Born Damian Rhoden from Islington, St. Mary, Munga joined the music scene a… Read Full Bio ↴Born Damian Rhoden from Islington, St. Mary, Munga joined the music scene at the tender age of 18 when he entered the Red Label Wine Superstar Competition with the original song "Who Drink Out the Red Label Wine?". A past student of St Mary High and Tarrant Comprehensive, Munga hustled on the streets doing odd jobs before setting his mind on becoming an entertainer. Since then, he has never turned back.
Munga developed his versatile style as a prodigy of the 'fireman' Capleton before grabbing the attention of the nation as a solo act. With an edgy rap style combined with a conscious mind and a 'gangsta ras' image, Munga broke into the business with his hit song "No Bad Like I". Lyrically "Nuh Bad Like I" launched an attack on other upcoming deejays who proved unable to match Munga's style. Following on the success of the monster hit, "No Bad Like I", Munga performed on stages all over the island, U.S. East Coast and the Caribbean. His forceful, heartfelt performances earned him a slew of loyal fans. He says: "We start travel in 2001, opening for Capleton in the small islands, and then in 2002, I opened for him on the U.S. tour. The Prophet has been the best teacher I could possibly have. He taught me about presentation, which is your image to the people, and the delivery of your sound and vocals. I commend him for that; he has the presentation aspect locked."
Coming under the tutelage of David House and Don Corleone then proved a turning point for Munga. Under the guidance of these co-managers, Munga has unleashed an extensive collection of singles on reggae's hottest riddim tracks such as High Altitude, Sweat, Heavenly, Untouchable, Operation Blaxx, Full Clip, Seizure, Billback, 12 Gauge and Soap Riddim. With his signature 'Yes! Yes!' Munga makes his presence felt with every song, whether it is a gangsta vibe or a conscious feel. Having dubbed himself the 'gangsta Ras', Munga has allowed himself the ability to slip between a more thug look that and popular in the dancehall now and the more conscious lyrics that are associated with being a Rastafarian. As he says, what you see is what you get, which is simply Munga at his best. Since releasing his hit single Bad From Wi Born in 2006, Munga has become one of the hottest commodities on, stage shows. His Flippin Rhymes, I Came To Take My Place, Not At All and Earthquake are all on heavy rotations at parties and all the radio stations. His high-pitched Sizzla-like singing style has producers clamouring to voice the artiste who hopes to one day be as prolific as a Capleton, Sizzla or Bob Marley.
Munga developed his versatile style as a prodigy of the 'fireman' Capleton before grabbing the attention of the nation as a solo act. With an edgy rap style combined with a conscious mind and a 'gangsta ras' image, Munga broke into the business with his hit song "No Bad Like I". Lyrically "Nuh Bad Like I" launched an attack on other upcoming deejays who proved unable to match Munga's style. Following on the success of the monster hit, "No Bad Like I", Munga performed on stages all over the island, U.S. East Coast and the Caribbean. His forceful, heartfelt performances earned him a slew of loyal fans. He says: "We start travel in 2001, opening for Capleton in the small islands, and then in 2002, I opened for him on the U.S. tour. The Prophet has been the best teacher I could possibly have. He taught me about presentation, which is your image to the people, and the delivery of your sound and vocals. I commend him for that; he has the presentation aspect locked."
Coming under the tutelage of David House and Don Corleone then proved a turning point for Munga. Under the guidance of these co-managers, Munga has unleashed an extensive collection of singles on reggae's hottest riddim tracks such as High Altitude, Sweat, Heavenly, Untouchable, Operation Blaxx, Full Clip, Seizure, Billback, 12 Gauge and Soap Riddim. With his signature 'Yes! Yes!' Munga makes his presence felt with every song, whether it is a gangsta vibe or a conscious feel. Having dubbed himself the 'gangsta Ras', Munga has allowed himself the ability to slip between a more thug look that and popular in the dancehall now and the more conscious lyrics that are associated with being a Rastafarian. As he says, what you see is what you get, which is simply Munga at his best. Since releasing his hit single Bad From Wi Born in 2006, Munga has become one of the hottest commodities on, stage shows. His Flippin Rhymes, I Came To Take My Place, Not At All and Earthquake are all on heavy rotations at parties and all the radio stations. His high-pitched Sizzla-like singing style has producers clamouring to voice the artiste who hopes to one day be as prolific as a Capleton, Sizzla or Bob Marley.
Crazy Talk
Munga Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Crazy Talk' by these artists:
Brenda Lee Every time I see you comin' a walkin' down the…
Chilliwack She talks crazy talk She talks crazy talk She talks crazy ta…
Space Cowboy ᴸᴼᵂ ᴵᴺ ᵀᴴᴱ ᴮᴬᶜᴷᴳᴿᴼᵁᴺᴰ again, and again and again I dont car…
We have lyrics for these tracks by Munga:
Bad From Mi Born Yeah! Hail Selassie I di first Jah Rastafari redemption I…
Earthquake Ganstas don't play around baygan can stay around red, green…
In Your Arms (intro) selassie I I you lookin so yeah it's munga (c…
INTRO Is not a tiny cut Uhh there was something that come…
Rise Intro Figure 8 New Day, new beginning But sometimes, feels…
Take My Place AND NOW (Wassup)...INTRODUCING TO THE WORLD (Who) MUNGA...HO…
Wine Pon It Intro: Yes, yeees Girlfriend tell you friend sey casco wa…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@EjnrTV
Munga & Don Corleone chemistry undeniable. Wish they could reason tings out & go make more history in music.
@goodbye6522
Real talk I feel like we didn't get to see the full potential of munga because of that split between them both.
@thelivekatcher666
Munga doesn't need no one producer in particular to strike a big hit song because his flows are impeccable on any and every riddim.
@EjnrTV
@@thelivekatcher666 I hear you but when you find a producer who understands your talent to a good extent or exceptionally well also pushing you to a level you never imagined, It’s in your best interest to stick with them because that chemistry is hard to find. Artists who do this normally go on to have a very successful career and make timeless music.
@thelivekatcher666
@@EjnrTV mi agree wid everything you said here.💯💯💯📽
@thelivekatcher666
@@EjnrTV but finding that producer is like finding a needle in a hay stack because most of these producers always want exercise dem ego on the same artist dem who enjoy working with them, well at least with my experience with a lot of producer. The best producer i ever had was a brethren name "Scrum Dilly" AKA Don Rico El Patron. He was the one who brought Aidonia to Skatta Burrell because Scrum Dilly was the secret recipe to most of Skatta Burrell big projects. But Skatta had robbed him 2000 USD that he earned on his own using Skatta Burrell equipment and that would have been the Biggest pay cheque Scrum Dilly would have earned working alongside Skatta but Skatta was too greedy and that's the problem with most of these producers, they think they work deserves more than the artist and a lot more egotistical behavior i always tend to find with most of these producers and engineer. A lot of times they want to tell the artist what to say in their song and they are not artist nor do they understand the rhyming pattern and certain intricacies that's involved in the song, yet they want to tell you to not say that and say this and if you refuse then they shut down their system and tell you to go somewhere else, no matter the amount of years you spent around them. That's my experience with 90% of these producers.
@gazagirl6747
This interview brings back so many good memories in dancehall munga use to mash up the place no doubt love this interview
@D_it_Dude
Great interview bredda…well done on focusing on artiste weh a veterans and no inna the spotlight right now.
@NegusImaranation
Respect🙌🏾
@EjnrTV
The Prayer one of my favourite Munga songs. It’s probably his best song to date even though it doesn’t have the same notoriety as other hits by Munga Honourable