Turbulence shares roots-reggae statement of resilience with Same Suh Wi Stay
Turbulence’s new single lands as a straight roots-reggae creed, with Orize’n Global pushing a rough-mix preview from the More Money Riddim and a message of self-respect.

Turbulence kept his focus on survival, discipline and self-respect with Same Suh Wi Stay, a June 27 release on Orize’n Global Inc that lands as a roots-reggae statement rather than a bid for quick crossover heat. Riddims World frames the track as a tune built on steadiness under pressure, and that approach fits an artist who has long made conscious lyrics and forceful delivery part of his calling card.
Sheldon Campbell, known worldwide as Turbulence, emerged from Kingston’s music scene after being discovered in 1999 by producer Philip “Fatis” Burrell. His debut album, I Believe, followed in 2000, and the years since have kept him in the lane where roots and dancehall meet, with a catalog defined by directness, moral clarity and a voice that can cut through a riddim without losing its message.

Same Suh Wi Stay sits on Orize’n Global Inc as producer and label partner, and the release is already moving across digital channels. A YouTube posting credits the track to SongCast, Inc. and Orize’n Global Inc, while an earlier teaser presented the song as part of a More Money Riddim project and described the vocals as a rough mix in progress. That preview language matters: it shows the record arriving not as a polished pop pivot, but as a workmanlike roots cut being carried into public view with its edge intact.
Orize’n Global says it was established in 2009 in Orlando, Florida, with Jamaican entertainment roots that go back to 2001, and it presents itself as a platform dedicated to Caribbean talent and rhythms. In that setting, Turbulence’s new single reads less like a one-off and more like a current expression of the lane he has occupied for years, where conscious reggae still has room to sound urgent and contemporary at the same time.
That balance is the point of Same Suh Wi Stay. The phrase works like a creed, and Turbulence delivers it as one more firm reminder that roots-reggae does not need to shout for attention when the message is already strong enough to hold its ground.
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