
The Jamaica Reggae Industry Association (JaRIA) is kicking off its 2026 Reggae Month celebration internationally with a Tribute to Dennis Brown at the Hard Rock Guitar Hotel in Florida today, January 31st and in Jamaica on February 1st, 2026 with Honouring the Crown Prince at the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA) Amphitheatre.
This is being done in partnership with the Dennis Brown Trust. JaRIA is celebrating 17 years of advocacy and service to Jamaica’s creative community under the theme “Rhythms of Resilience,” through a series of events marking Reggae Month 2026, scheduled to run from January 31 to February 27, 2026. This year’s theme reflects the unwavering determination of Jamaica’s cultural practitioners to continue creating, uplifting communities, and driving national inspiration, even amid ongoing financial challenges and post-hurricane recovery efforts affecting the creative industries.

“Reggae Month has always been about more than concerts,” explains JaRIA Chairman, Ewan D.A. Simpson, adding, “It is a declaration that our music, our creativity, and our cultural ecosystem are essential to nation building.
Even where sponsorship support has been slow, we remain committed to producing meaningful, world-class programming that honours our icons and inspires the next generation.” As part of its continued focus on education and tertiary institution collaborations, JaRIA will once again partner with EMCVPA to stage its popular Reggae Wednesdays series, while also expanding the Reggae Open University (ROU) programme to tertiary institutions across Kingston, Montego Bay, and Mandeville, and Port Antonio.

The month’s activities continue with four Reggae Wednesdays, Back 2 Bass-eson February 4, Rocking the Cliff: Tribute to Jimmy Cliff at Coral Cliff in Montego Bay on February 11, Resilient Praise on February 18, and Bands Rewind on February 25, all Wednesdays except the 11th will be at the EMCVPA Amphitheatre.
In keeping with its mission of collaboration and cultural unity, JaRIA will also continue to support and endorse Reggae Month activities across Jamaica and the diaspora, including Reggae Month Miami activities featuring Inner Circle throughout February, Toronto Reggae Month celebration honouring Leroy Sibbles in partnership with Kreative Movement Inc., the Wickie Wackie Music Festival in Bull Bay, Jamaica, and the I-Frequency series held on the first and third Thursdays of February at Bamboo Splash JA.

Chairman Simpson says, “These partnerships show the reach and strength of Reggae. From Kingston to Florida, Toronto, and beyond, Reggae Month is a living movement connecting our culture with communities across the world.” JaRIA was formed to promote advocacy, professional development, education, research, and the celebration of Jamaica’s music ecosystem, working to ensure that reggae remains a dynamic cultural, social, and economic force for Jamaica and the world.
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