
Artist
Buju Banton
Buju Banton is a reggae artist from Salt lane Jamaica formed in 1987. 92 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Reggae · Salt lane Jamaica · Best reggae albums
- 92
- Releases
- 1900–2026
- Active years
- 1987
- Formed
Discography
34
Most popular
Inna Heights
1997

Voice of Jamaica
1993

Mr. Mention
1993

Dancehall: Buju Banton
2018

Friends for Life
2003

Gonna Bring Ya
2001

Unchained Spirit
2000

Stamina Daddy
1992

Want it!
2016

The Early Years (90-95)
1900

Before the Dawn
2010

Quick
1998

Flames of Freedom
-
- Too Too Bad
Too Too Bad
2026

BORN FOR GREATNESS
2023

ROAD TO GREATNESS
2023

Penthouse Flashback - Buju Banton, Vol. 5
2021

Penthouse Flashback, Vol. 4
2021

'Til Shiloh (25th Anniversary Edition)
2020

Upside Down 2020
2020

Steppaz Riddim
2020

Hapilos Collections: Buju Banton
2019

Reggae Jamdown Triplets - Buju Banton, Elephant Man and Jigsy King
2019

Sons Of Jamaica
2015

Penthouse Flashback Series: Buju Banton, Vol. 2
2013

Penthouse Flashback Series: Buju Banton, Vol. 1
2013

The Early Years Vol. 2 - "The Reality of Life"
2012

Buju & Friends
2010

Rasta Got Soul
2009

Inna Heights - 10th Anniversary Edition
2008

Too Bad
2006

Buju and Friends
2004

Dubbing With the Banton
2000

'Til Shiloh
1995
Singles & EPs
58
Driver A - A COLORS SHOW
Single · 2026

X Rated
Single · 2026

Punisher
Single · 2026

Waistline (Uptown Riddim)
Single · 2026

Butterflies
Single · 2026

Everybody Knows (Soul Food Riddim)
Single · 2026

Not Sure (Rapid Burst Riddim)
Single · 2026

Baba Boom Riddim
EP · 2025

Rapid Burst Riddim
EP · 2025

Dancehall Riddim: Candle Wax (Sped Up)
EP · 2025

Reggae Riddim: One In Ten
EP · 2025

Bad Boys and Police
Single · 2025

Full A Craft
Single · 2025

Green Light
Single · 2025

Flava
Single · 2024

This Is How We Roll
Single · 2024

Slogan
Single · 2024

Pretty Girls
Single · 2024

Dancehall Riddim: Callaloo Bed
Single · 2024

Thank You Lord
Single · 2024

This Is Jamaica
Single · 2024

Such Man Party
Single · 2024

Slogan (2024 Remastered)
Single · 2024

John John Dancehall Riddims: Anthrax
EP · 2024

Dancehall Riddim: Candle Wax
Single · 2024

Tony Kelly Presents: Dancehall Vibes
EP · 2024

John John Dancehall Riddims: G String
EP · 2024

Stop Gazing
Single · 2023

Lord I Thank You
Single · 2023

COCONUT WATA (SIP)
Single · 2023

Dancehall Riddim: I C I
Single · 2023

Dancehall Riddim: Anthem
Single · 2023

Media Dolly
Single · 2023

Dancehall Riddim: Nookie 2K6
Single · 2023

Dancehall Riddim: Wha Do Dem
Single · 2023

False Pretense
Single · 2023

Dancehall Riddim:
Single · 2023

Faded Away
Single · 2022

Reggae Dancehall Riddim: Scorcher
Single · 2022

SI MI CLEAN
Single · 2022

Keep Coming Back the Tyrell 144 Mix
Single · 2021

Be Humble
EP · 2021

My Favorite Song
Single · 2021

Summer Body
Single · 2021

Ganja Man
Single · 2020

All I Say
Single · 2020

Blessed More Blessed (The Remixes)
EP · 2020

Wanna Be Loved (Remix)/Not An Easy Road (Remix)/Come Inna The Dance
Single · 2020

Not An Easy Road (Remix)/Come Inna The Dance
Single · 2020

Come Inna The Dance
Single · 2020

Blessed More Blessed (Dance Remixes)
Single · 2020

Lonely Nights
Single · 2020

Blessed
Single · 2020

Memories
Single · 2020

Trust (Remix)
Single · 2020

Country For Sale
Single · 2019

Trust
Single · 2019

Steppa
Single · 2019
Appears on
1Releases by other artists featuring Buju Banton.
Featured tracks
4
Bonafide Love (feat. Buju Banton)Wayne Wonder · Collectors Series - Wayne Wonder
Commitment (feat. Buju Banton)Wayne Wonder · Collectors Series - Wayne Wonder
Searching (feat. Buju Banton)Wayne Wonder · Collectors Series - Wayne Wonder
What You Gonna Do (feat. Buju Banton)Wayne Wonder · Collectors Series - Wayne Wonder
Collaborators
1Upcoming shows
Community
More about Buju Banton
About
Buju Banton was one of the most popular dancehall reggae artists of the '90s. Debuting with a series of popular "slack" singles, which drew criticism for their graphic sexuality and homophobia, Banton converted to Rastafarianism and revolutionized dancehall by employing the live instrumentation and social consciousness of classic roots reggae. He first adopted the approach on his 1995 classic 'Til Shiloh, which raised hopes among his fans that he would become dancehall's great international ambassador, as Bob Marley had been for roots reggae. While that never quite materialized, Banton remained a high-profile star into the new millennium.
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Buju Banton was born Mark Anthony Myrie on July 15, 1973, in the Kingston slum of Salt Lane. Buju was his childhood nickname, a word for breadfruit that was often applied to chubby children; he would later adopt Banton in tribute to one of his earliest musical influences, Burro Banton. He was one of 15 children; his mother was a street vendor, and he was directly descended from the colonial-era freedom fighters known as the Maroons. Banton first tried his hand at DJing and toasting at age 13, performing with local sound systems. He made his first recording not long after, with the 1986 Robert Ffrench-produced single "The Ruler." He continued to record through 1987, then took some time off to allow his voice to mature. He returned in the early '90s with a rough growl comparable to that of Shabba Ranks. Mr. Mention In 1991, Banton began recording for Donovan Germain's Penthouse label, often teaming with engineer/producer/songwriter Dave "Rude Boy" Kelly. Debuting for the label with "Man Fi Dead," his first major hit was "Love Mi Browning," an ode to light-skinned women that drew the ire of Jamaica's sizable darker-skinned population. As penance, he released a follow-up single called "Love Black Woman," but courted even more controversy with "Boom Bye Bye," a notoriously homophobic track that seemingly advocated violence against gays. Other hits of the period included "Batty Rider," "Bogle," and "Women Nuh Fret," among many others; in fact, 1992 saw Banton break Marley's record for the most number one singles in one year. His debut album, Mr. Mention, was a smash hit that year as well, and he signed an international major-label deal with Mercury. Voice of Jamaica The Voice of Jamaica album, released in 1993, introduced Banton to the world outside Jamaica, and gave him a huge hit in the celebratory safe-sex anthem "Willy (Don't Be Silly)." Other singles from the album included "Operation Ardent," a critique of police corruption, and "Deportees (Things Change)," which castigated emigrants who refused to share their overseas earnings with the family back in Jamaica. In early 1994, Banton released the monumental single "Murderer," an impassioned indictment of dancehall culture and gun violence recorded after the shooting deaths of fellow dancehall DJs Panhead and Dirtsman. Inna Heights As well-received as Voice of Jamaica was, it was the 1995 follow-up, 'Til Shiloh, that would rank as Banton's masterpiece. A fusion of dancehall with live instrumentation and classic roots reggae, 'Til Shiloh consolidated Banton's move into social awareness and adopted a more mature, reflective tone that signaled Banton's arrival as an artist able to make major creative statements. His follow-up, 1997's Inna Heights, continued in a similarly rootsy vein and won only slightly less acclaim than its much-heralded predecessor. In 1999, Banton recorded with the punk band Rancid and subsequently signed with the punk label Epitaph's eclectic Anti subsidiary. In 2000, he delivered his Unchained Spirit, which found him growing more eclectic in a quest to cross over to the international market; it also featured a successful duet with Beres Hammond on "Pull It Up." After a three-year break from album releases, Banton returned on Atlantic in 2003 with Friends for Life, a crossover-friendly record with elements of hip-hop, R&B, and pop (and very little of the roots-dancehall hybrid that had catapulted him to stardom). Unhappy with the support he was given at the major labels, Banton started his own label, Gargamel Music, and released the single "Magic City" in 2004. The single was a preview of his next album, Rasta Got Soul, but an arrest on ganja cultivation charges sent him into legal battle for the next two years. When it all ended in a fine, he unleashed his strictly dancehall album Too Bad featuring the huge Jamaican hit "Driver A." The much more traditional Rasta Got Soul finally appeared in 2009.
Buju Banton in brief
- How many Buju Banton releases are on Riffiter?
- 92 releases are catalogued, spanning 1900 to 2026.
- When was Buju Banton formed?
- Buju Banton formed in 1987, in Salt lane Jamaica.
- What genre is Buju Banton?
- Buju Banton is catalogued under Reggae.
- What is the most recent Buju Banton release on Riffiter?
- Driver A - A COLORS SHOW, released in 2026.
