Young Garvey promotes peace with ‘No War’

Three years after he first dropped his blunt anti-conflict track *No War*, Jamaican roots musician Young Garvey is watching escalating military clashes between the United States, Israel and Iran unfold with a sharp sense of eerie irony. The song’s core message, which calls out U.S. hypocrisy over nuclear weapons stockpiling at a time when successive U.S. administrations have accused Iran of pursuing illegal nuclear programs, feels even more urgent today than it did when it was first recorded. When American and Israeli forces launched bombing raids on Tehran in May, Garvey and his long-time producer, legendary reggae figure Leroy Sibbles, made the quick decision to re-release the track to amplify its call for global peace. “The U.S. holds massive nuclear stockpiles, so this can’t be a one-sided standard,” Garvey told Jamaica Observer Online in a recent interview. “When these power imbalances and double standards spiral into open war, that’s where I draw the line, because all people deserve peace.” Garvey first crafted the track to push an uncompromising message of peace, and shot the song’s official music video in Trench Town, the iconic Kingston neighborhood that was Garvey’s childhood home. Trench Town is classified as one of Jamaica’s “garrison communities,” areas that have long been plagued by endemic gang and political violence, giving Garvey personal, lived insight into the devastation war causes, whether it plays out on local streets or international battlefields. “War is never a good thing, no matter if it’s in your own backyard or across the globe,” explained the dreadlocked artist. “That’s the simple, clear message the song has always carried.” *No War* is one of dozens of tracks Garvey has cut for Sibbles’ independent imprint Bright Beam Records. Other well-released cuts from their collaboration include *Cool Natty* and *One More Sad Song*, the latter of which was written in response to the controversial 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, which sparked global racial justice protests. Since the start of 2026, Garvey has also rolled out two additional original singles, *What If* and *Still Going On*, building momentum toward a planned full-length project later this year.