Reggae · March 09, 2017
Jamaican singer Queen Ifrica releases an incredible album with Damian Marley! Listen now!
Award-winning singer, songwriter and social activist Queen Ifrica has just released on all music platforms her newest studio album titled "C

Award-winning singer, songwriter and social activist Queen Ifrica has just released on all music platforms her newest studio album titled "Climb". Her incisive lyrics and feminine voice earned her the nickname "Fyah Muma".
(Cover of the album "Climb")
Her new album speaks about a mother's concerns for her family, and features Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley calling for global change in the opening song "Truversation".
The album also addresses police brutality in the Black community in "I Can Not Breathe", and in the song "Black Woman" she implores young people to know their worth and not be influenced by global consumer trends.
The singer was born in Jamaica and was raised by her mother and stepfather in a Rastafari community in Montego Bay.
The name Ifrica was given to me by my mother; she and my stepfather were Rastafari and that is where my true cultural awareness comes from" - she reveals.
(The diva Queen Ifrica)
Ifrica was 20 when she came to know her father, ska pioneer Derrick Morgan.
With roots planted in the Rastafari faith, she flourished as one of the leading cultural artists in reggae, stealing the show at major festivals around the world (Summer Jam in Germany, Festival de Sierra Nevada, Festival Bob Marley, Reggae On The River in California and Reggae Sundance Festival in the Netherlands).
These songs come to me because of the way I pay attention to the world. I see myself as a social worker who uses music as a weapon, because music is the greatest weapon to drive social change, to help young people understand themselves" - affirms Queen Ifrica.
(Cover of the album "Climb")
The name Ifrica was given to me by my mother; she and my stepfather were Rastafari and that is where my true cultural awareness comes from" - she reveals.
(The diva Queen Ifrica)
These songs come to me because of the way I pay attention to the world. I see myself as a social worker who uses music as a weapon, because music is the greatest weapon to drive social change, to help young people understand themselves" - affirms Queen Ifrica.
LISTEN TO THE ALBUM "CLIMB"
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#Reggae