I didn't say it lasted longer than reggae. After all neither reggae nor ska for that matter is dead.
I said as the most POPULAR form of music in JA it has been on top longer than reggae was. I might not have been clear that I was speaking in a Jamaican context and not a worldwide context.
It is worth noting though that while there are still more practitioners of reggae worldwide, most of the international hits made by Jamaicans in recent years have been more dancehall than reggae! Shaggy, Sean Paul and Junior Gong come to mind easily.
Given this reality, the idea that more than 30 years after it went mainstream (in a Jamaican context) we still think dancehall "will not last" is difficult to accept.
I said as the most POPULAR form of music in JA it has been on top longer than reggae was. I might not have been clear that I was speaking in a Jamaican context and not a worldwide context.
It is worth noting though that while there are still more practitioners of reggae worldwide, most of the international hits made by Jamaicans in recent years have been more dancehall than reggae! Shaggy, Sean Paul and Junior Gong come to mind easily.
Given this reality, the idea that more than 30 years after it went mainstream (in a Jamaican context) we still think dancehall "will not last" is difficult to accept.
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