Mojo Morgan – Jamaica Love (2025)
Mojo Morgan has always straddled two worlds. Born in Brooklyn, raised in Massachusetts, and steeped in the legacy of his Jamaican family, the Grammy award-winning member of Morgan Heritage knows how to make music that travels. With his new solo EP, Jamaica Love, Mojo Morgan offers his boldest statement yet: a collection that folds roots reggae, hip-hop, country soul, and pop into an expansive, borderless sound he calls ‘Rasta Rock’.
The EP begins with the spiritually charged ‘When The Father Calls’, which anchors the record in faith and resilience. It’s a reminder of Morgan’s grounding in Rastafarian philosophy and the guiding voices of elders. From there, the project unfolds into a kaleidoscope of genres.
On ‘Make It’, Popcaan and Chronic Law trade verses over a beat that threads dancehall’s raw pulse with a hip-hop undercurrent, while Pablo YG’s feature adds youthful urgency. ‘By My Side’,” featuring Jemere Morgan and Kelib Morgan, moves in the opposite direction, a tender ballad draped in soulful melodies that reveal the project’s intimacy.
The standout, though, is ‘Mountain Song’. Joined by Gramps Morgan and Esh Morgan, Mojo Morgan crafts a track that feels like a generational anthem. Acoustic guitar strums give way to layered harmonies that swell with gospel energy, while the reggae foundation keeps the track rooted. It’s crossover-ready, but never panders: instead, it insists that Jamaican spirit belongs in global pop conversations.
‘Man of Action’. featuring rapper Maino, pushes even further. It’s hip-hop-forward, yet Morgan’s presence anchors it in his signature fusion. The result feels less like a compromise and more like a collision, a daring experiment where cultural lines blur into something new.
What sets Jamaica Love apart is its emotional resonance. The posthumous inclusion of Peetah Morgan gives the EP a bittersweet depth, transforming it into both tribute and continuation. Every collaboration, whether with family or global stars, carries weight because the record is ultimately about legacy: what we inherit, and what we pass on.
Morgan’s voice is warm but commanding, equally at home over trap-inflected beats as it is on roots reggae rhythms. His willingness to push reggae outward, into hip-hop, country soul, and pop, feels urgent at a time when global sounds dominate charts. Jamaica Love positions him not as a follower of trends, but as a visionary reimagining the possibilities of Jamaican music.
Find out more about Mojo Morgan on his Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, and Spotify.