Releases

Fiyah Locks Drops Roots Reggae Anthem "They Will Try" on Natural Mystic Riddim

Toronto's Fiyah Locks dropped the official video for "They Will Try" on March 21, riding Domini's Natural Mystic Riddim via IsRoyal Records.

Sam Ortega2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Fiyah Locks Drops Roots Reggae Anthem "They Will Try" on Natural Mystic Riddim
AI-generated illustration
This article contains affiliate links, marked with a blue dot. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Fiyah Locks came through with a certified roots statement last week. The Toronto artist dropped the official video for "They Will Try" on March 21, premiering it through Reggaeville alongside his own channels, putting the track in front of the global reggae community from day one.

The cut rides the Natural Mystic Riddim, composed by Domini, and the production leans hard into classic roots territory: the kind of foundation that lets the message sit front and center rather than compete with the beat. That's clearly the intent. This is not crossover music angling for a wider demographic. "They Will Try" is a roots-reggae anthem in the truest sense, built for heads who know the difference between a riddim with purpose and one built for the charts.

IsRoyal Records is an independent label based in Toronto, Canada, specializing in reggae music. The label was founded in 2009 by producer Dada Supreme, who has worked with artists including Jahmali, Souljah Zeal, Culture Brown, and Fiyah Locks over the course of his career. IsRoyal's mission has centered on working with mainly independent reggae artists globally, and "They Will Try" fits squarely in that tradition.

Premiering on Reggaeville carries real weight in this space. The platform is one of the most consistent amplifiers of roots and conscious material worldwide, and landing a premiere there signals that IsRoyal and Fiyah Locks are positioning this release for an international audience, not just local Toronto circulation.

The Natural Mystic Riddim as a vehicle is a deliberate choice. Riddim-based releases live or die by how well the vocal connects with the rhythm's character, and a roots-minded riddim demands a vocalist who can carry moral or spiritual weight without the production propping them up. Whether "They Will Try" succeeds on that measure is for your own ears to decide, but the infrastructure around it, the label, the platform, the riddim builder Domini, is all pointed in one direction.

Canadian reggae has always punched above its weight given the size of the scene, and Fiyah Locks is among the artists keeping that tradition alive out of Toronto.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.
Get Reggae updates weekly.

The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Reggae News