
Lutan Fyah – Fire Blaze produced by Juna-Vill Records 2026
Lutan Fyah keeps his name where it belongs with “Fire Blaze, ” a roots cut that lands hard and steady rather than chasing gloss. The song fits the Jamaican singer’s long-running calling card: straight talk, cultural fire, and a voice that can carry conviction without sounding forced. Born Anthony Martin in Spanish Town, he came up through the early-2000s reggae wave with a style that sits between conscious singjay energy and classic roots phrasing, and he has stayed productive enough to remain a familiar figure in the scene while still sounding current.
“Fire Blaze” arrives through Juna-Vill Records and sits on the Di Regulator Riddim, which dropped in 2026. The label is the work of Collin “Juna-Vill” Clarke, whose recent output has been pushing conscious reggae with a sturdy, message-driven approach and a growing catalogue of singles and riddim projects. That context matters here, because the track feels made for the kind of heavyweight juggling where voice and message have to do the talking.
The title says plenty already: this is a fire anthem with spiritual and social weight, the kind of tune that points at pressure, resistance, and cleansing rather than empty bravado. The riddim behind it is reported as sitting in a 75-150 BPM range, which lines up with a mid-tempo reggae framework that can move in a rootsy pulse without rushing the vocal. Lutan Fyah’s delivery suits that lane well. He rides the rhythm with a measured intensity, turning the chorus into a chant-like warning shot. In a year already busy with new Lutan Fyah material, “Fire Blaze” feels like another clean entry in a catalogue that still knows how to speak plainly and burn bright.
Tracklist:
- Lutan Fyah – Fire Blaze
