True Blue Family Records is a dancehall and reggae production
label known for putting out crisp, club-ready riddims and singles
that move easily between raw street energy and melodic crossover
appeal. The company’s name appears across a steady run of releases
in the mid-to-late 2010s, often in partnership with digital
distributors and other imprints, which helped its catalog travel
widely through the Caribbean music market and beyond. Rather than
building around one signature artist, the label has worked as a
reliable riddim house, giving different voices a shared
instrumental backbone and a clear, modern sound.
A good example is the 2016 90’s Gold Riddim, which set the tone for
a string of releases that leaned into familiar dancehall patterns
while keeping the production tight and contemporary. Around the
same period, True Blue Family Records was attached to singles such
as Wine Yuh Waist Suh and later projects including Beef Patty,
showing an ear for records that could sit comfortably in both party
playlists and digital dancehall rotations. The label’s output also
reached established names like Spice, Sizzla, RDX, and Vybz Kartel,
a sign of both its industry reach and its focus on commercially
practical collaborations.
In the archive, titles like Whateva Riddim and Cartel Riddim
suggest the kind of rolling, DJ-friendly production that has made
the label recognizable. The consistent thread through the catalog
is not an elaborate artistic persona, but a straightforward
producer identity: build strong riddims, place them with the right
voices, and keep the records moving. That approach has given True
Blue Family Records a steady place in modern dancehall’s
independent production scene, especially among listeners who follow
the genre through riddim culture and label-driven releases.



















