Silly Walks Discotheque unites reggae stars on Double Trouble Riddim EP
Agent Sasco, Christopher Martin, Jesse Royal, Busy Signal and more all landed on one 4-track riddim, with Easy leading the rollout.

Silly Walks Discotheque put six marquee names into four tight cuts on the Double Trouble Riddim EP, released June 26, 2026. The project ran with Agent Sasco and Christopher Martin on Easy, Jesse Royal and Christopher Ellis on This Love, J Boog and Busy Signal on Juggling Sweet, and Nigy Boy x Kaylan Arnold on We Belong Together.
That lineup gave the release its shape. Agent Sasco and Christopher Martin brought straight-ahead Jamaican mainstream pull, while Jesse Royal and Christopher Ellis anchored the set with a roots-and-melody balance. J Boog and Busy Signal stretched the EP across the Caribbean and Pacific reggae lanes, and Nigy Boy with Kaylan Arnold added a fresher cross-market pairing that pushed the riddim beyond a single audience pocket. On paper, it looked like a compact four-song drop; in practice, it worked like a sampler of where reggae and dancehall collaboration sits right now.

The first single rollout focused on Easy, with Christopher Martin and Agent Sasco fronting the opening push before the full EP landed. That track also carried the clearest behind-the-board credits: instrumentation from Guiseppe Coppola and Ottmar Campbell, mixing by Keron 'Kalex' Alexander, and recording at Big Yard Studio in Kingston, Jamaica by Kamal. Those details mattered because the production was not just assembling voices, it was packaging a finished studio statement around the pairing.
The release also arrived with a longer lead-up than a simple Friday drop. Reggaefocused coverage had already surfaced by June 12, 2026, and the tracklist stayed consistent across the rollout, including the order shown on the official digital release pages. Beatport listed the EP under catalog number SW078-1, while Spotify and Amazon Music both showed the four-song format. The same track sequence appeared across those pages, which kept the project locked into one clean presentation instead of a scattered single campaign.
Silly Walks Discotheque’s own catalog gave the EP extra context. Bandcamp listed earlier riddim projects including Sandy Park Riddim, Lessons Of Love, Honey Pot Riddim 2.0, Roots & Culture Riddim, and Ginger Riddim, placing Double Trouble inside a production run that already knew how to work one rhythm across multiple voices. Caribbean Dance Radio framed it as part of that same tradition of one-riddim releases that still speak to reggae purists and wider audiences alike. Double Trouble made that formula feel current again by pairing names that could stand alone and still hit harder together.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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