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		<title>Can Mavado Put DanceHall Back On the US Map?</title>
		<link>http://jamaicaviews.com/can-mavado-put-dancehall-back-on-the-us-map/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2009 13:30:54 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[dancehall]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[mavado]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A better tomorrow for dancehall? Published: Tuesday &#124; February 24, 2009 Howard Campbell, Gleaner Writer Mavado (right) with superstar Wyclef Jean, one of his many hip hop admirers. &#8211; Contributed IT&#39;S BEEN some time since a dancehall artiste made a big mark in the United States. Fans have to look back to 2006 to Junior [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>A better tomorrow for dancehall?</h3>
<p class="publishtime">Published: Tuesday | February 24, 2009</p>
<p></p>
<div class="KonaBody"><strong>Howard Campbell, Gleaner Writer</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20090224/ent/images/Layout1_1_PQM4WweddingmAM.jpg" /> <br /><small><strong><font size="2">Mavado (right) with superstar Wyclef Jean, one of his many hip hop admirers. &#8211; Contributed </font></strong></small></p>
<p><strong>IT&#39;S BEEN some time since a dancehall artiste made a big mark in the United States. Fans have to look back to 2006 to Junior Gong&#39;s Welcome to Jamrock to find a massive seller stateside.</strong></p>
<p>Some pundits in the US believe
</p>
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<p><span id="more-46"></span><br />
Mavado has what it takes to break that drought with the March 3 release of his second album, <strong>Mr Brooks &#8230; A Better Tomorrow</strong>, on VP Records.</p>
<p>The deejay&#39;s first album, 2007&#39;s <strong>Gangsta For Life: The Symphony of David Brooks</strong>, made some ripples in the US but was not a big seller. Urban tales like <strong>Gully Side</strong> and <strong>Weh Dem a Do</strong> made it, arguably, the grittiest dancehall album since Bounty Killer&#39;s <strong>My Xperience</strong> in 1996.</p>
<p>VP Records has thrown its weight behind <strong>Mr Brooks</strong>, pushing the video for its lead single, <strong>So Special</strong>, on BET and MTV.</p>
<p>Already, there is&#0160;radio buzz around <strong>Mr Brooks</strong>&#39; leading songs: <strong>So Special</strong>, <strong>So Blessed</strong>, <strong>On The Rock</strong> and <strong>Overcome</strong>. <strong>So Special</strong> is currently on <strong>Billboard</strong> magazine&#39;s Top 100 R&amp;B/Hip Hop chart.</p>
<p>Baz Dreisinger, a writer for the edgy <strong>Spin</strong> magazine, says Mavado may be a godsend for lovers of hardcore music.</p>
<p>&quot;Gangsta personas have short shelf-lives. Snoop Dogg: the only set he&#39;s believably rolling with these days is the PTA. And who&#39;s still afraid of big, bad&#0160;50 Cent? But on his stellar second album, David &#39;Mavado&#39; Brooks &#8211; the Kingston-born artist hyped as having more street &#39;cred&#39; than Biggie and tupaccombined &#8211; has lost none of the edge that made him dancehall&#39;s latest commercial saviour.&quot;</p>
<p><strong>Pyroradio.com</strong>, an influential network for hip hop and urban music, is just as impressed with the Mavado set. &quot;Part prophet, part superhero and part fugitive, Mavado is the voice of the streets and represents dancehall for the new generation,&quot; it said in its review.</p>
<p>Last year was not a good one for dancehall albums. Although <strong>Let&#39;s Get Physical</strong> by Elephant Man and Shaggy&#39;s <strong>Intoxication</strong> did well in Jamaica, neither cracked US pop charts.</p>
<p>With the wind at his back, Mavado has a clutch of promotional dates lined-up in the US, starting this week. </p>
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