Listeners Reggae Chart

UK Artists Reggae Chart

today13/06/2026 26

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    10

    Still in Love

    Nubian Queenz [Still in Love - Single]

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    9

    It Feels so Right

    House Of Fyah [It Feels so Right - Single]

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      It Feels so Right House Of Fyah

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    Higher

    Adelaide Mackenzie [Higher - Single]

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      Higher Adelaide Mackenzie

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    Someone Special

    Sandra Cross [Now]

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      Someone Special Sandra Cross

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    Wonderful Feeling (feat. Morfius)

    Jayjayborn2sing [Wonderful Feeling (feat. Morfius) - Single]

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      Wonderful Feeling (feat. Morfius) Jayjayborn2sing

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    Where Are We Now? (feat. Peter Hunnigale)

    The Aarons Brothers [Where Are We Now? (feat. Peter Hunnigale) - Single]

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      Where Are We Now? (feat. Peter Hunnigale) The Aarons Brothers

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    Everytime I See My Baby

    Abel Miller, Mad Professor, Ariwa Posse & Joe Ariwa [Everytime I See My Baby - Single]

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      Everytime I See My Baby Abel Miller, Mad Professor, Ariwa Posse & Joe Ariwa

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    I Have Faith

    Gappy Ranks [Likkle More Riddim - EP]

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      I Have Faith Gappy Ranks

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    Emotional Roots

    Chardel Rhoden & Yllavation [Emotional Roots - Single]

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      Emotional Roots Chardel Rhoden & Yllavation

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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

Here at Skyline Radio, where the UK reggae scene is never just a playlist but a living, breathing culture, these ten cuts land with the kind of warmth and purpose that keeps listeners locked in. Across lovers rock tenderness, roots-wise reflection and contemporary reggae polish, this selection captures a scene that is both proudly local and firmly global. In an era when streaming has flattened borders, these artists remind us that UK reggae still thrives on craft, message and unmistakable feel.

Leading the charge is Nubian Queenz with “Still in Love”, a title that promises devotion and delivers it with elegant restraint. The lyric idea sits squarely in the lovers rock tradition: tenderness, loyalty and emotional honesty, all wrapped in a soft-focus groove designed for late-night replay. What makes it stand out is its poise — not chasing trends, but refining a timeless sound. This is a track for the car at dusk, the house party slow dance, or any moment when romance needs a soundtrack with depth.

House Of Fyah turn up the temperature on “It Feels so Right”, a title that suggests instinctive chemistry and a bassline built for movement. Adelaide Mackenzie brings uplift on “Higher”, while Sandra Cross offers mature grace on “Someone Special”, a song that feels tailor-made for daytime listening when you want the energy gentle but optimistic. These tracks show how reggae continues to balance joy with emotional intelligence.

Jayjayborn2sing and Morfius bring a brighter, contemporary edge on “Wonderful Feeling”, while The Aarons Brothers team with Peter Hunnigale on “Where Are We Now?” — a collaboration that hints at reflection, distance and the need to take stock. That questioning spirit is central to modern roots music: not nostalgia, but awareness. Similarly, Abel Miller, Mad Professor, Ariwa Posse and Joe Ariwa on “Everytime I See My Baby” bring heavyweight heritage into the present, with dub-informed sonics likely to reward proper speakers and a patient ear.

Gappy Ranks keeps the spiritual centre strong on “I Have Faith”, a reminder that reggae remains one of popular music’s most reliable homes for resilience. Chardel Rhoden and Yllavation deepen the mood on “Emotional Roots”, a title that neatly captures the genre’s core strength: feeling with backbone. And Maxi Priest, still one of the most recognisable voices in the field, closes the circle with “Touch By An Angel”, a track that sounds built for golden-hour listening, when the day slows and the soul does the talking.

What ties this set together is its refusal to treat reggae as museum music. These songs speak to today’s listeners — people seeking sincerity in a noisy digital age, people craving songs that move the body but also steady the mind. On Skyline Radio’s UK Reggae Artists Chart, this is exactly the sort of material that matters: homegrown talent, culture-forward storytelling and rhythms with staying power.

So put these tracks on when the commute needs calm, when the weekend needs lift, or when you want your room to feel like a community. The message across the board is clear: UK reggae is not only alive, it is evolving beautifully — and these artists are helping shape where it goes next.


Listeners Reggae Chart

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