ROCK TOPS

For four consecutive weeks, global rap superstar Drake’s latest studio album *Iceman* has held the top position on the United States’ all-genre Billboard 200 album chart, marking yet another rare moment of recognition for Jamaican music professionals on one of the world’s most prestigious industry rankings.

The chart-topping project carries production credits for two Jamaican creative talents: Montego Bay-based beatmaker Mxssivh, who co-produced the high-profile album cut *Ran to Atlanta* alongside featured artists Future and Molly Santana, and Jamaican-born super producer Matthew “Boi-1da” Samuels, a long-time Drake collaborator who crafted the beat for album track *National Treasures*.

While Jamaican music’s influence on global popular culture runs deep, recordings with credited Jamaican participation rarely claim the Billboard 200’s number one spot. To date, only one full-length album led by a Jamaican artist has ever topped the chart: Shaggy’s iconic 2000 release *Hotshot*, which enjoyed an identical four-week run at the peak of the ranking more than two decades ago.

That landmark 2000 project carried credits for a whole host of Jamaican talent, including producers Christopher Birch, Robert Livingston, Dave Kelly, and Tony “CD” Kelly, keyboardist Nigel Staff, and backing vocalists Dorrett Wisdom, Brian Gold and Tony Gold. For Birch, a former member of Shaggy’s touring band who co-produced *Hotshot*’s title track, the experience remains a career-defining blessing.

“It was indeed a blessing. I had been a musician playing and making music for years, so the word got around about my work,” Birch shared in an interview with the *Jamaica Observer*. “It was an amazing feeling at the time. I was on tour when the album hit number one, and the news hit like a ton of bricks. It was just surreal.” Birch would go on to parlay that early success into launching two independent labels, Echo and Birchill Records, with Echo breaking through via the hit *Thrilla* rhythm that spawned multiple chart-topping tracks including Macka Diamond’s breakthrough hit *Done Already*.

In the decades since Shaggy’s historic run, most Jamaican contributions to Billboard 200 number one albums have come via features and production work on projects from major American artists, most notably hitmaking producer and executive DJ Khaled, who has repeatedly centered Jamaican talent on his own chart-topping releases.

Khaled’s 2016 number one album *Major Key* included the Mavado track *Progress*, co-produced by Tawanna Jones, CEO of Jamaica’s Mineral Boss Records, alongside her husband Cleon. Jones says that opportunity transformed her label’s standing in the global dancehall industry.

“Being a part of a great music project that went to number one was more than just making music. It helped me to create a legacy,” Jones explained. “It was definitely a game-changer, and it brought credibility, industry recognition, and opened doors for us that had been out of reach. The attention that we got attracted new artistes to our label, other producers began to reach out as well as investors and business opportunities, while proving that Mineral Boss Records can compete on a larger scale.”

That pattern repeated across Khaled’s subsequent chart-topping projects: his 2017 number one *Grateful* included a feature from Jamaican reggae icon Sizzla and production credit for Troyton Music on a Mavado cut; 2021’s *Khaled Khaled* featured a collaborative track from dancehall legends Buju Banton, Capleton, and Bounty Killer; and 2022’s gold-certified *God Did* included another team-up between the same four Jamaican stars, with engineering credit for Jamaica’s Panta Son.

Beyond DJ Khaled’s projects, Drake has a long history of centering Jamaican talent on his own multiple Billboard 200 number one albums, with Boi-1da appearing on nearly every major Drake release dating back to 2010’s *Thank Me Later*, including *Take Care*, *Nothing Was the Same*, *Scorpion*, *Her Loss*, *If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late*, *What a Time to Be Alive*, *Care Package*, and *For All the Dogs*. Other Jamaican contributors across Drake’s chart-topping catalog include Beres Hammond, who received a vocal sample credit on 2017’s *More Life*; Stephen “Di Genius” McGregor, Beenie Man, Popcaan, Dwayne “Supa Dups” Chin-Quee, Mavado, Serani, and the Daseca Productions duo on 2016’s *Views*.

Boi-1da has also earned credits on other major number one albums outside of Drake’s discography, including Rihanna’s 2016 *Anti* and two Eminem releases: 2010’s *Recovery* and 2018’s *Kamikaze* – with Chin-Quee also producing a track on Eminem’s *Recovery*. Even global pop icon Beyoncé has tapped Jamaican creative talent for her chart-topping projects: 2011’s *4* credits Vybz Kartel as a co-writer after sampling his Major Lazer hit *Pon De Floor* for Beyoncé’s hit *Run The World (Girls)*, while 2022’s *Renaissance* carried credits for Kingston-born artist BEAM, veteran performer Grace Jones, Boi-1da, and engineer Delroy “Phatta” Pottinger.

For Jamaican music professionals, each new credit on a Billboard 200 number one album not only cements the island’s outsize influence on global popular music, but also opens new doors for the next generation of Jamaican creative talent to reach international audiences.