roots consciousness and mainstream reach. Shenseea adds star power and contemporary bounce, while Protoje keeps the lyrical frame focused and deliberate. It’s the kind of pairing that highlights how reggae’s future often depends on smart, intergenerational collaboration.

Stephen Marley’s Hills Of St. Ann feels like a sonic postcard, grounded in family legacy and place. Marley has always carried the weight of heritage with remarkable calm, and this track channels that lineage into something intimate rather than museum-like. Feel It by Protoje continues his run as one of reggae’s most reliable modern stylists, blending emotional clarity with sleek production. His strength lies in making roots music feel immediate without sanding down its identity.

There’s also plenty to admire in the broader field: Busy Signal’s Reggae World offers veteran charisma and dancehall muscle; Shaggy’s Lottery with Jeremih shows the enduring power of pop-reggae fusion; Gyptian’s Good Love keeps melodic romance central; Romain Virgo’s Finally delivers the kind of vocal purity that has become increasingly prized in a digital landscape flooded with effects. And Cravert Sterling’s Love Is Overdue adds a heartfelt, classic-minded touch that fits neatly into the current appetite for authenticity.

The bigger picture? These songs arrive at a time when listeners are craving songs that feel human, rooted, and replayable. Reggae’s current resurgence isn’t about nostalgia alone — it’s about craft, identity, and collaboration. At Skyline Radio, we hear a genre confidently speaking in more than one dialect at once, and that’s exactly what makes this wave so compelling. The chart may update weekly, but these tracks have the kind of staying power that can shape the conversation well beyond a single spin.


Listeners Reggae Chart

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