In Jamaica’s globally influential dancehall scene, household names and chart-topping performers grab all the public attention: their voices blare from festival speakers, their social media posts spark viral conversations, and their lyrics enter everyday slang as cultural touchstones. But for every high-profile star, there is a network of skilled, dedicated professionals working behind the curtain, building the industry’s infrastructure while staying out of the limelight. For decades, Vivian Thomas, a veteran producer, manager, and music strategist, preferred this quiet, invisible role — that is, until now, as he steps forward to elevate underrepresented authentic Jamaican artistry on the global stage.
Thomas cut his teeth in the industry at King Jammy’s Studio, one of the most legendary and influential institutions in dancehall history. Unlike the performers who took the mic, Thomas worked behind the mixing boards, honing his craft as a sound engineer, adjusting frequencies, and learning how subtle tweaks could turn a rough recording into a culturally resonant movement. That early training shaped every part of his career, he says. “That taught me everything,” Thomas shared in a recent interview. “You learn to hear what doesn’t belong.”
After mastering the precision of studio engineering, Thomas parlayed that skill set into founding two companies: Push A Yute Ent Inc and Urbanvine Media, bringing the same attention to detail to artiste development, management, and media strategy. Over decades in the business, he has collaborated with and produced for a roster of artists that shaped decades of Jamaican popular music, including Black Ryno, Deva Bratt, Mr Peppa, I-Wayne, Mr Lexx, and Munga. His resume includes career-defining credits: he earned a Grammy nomination as a producer for his work with singer Da’Ville, produced *Fyah Pon the Bay* alongside Grammy-winning artist Kabaka Pyramid, and released Lisa Hyper’s 2018 full-length album *Boss Up*. During his time at King Jammy’s, he also served as recording engineer for Sizzla’s *Get to the Point* and Bushman’s iconic single *Fire Pon a Weak Heart*.
Seeking to expand Jamaican music’s global reach, Thomas later extended his work into Europe, holding roles as an A&R representative at Star Search Media before signing with Switzerland’s Dancing City under Jean Singellos. Operating across a fragmented network of independent promoters, labels, and venue owners, he became an indispensable guide for Jamaican artists navigating unfamiliar international industry systems, all while working to introduce European audiences to dancehall and reggae that went beyond shallow commercial stereotypes. He also toured with spoken-word artists and poets, creating space for Jamaican performance traditions to connect with continental audiences, who often connected with the emotion of the work before grasping its linguistic nuance.
Reflecting on his cross-Atlantic career, Thomas notes: “Europe taught me systems. Jamaica taught me soul. The challenge was learning how to protect one without sacrificing the other.” That balancing act required equal parts strategic diplomacy and gut instinct; time and again, he pushed back against European industry leaders who sought to sanitize dancehall for mainstream audiences, arguing that stripping the genre of its raw, cultural identity would erase what made it special. Over the years, he earned a quiet reputation as a trusted fixer, the first call artists made when tours fell apart, managers hit dead ends, or careers lost direction. He has brokered deals for performers including Tanto Blacks and coordinated full European tours for acts ranging from Richie Spice and TOK to emerging poetess Simone “Fruittree” Dewar, handling everything from visa applications and venue politics to payment disputes and the fragile economics of international touring for Jamaican artists.
Long before social media dominated music promotion, Thomas built his audiences through proven grassroots tactics: radio campaigns, on-the-ground street teams, connections to the vast Jamaican diaspora, and early digital marketing networks. Through every venture, his core mission has remained consistent: expand Jamaican music’s global footprint without diluting its unique cultural character.
Today, after decades behind the scenes, Thomas is stepping into the public eye to lift up new, eclectic Jamaican work that reflects the full diversity of the island’s culture. He is currently the driving force behind rising spoken-word poet Simone Dewar, who just released her debut three-track EP *Thoughts Uncut*. Thomas explains the shift in his approach: “I am doing more eclectic projects now that mirror the true nature of Jamaican culture: the spoken word, the rhythms and the invincible spirit of black consciousness.”
Despite his decades of success, Thomas is open about the challenges that come with working behind the scenes in Jamaica’s entertainment industry. He argues that the local scene rarely offers formal infrastructure or support for off-camera professionals. “Entertainment doesn’t have HR,” he points out. “If you’re a manager, marketer or media owner in Jamaica, you’re building the plane while flying it.”
Years of instability, including crippling debt, failed business partnerships, and missed opportunities, shaped his pragmatic worldview. He notes that major labels often prioritize quick, chart-topping hits over long-term artist development, while local media outlets often shape coverage to fit industry alliances rather than tell unvarnished stories. For behind-the-scenes builders and artists alike, success depends as much on survival as it does on talent.
His career has also carried personal grief: he was a close mentor to late artist Al’Qual, whose death left a lasting impact on him. These hard-won experiences have cemented core beliefs that guide his work today: “Contracts matter more than promises. Information is leverage. Popularity without ownership is temporary.”
Through every phase of his decades-long career, Thomas has circled back to the core lesson he learned as a young engineer at King Jammy’s, a philosophy that shapes every project he takes on today: “Strip it down to the signal. Cut the noise. Amplify what’s real.”
