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Jah Bami’s Justice brings roots message from Trinidad to Humbleness Production

Jah Bami’s new single Justice landed on Humbleness Production with Asha D on the riddim, mix, and master, extending the label’s steady roots run.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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Jah Bami’s Justice brings roots message from Trinidad to Humbleness Production
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Justice arrived as another sharp move from Humbleness Production, with Jah Bami teaming with Asha D on a single that was out on all digital platforms and officially dated May 1, 2026. The release was listed the day before it dropped, and the digital credit reads Jah Bami feat. Asha D, a small detail that says plenty about how tightly this one was built and how quickly Humbleness is moving.

What makes the record matter is the label momentum behind it. Humbleness Production had already put out What If? by Young Garvey, and Justice feels like the next step in the same lane: conscious, modern roots with enough polish to move cleanly from reggae playlists to culture radio. Asha D handled the composition, mix, and mastering, while Evidence Music handled distribution, giving the single a transnational path from the independent scene around Montpellier into the wider digital reggae circuit.

Jah Bami brings his own history to the cut. Born Damian Marvin Walters in 1979 in Trinidad and Tobago, he has a background that blends reggae and soca with hip-hop and R&B influences, and that mix gives Justice a broader Caribbean reach than a straight roots one-drop. The track was recorded at Induction Empire studios and is framed as a message to younger listeners, urging them to hold onto values and stay strong through everyday traps and setbacks. That keeps it firmly in the new-roots tradition, where the song has to carry a message and still sound ready for the system.

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Asha D’s role also fits the pattern. A drummer, singer, and producer, he has built a reputation for turning out many riddims each year through his own instrumental platform, and that kind of output helps explain why his name keeps surfacing on independent reggae releases. He also carried the mix and mastering on Young Garvey’s What If?, so Justice does not read like a one-off collaboration. It reads like a working relationship and a sound being refined in real time.

A clip was expected to follow soon, which suggests Humbleness is treating Justice as part of a broader rollout rather than a simple audio upload. For listeners tracking where new roots is actually being built right now, Humbleness Production is starting to look less like a label with isolated drops and more like a source worth watching.

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