Dragon Fyah Wenzdez launches Kingston nightlife series with dancehall vibes
Romeich Major is launching Dragon Fyah Wenzdez on May 27 with free entry, ladies free, and 3 Dragon for $1,000 at his Campbell’s Boulevard lounge.

Romeich Major is betting that Kingston nightlife will show up for something that feels less like a branded promo and more like a real dancehall session. Dragon Fyah Wenzdez is set to debut on May 27 at the new Romeich Entertainment lounge on 1 1/2 Campbell’s Boulevard in Kingston 11, with the series then returning on the last Wednesday of every month.
That monthly format is the point. Major is not pitching a one-night fling; he is building a recurring fixture around dancehall culture, street energy, and crowd interaction, with top DJs, bucket deals, and a room that is meant to feel immediate rather than overly polished. The launch will feature Karlando Bad Sekki Bailey on hosting duty, with Bishop Escobar, DJ MAC, and DJ Baba driving the music.

The music policy matters because this is being framed as a lived-in Kingston session, not a generic midweek brand activation. Major has tied the concept to the kind of spaces where sound-system culture, community energy, and music already overlap, and the pitch is that the brand belongs in that world instead of hovering above it. That makes Dragon Fyah Wenzdez a useful test case for where dancehall-linked nightlife is headed in 2026: fixed location, fixed night, and a repeatable vibe that can build loyalty by consistency rather than hype alone.
The launch also comes with clear entry terms. Promotional material says entry is free, ladies enter free, and patrons can buy three Dragons for $1,000. The event is restricted to adults 18 and older, and the messaging pushes responsible drinking alongside the deal-driven bar setup. That combination of free access and bucket pricing is built to pull in a crowd fast while keeping the night centered on the room, the selectors, and the brand.

Dragon Stout itself gives the partnership a familiar Jamaican anchor. The company says the stout has been enjoyed since 1920, and its official description lists a 7.5% ABV brew made with pilsen and roasted malt, sugar, hops, water, and caramel colouring. Major’s own track record adds another layer. He has been publicly described as manager of Shenseea, Ding Dong, and Teejay, and he previously linked with producer Slyda Di Wizard on the Red Fyah rhythm project. Dragon Fyah Wenzdez looks like the next step in that playbook, and the opening night will show whether Kingston wants this kind of branded dancehall residency to become part of its regular rhythm.
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