
Artist
Max Romeo
Max Romeo is a reggae artist from Jamaica formed in 1944. 108 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Reggae · Jamaica · Best reggae albums
- 108
- Releases
- 1969–2026
- Active years
- 1944
- Formed
Discography
53
Most popular
Horror Zone
2016

Wet Dream
1993

Pocomania Songs
2006

A Little Time for Jah
2003

Our Rights
1988

Words From the Brave
2019

On the Beach
2001

Reconstruction
1978

Something Is Wrong
1993

Selassie I Forever
-

Holding Out My Love To You
2025

Reggae-Up
2024

The Cross Or the Gun
2024

Every Man Ought To Know
2024

The Pama Years: Max Romeo - The Hit Maker
2022

Reggae Greats: Horace Andy, Johnny Clarke and Max Romeo
2021

World Of Ghouls
2021

Revelation Time
2020

Reggae Legends: Max Romeo
2019

Striker's Choice Dubs (Bunny 'Striker' Lee 50th Anniversary Edition)
2019

Father and Sons
2014

36 Carat Golden Hits
2014

Reggae Max Romeo
2014

The 10 Commandments of Max Romeo
2014

Head 2 Head
2012

Sound Box Essentials Platinum Edition
2012

Max Romeo Anthology
2012

Three Wise Men, Vol. 6
2012

Best Of Max Romeo
2011

Tribute to Bob Marley & Dubs
2011

Max Romeo Sings Hits of Bob Marley
2011

Bunny Striker Lee Presents
2011

Jackpot Present Tribute to Bob Marley & Dubs
2011

freedom street
2010

Perilous Times (1974-1999)
2010

Reggae
2009

Best Of
2009

First In Live
2008

Open the Iron Gate: 1973-1979
2006

Sings Hits Of Bob Marley
2006

Max Romeo's Don't Rock My Boat
2006

Anthology 1967-76: The Coming of Jah
2002

In This Time
2000

Pray For Me
2000

Open the Iron Gate 1973 - 1977
1999

Fari - Captain of My Ship
1992

Far I - Captain of My Ship
1992

Love Message
1988

I Love My Music
1982

War Ina Babylon
1976

Wet Dream EP
1973

Let The Power Fall
1971

A Dream
1969
Singles & EPs
55
Chase the Devil / Disco Devil
Single · 2026

We're Gonna Make It
Single · 2025

Over All
Single · 2025

Badminded People
EP · 2025

Marching (Remix Dub)
Single · 2025

Marching
Single · 2025

Max Romeo Sings Classics
EP · 2024

Man Next Door (Radio Edit)
Single · 2024

Man Next Door
Single · 2024

No Place Like Home (Radio Edit)
Single · 2024

No Place Like Home
Single · 2024

Dubplate Hemporizer My Canarian Herb
Single · 2024

Send The Praises Up
Single · 2024

Jah Jah Love
Single · 2024

A Little Time for We
Single · 2023

Final Warning
Single · 2023

Johosaphatt The Lost Valley / Johosaphatt The Lost Valley Version
Single · 2023

Melt Away
EP · 2022

Just Like The Rainbow
Single · 2022

REVERANT (DUBPLATE MIX)
Single · 2022

Public Enemy
Single · 2021

Are You Coming Again
Single · 2021

Flatten the Curve
Single · 2020

Johosaphatt The Lost Valley
Single · 2018

Chant Rasta
Single · 2016

Wet Dream (Extended Version)
Single · 2014

Candida
Single · 2014

Sometimes
Single · 2014

Two Face People
Single · 2014

People Get Ready
Single · 2012

Crazy World of Dub
Single · 2012

The EP Vol 4
EP · 2012

The EP Vol 2
EP · 2012

The EP Vol 5
EP · 2012

The EP Vol 3
EP · 2012

The EP Vol 1
EP · 2012

Down Rome Yard Dub
Single · 2012

Dis Ya Dubwise Keep You Moving Yard
Single · 2012

Dis Dub Nuh Free Yard
Single · 2012

For Moses Yard Dub
Single · 2012

Forever Yard Dub
Single · 2012

The Dub Clock Yard
Single · 2012

Ethiopian Anthem
Single · 2012

Can't Hide from Dub Yard
Single · 2012

Dangerously Yard Dubbing
Single · 2012

Love Thy Dub Yard
Single · 2012

Ganja Yard Dub
Single · 2012

Rainbow Country
Single · 2012

Walking Along
Single · 2012

Trouble Yard Dub
Single · 2012

Nobody's Child
Single · 2012

Hypocrites
Single · 2012

Mellow Mood
Single · 2012

Babylon Fall EP
EP · 2011

Norman the Gambler
EP · 2010
Upcoming shows
Community
More about Max Romeo
About
Max Romeo (born Maxwell Livingston Smith, 22 November 1947, St. D'Acre, St. Ann, Jamaica), is a reggae and roots reggae recording artist who has achieved chart success in his home country, and in the UK. The singer who put the rude in rude boy, Max Romeo was responsible for launching an entirely new sub-genre of reggae, whose overtly suggestive lyrics caused an outcry but took a massive hold of the music scene regardless. Yet innuendo was the least of the singer's stylings, previous to the release of his infamous "Wet Dream," Romeo had garnered a string of sweet hits with the vocal trio the Emotions. And once the nocturnal naughtiness faded, the singer established himself as one of the most important figures in the roots scene. He left home at the age of 14 and worked on a sugar plantation outside Clarendon, cleaning out irrigation ditches, before winning a local talent competition when he was 18; prompting a move to the capital, Kingston, in order to achieve a successful musical career. In 1965 he joined up with Kenneth Knight and Lloyd Shakespeare in The Emotions, whilst also working as a record plugger for Ken Lack's Caltone label.
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The group were unsuccessful in auditions for other producers, but Lack offered them an audition after overhearing Smith singing to himself as he worked one day. In 1966, the group had their first hit, with the Lack-produced, "Buy You a Rainbow". The Emotions went on to have several hit singles and by 1968, the singer, by this point known as Max Romeo, felt confident enough to launch a solo career. Working with producer Bunny Lee, the young star recorded a number of pop songs, mainly love ballads, but they failed to be popular and so he returned to The Emotions, now recording for Phil Pratt. During this time he began work as a sales representative for Bunny Lee and did some recording with The Hippy Boys, which would later became The Upsetters. Later on in 1968, Romeo wrote new lyrics for the rhythm track of Derrick Morgan's "Hold You Jack" and handed them over to Lee. Morgan, who was due to add his vocals to the track, ultimately gave it a miss, as did several other vocalists (including John Holt and Slim Smith), leading the producer to turn to Romeo to sing the lyrics he had written. The result, "Wet Dream", was an instant hit in Jamaica, although in the UK it was met with a BBC Radio ban, despite Romeo's somewhat-disingenuous claim that the song was actually about a roof that has a leak. Still, the ban only made it more popular and the single charted in the Top Ten, in the UK Singles Chart, spending almost six months therein, before featuring on his LP, A Dream, which included several follow-up singles in a similar vein, such as "Mini Skirt Version", "Fish In The Pot", "Belly Woman", and "Wine Her Goosie". A UK tour also met with Romeo being banned from performing at several venues, although many allowed him to play, the singer staying in the UK for eighteen months. In 1970, Romeo returned to Jamaica and set-up Romax, an unsuccessful record label and sound system. Following which, he recorded several singles, mainly with old producer Bunny Lee, before going on to work a host of other producers including Niney Holness. This was followed by a period of which saw the release of a series of politically charged singles, most advocating the democratic socialist People's National Party (PNP), which chose his song, "Let The Power Fall On I", as their campaign theme for the 1972 Jamaican general election. Romeo joined the PNP Musical Bandwagon, travelling around Jamaica, playing on the back of a truck. After this, Romeo recorded a number of religious songs, until he worked with producer Lee "Scratch" Perry, producing the classic singles "Three Blind Mice" (an adaptation of the nursery rhyme with lyrics about a police raid on a party), "Sipple out deh", and "Chase The Devil". A remixed version of "Sipple out deh", entitled "War Ina Babylon", was another popular track in the UK, the first fruits of his deal with Island Records, and was followed by an album of the same name, and a follow-up single "One Step Forward". Shortly after this the pair fell out, leaving Romeo to self-produce his follow-up album, Reconstruction, which could not match the success of its predecessor. Perry's animosity towards Romeo was demonstrated by his single "White Belly Rat", with Perry also writing the word 'Judas' over a photograph of Romeo on the wall of his Black Ark studio. He moved to New York City in 1978, where he co-wrote (with Hair producer Michael Butler) the musical, Reggae, which he also starred in. In 1980 he appeared as a backing vocalist on "Dance" on The Rolling Stones album Emotional Rescue. In 1981, the favour was returned when Keith Richards (of The Rolling Stones) co-produced and played on Romeo's album, Holding Out My Love to You. The rest of his output during the decade went practically unnoticed, with Romeo finding work at a New York electronics store. He returned to Jamaica in 1990, and began touring and recording more regularly. He visited the UK again in 1992, recording the albums Far I Captain of My Ship and Our Rights with Jah Shaka. In 1995 he recorded Cross of the Gun with Tappa Zukie, and he joined up with UK rhythm section/production team Mafia & Fluxy in 1999 for the album Selassie I Forever. His music has been sampled by other artists; The Prodigy sampled his track "Chase The Devil" for their 1992 UK Top Ten hit "Out of Space". Kanye West has also used samples from it to produce Jay-Z's hit song "Lucifer", which appeared on Jay-Z's 2003 release - The Black Album. "Chase The Devil" is featured on the reggae radio station K-JAH Radio West in a popular videogame Grand Theft Auto San Andreas, released in October 2004. Romeo's single "Sipple out deh" appeared in John Peel's Record Box. - Albums: A Dream (1970) Trojan Let The Power Fall (1972) Dynamic Revelation Time (1975) Black World War Ina Babylon (1976) Island Reconstruction (1979) Island I Love My Music (1979) Wackies Rondos (1980) King Kong Holding Out My Love to You (1981) Shanachie Transition (1989) Rohit Fari - Captain of My Ship (1992) Jah Shaka Our Rights (1992) Jah Shaka Cross or the Gun (1995) Tappa Zukie Selassie I Forever (1999) Mafia & Fluxy Love Message (1999) Warriors Something is Wrong (1999) Warriors In This Time (2001) 3D (Max Romeo & Tribu Acustica) Pocomania Songs (2007) Ariwa Sounds - Compilations: Max Romeo Meets Owen Gray At King Tubby's Studio (1984) Culture Press (with Owen Gray) Max Romeo and the Upsetters (1989) Wet Dream (1993) Crocodisc McCabee Version (1995) Sonic Sounds Open The Iron Gate (1999) Blood & Fire The Many Moods of Max Romeo (1999) Jamaican Gold Pray For Me: The Best of Max Romeo 1967-73 (2000) Trojan Records Perilous Times (2000) Charmax On The Beach (2001) Culture Press The Coming of Jah (2002) Trojan Ultimate Collection (2003) (compiled by David Katz) Holy Zion (2003) Burning Bush Wet Dream: The Best of Max Romeo (2004) Trojan Crazy World of Dub (2005) Jamaican Recordings One of Jamaica's most provocative lyricists, a singer who gave us such enduring songs as 'Chase The Devil' (which was sampled in the song 'Out of Space' by The Prodigy and the song 'Lucifer' by Jay-Z), 'Public Enemy Number One', 'One Step Forward' and 'Three Blind Mice'. It was Romeo who first introduced Britain to the concept of rude reggae with 'Wet Dream', which, despite a total radio ban, reached number 10 in the UK charts in May 1969. In 1972 Romeo began working with producer Lee "Scratch" Perry. 'Babylon Burning', 'Three Blind Mice' and 'The Coming Of Jah' all maintained his star status in Jamaica between 1972 and 1975. Revelation Time was one of the best albums of 1975, and 1976's War Ina Babylon was hailed by the rock press as an all-time classic reggae album. Two outstanding contributions that will remain classic recordings from the so-called 'golden age' of Jamaican reggae music.
Max Romeo in brief
- How many Max Romeo releases are on Riffiter?
- 108 releases are catalogued, spanning 1969 to 2026.
- When was Max Romeo formed?
- Max Romeo formed in 1944, in Jamaica.
- What genre is Max Romeo?
- Max Romeo is catalogued under Reggae.
- What is the most recent Max Romeo release on Riffiter?
- Chase the Devil / Disco Devil, released in 2026.