Yanique Curvy Diva is a Jamaican dancehall artist and media
personality who built her name first as a familiar face on
television and radio before stepping further into music. Based in
Kingston, she became widely known for her bold on-screen presence
and her role as host of Magnum Kings and Queens of Dancehall, a
platform that helped place her at the center of Jamaica’s dancehall
conversation. Her public image has always mixed glamour,
confidence, and a distinctly local edge, which has made her stand
out in a crowded scene.
As an artist, Yanique has leaned into the same personality that
made her a recognizable media figure. Her breakout single,
“Lifestyle,” arrived in 2017 and introduced her recording style to
a wider audience. The song helped establish her as more than a
presenter or personality, and it opened the door to a run of
releases that played to dancehall’s crossover appeal while keeping
a sharp, feminine perspective. Tracks such as “Bunx Pon It,”
“Intimacy,” “Pussy Feelings,” and “Turn Your Lights Down Low”
reinforced that image, balancing flirtation, attitude, and the
polished delivery that has become part of her sound.
She has also remained closely tied to the production side of the
business. Her work with Good Good Productions has been especially
visible, including appearances connected to the Money Mix and
Life’s Path riddims, where her voice sits alongside some of
dancehall’s most familiar names. Those collaborations placed her
inside the wider industry rather than outside it, and they helped
frame her as an artist who moves comfortably between entertainment,
performance, and promotion.
Beyond music, Yanique has built a career around visibility and
entrepreneurship. She has hosted events, launched her own
production imprint, and used her profile to remain active in
Jamaican nightlife and media culture. That combination has made her
one of the more recognizable crossover figures in modern dancehall:
part artiste, part host, part brand, and fully aware of how image
and music work together. Her catalog is still relatively compact,
but it has already given her a clear place in the contemporary
dancehall landscape.












