Jamaican musical trailblazers made Toronto world-class reggae hotspot

eAwazEntertainment

Toronto – National Film Board of Canada (NFB)

At the height of the golden age of reggae, some of Jamaica’s brightest stars left their homeland to relocate to Toronto. Now their stories and the musical community they helped build are celebrated in Graeme Mathieson and Chris Flanagan’s captivating National Film Board of Canada (NFB) anthology series Sounds & Pressure: Reggae in a Foreign Landpremiering August 23 on nfb.ca and the NFB’s streaming platform for smart TVs.

Toronto’s Paradise Theatre will also host a special screening and launch event on August 22. Through rare archiveselectrifying needle drops and lively interviews, this five-part series takes viewers from Kingston to Kensington Market to see and hear how reggae made roots in Canada against all odds, chronicling the musical and geographical journeys of Nana McLeanJohnny OsbourneLeroy SibblesJerry Brown and the duo of Roy Panton and Yvonne Harrison.

Getting their sound to catch on in Canada wasn’t easy. These innovators of rhythm and rhyme had to work against racism, scarce resources and an industry that stigmatized reggae music. But that didn’t stop them from transforming the city into a reggae mecca. With a powerful message of love and a revolutionary spirit behind them, these visionaries faced the pressure head on—and thanks to them, you can still feel the infectious beats of Bathurst Street and Eglinton Avenue reverberating all over the world.