Few rhythms carry the cultural heft of the Diwali riddim. Steven ‘Lenky’ Marsden constructed it in 1998, powering timeless information like Sean Paul’s Get Busy and Wayne Surprise’s No Letting Go. Now, reggae veteran Richie Stephens brings his signature vocal heat and melodic instincts to a rhythm the world already loves, along with his vibrant single Moist Sugar.
Richie Stephens has earned his place within the Jamaican music fraternity by sheer versatility. He glides effortlessly between reggae, dancehall and soul, and his decades-long profession, spanning chart hits and high-profile collaborations.
His newest launch is a observe that feels nostalgic and forward-moving in equal measure, and Stephens is characteristically direct about what he got down to do.
WET SUGAR IS ABOUT GIVING FANS SOMETHING FRESH TO CONNECT WITH
“The Diwali Riddim is a kind of timeless sounds that by no means actually left. It simply evolves with the individuals,” Stephens shares. “Moist Sugar is about bringing my flavour to one thing that already means a lot to the tradition, whereas giving followers one thing recent to attach with right this moment.”
As basic dancehall sounds surge again globally, Moist Sugar arrives on the excellent second. It honours the Diwali Riddim’s legacy whereas taking its vitality someplace new, steered by an artist who respects the roots sufficient to take actual dangers with them.
ABOUT RICHIE STEPHENS

Few artists have formed reggae and dancehall as quietly or as lastingly as Richie Stephens. He broke by alongside Grammy-winning Soul II Soul within the early Nineteen Nineties, then recorded for Motown and VP Information.
Hits like Winner and Bus The Place turned style staples, and his co-created riddim later powered Rihanna’s world smash Work, incomes him ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers) recognition.
Few artists bridge custom and affect so quietly but fully.
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