Releases

Snatcha honors baby mothers with tribute single My Baby Mother

Snatcha’s My Baby Mother turns a reggae single into a salute for baby mothers, with a one-take recording and a June 12 release rooted in Rock Hall family history.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Snatcha honors baby mothers with tribute single My Baby Mother
Source: jamaicaobserver.com

Snatcha’s new single My Baby Mother puts the labour, resilience and emotional weight of women raising children at the centre of the release, treating baby mothers as the people who quietly hold families together. The singjay framed the track as a deliberate tribute to strength, sacrifice and the work that often goes unseen, giving the song a social edge that reaches beyond simple sentiment.

The record was listed on Audiomack with a June 12, 2026 release date, and a YouTube upload identified it as Snatcha Lion - My Baby Mother and tagged it as a Freedom Trail Music production. The Jamaica Observer story said the song was produced by Freedom Trail Reggae and distributed by Music Embassies in Florida, and noted that it was completed in a single take. That stripped-down approach suits a song that leans on directness rather than gloss, letting the message land without distraction.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Snatcha, who comes from Rock Hall in St Andrew, said his love for music began when he was 11 and never let go. His influences run through a strong reggae and dancehall lineage, with Pliers, Buju Banton, Capleton, Richie Spice, Spanner Banner and Pinchers all shaping his sound. That list matters because Snatcha Lion is the youngest of the Bonner family of entertainers, with Richie Spice and Spanner Banner as brothers, placing My Baby Mother inside a family story that already sits deep in Jamaican music.

The single also fits the lane Snatcha has carved out as a conscious singjay rather than a disposable party voice. By putting baby mothers front and center, and by grounding the song in lived experience and the realities he has watched around him, he used My Baby Mother to sharpen both his message and his identity. That is what gives the release its pull: a family-rooted reggae statement that speaks plainly about the women who carry the load and deserve to be heard.

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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