
“And I have a lot of tracks for a lot of other persons. He has a five-track EP to drop in the next two weeks, he recently released Outbreak, a collab with Qraig from Voicemail, Kim Nain and Kandy Leax, and he produced a Singer J cover of a Bob Andy classic to be released soon. “Hopefully, I get chosen to work with her on another project,” was the most he would say.īut, with Koffee brewing, Frankie Music is still a busy producer. “We’ve been talking and working out some things,” he stated. Although she was at his studio recently (on April 12), it wasn’t for a recording session Frankie’s place was used as the venue for streaming a one-hour, Malta-sponsored acoustic set, where Koffee also interacted with fans. He agrees that the Grammy Kid needs another Raggamuffin, and while he disclosed that he and Koffee have been talking, he emphasised that he has not produced any new music with her … yet.

He proudly declares that his hallmark is excellence, whatever the genre, but points out that he tries to keep his projects “as authentic as I can”. The reggae and dancehall producer has worked with a wide range of artistes such as Sizzla, Beenie Man, Konshens, Kim Nain, Delus, RR, Raging Fyah, Duane Stephenson, Shawn Antoine, Qraig (Voicemail) and, of course, Koffee. That original dancehall deejaying makes a difference,” Frankie Music shared with The Gleaner, adding softly, “A child shall lead the way.”įrankie Music has been in the production game for a minute and it’s one he clearly knows quite well. “One of the ingredients that made Raggamuffin so good was the fact that we chose a riddim that was close to a big riddim in the ‘80s, the Real Rock. She needed to be heard,” Raggamuffin producer Comar ‘Frankie Music’ Campbell reminisced. Here was Koffee, this little teenager, deejaying in a Mumma Nancy old-days style, which was yet so fresh. “What caught my attention was the fact that a 17-year-old, recording her second single, was so authentic, so real.

Although ‘ Toast’ is recognised as Koffee’s signature breakout song, the commotion-causing ‘ Raggamuffin’, which calls out gun violence and Government’s neglect of the youth, wrapped up in a must-listen, friendly, spitfire flow, is rated by some music critics as a watershed moment musically.
