Genre

ragga

Top Ragga Artists

Showing 25 of 2,924 artists
1

2.0 million

7.9 million listeners

2

659,442

6.6 million listeners

3

796,651

5.5 million listeners

4

2.5 million

5.0 million listeners

5

Beenie Man

Jamaica

592,450

4.3 million listeners

6

Popcaan

Jamaica

1.6 million

4.1 million listeners

7

171,444

3.9 million listeners

8

Collie Buddz

United States

473,704

3.7 million listeners

9

Chronixx

Jamaica

697,313

3.4 million listeners

10

251,731

3.3 million listeners

11

Gyptian

Jamaica

663,952

3.0 million listeners

12

654,976

2.6 million listeners

13

22,839

2.6 million listeners

14

Protoje

Jamaica

514,453

2.5 million listeners

15

Konshens

Jamaica

580,225

2.2 million listeners

16

382,219

2.0 million listeners

17

Peter Tosh

Jamaica

1.3 million

2.0 million listeners

18

Mavado

Jamaica

801,938

2.0 million listeners

19

747,277

1.9 million listeners

20

Mr. Vegas

Jamaica

403,603

1.9 million listeners

21

801,429

1.9 million listeners

22

6,698

1.9 million listeners

23

Steel Pulse

United Kingdom

735,804

1.9 million listeners

24

262,290

1.8 million listeners

25

208,005

1.7 million listeners

About Ragga

Ragga, short for ragga-muffin, is a subgenre of dancehall that emerged in Jamaica in the late 1980s and quickly spread as digital rhythms reshaped the sound. It thrives on toasting—a rapid, rhythmic vocal delivery over a beat—set to hard, synthetic riddims built with electronic drums and bass. The defining shift was less about a single melody and more about a new approach: producers used programmable machines and samplers to create compact, digital backdrops that could carry a fearless, boastful, streetwise chat from deejays. The result was a sound that felt both futuristic and rooted in Jamaica’s toasting tradition.

A watershed moment came with the Sleng Teng riddim in 1985, created by Wayne Smith. Often cited as the spark that launched fully digital reggae and dancehall, Sleng Teng demonstrated that a computer-generated bassline and drum pattern could power a whole host of toasts and chants. From there, the digital dancehall era—often labeled ragga or ragga-muffin—took hold. The tempo tended to sit in the midrange, with punchy, repetitive bass, crisp snare, and a hypnotic loop that invited a rapper-like cadence from the MC.

If ragga has a face, many would point to Shabba Ranks as its international ambassador in the early 1990s. His sharp toasting, polished production, and cross-Atlantic reach helped propel ragga from Jamaican clubs into U.S. cities and European capitals. Hits like “Mr. Loverman” and his high-profile collaborations showcased a fierce, charismatic style that many other deejays emulated. Other pillars of the era include Super Cat with his confident, carnival-tinged swagger; Ninjaman’s hard-edged bragging; and Buju Banton’s evolving, dynamic presence as a deejay who could shift from raw to refined. Bounty Killer later joined the pantheon, bringing a relentless, heavyweight energy that reinforced ragga’s street-level ethos.

Ragga’s influence extended beyond Jamaica. In the United Kingdom, the UK dancehall scene embraced ragga as a crucial thread, feeding into the development of ragga jungle in the late 1990s—a fusion of ragga vocal styles with drum-and-bass breaks. Across Europe and North America, the genre found enthusiastic communities in cities with strong reggae and Caribbean diasporas: New York, Miami, Toronto, London, and Amsterdam all hosted scenes where DJs and MCs traded riddims, slang, and party energy. The reach even helped shape later genres like grime and various forms of electronic reggae, where the toasting cadence and bass-forward production continued to resonate.

Musically, ragga is characterized by toasting that blends Jamaican patois with a streetwise cadence, over digital, bass-heavy riddims. The sound favors a direct, hypnotic groove: minimal melodic ornaments, heavy focus on rhythm and vocal presence, and a willingness to push social and political lines through lyricism and bravado. Today ragga remains a living lineage within dancehall—an evolving conversation between old-school toasting and contemporary digital production, still prized by enthusiasts for its raw energy, its clever wordplay, and its ability to turn a party into a packed, kinetic space.