Artist's albums
That Ting
2023 · single
Only Room For Two
2023 · single
Amapiano (with Gyptian)
2023 · single
Amapiano
2023 · single
Gotta
2023 · single
I Wish
2023 · single
Let Yourself (gyptian hold-you) [Remix]
2022 · single
She Got It
2022 · single
My Everything
2022 · single
Numbers Gone Up
2022 · single
Keep Your Word
2022 · single
I'm for You
2022 · single
Leverage
2022 · single
Like Lovers Do
2022 · single
Girls Want Love
2022 · single
Party Time
2022 · single
Super Woman
2022 · single
Pon Tha Don
2022 · single
Summer in December
2022 · single
Just A Litle Loving (2022 Remastered)
2022 · single
More Thanks for Life (In Dub)
2022 · single
Girls Link Up
2022 · single
Disappear (Reggae Version)
2021 · single
Mama Bawl (Dub Mix)
2021 · single
Rich and Merry
2021 · single
Mama Africa (In Dub)
2021 · single
Sexy
2021 · single
Jiggle
2021 · single
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Biography
Windell Beneto Edwards became the singer known as Gyptian when he left his rural home in St. Andrew, Jamaica, and traveled to Portmore, the town where the promoter known as Mr. Wong ran his studio. Gyptian had grown up singing in his mother's Adventist church and listening to his Rastafarian father's music. His father had been a promoter himself for a time, so he understood the grooming and networking that would be involved in turning Gyptian's passion into his profession. His parents trusted Ravin Wong, having seen the promoter turn many an unpolished talent into reggae stars, I Wayne being a good example. Under Wong's direction, Windell became "Egyptian," then "I-Gyptian," and finally just Gyptian. The smooth singer was eventually presented with a song that would suit his conscious upbringing, "Serious Times," and after adding his own verse to it, he cut the track in Wong's studio. Combining hypnotic nyabinghi drums with lyrics that plead for an end to violence and crime, "Serious Times" exploded across Jamaica, putting Gyptian in the company of Jah Cure and Fantan Mojah, two other artists who were becoming popular by fighting for peace and justice in a roots reggae style. By the time the single had become a Jamaican number one, numerous producers were contacting Gyptian in hopes he would appear on their tracks, but the roots-minded singer refused most of the offers since their lyrics were filled with gun talk and misogyny. After being presented with enough socially conscious music and old-school lovers rock to fill a full-length, Gyptian made his debut in 2006 with My Name Is Gyptian on the VP label. Two years later he returned with I Can Feel Your Pain, an album heavily influenced by contemporary R&B. In 2010 his massive Jamaican hit "Hold You" put him back in the spotlight. It was followed by a soca remix of the track, a hip-hop remix with rapper Nicki Minaj as guest, dubstep remixes from Diplo and Toddla T, plus a full-length album of the same name. In 2013, he returned with the album Love, Sex and Reggae, a more pop-oriented effort with Diplo returning as a producer. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi