KEZNAMDI wins with BLXXD & FYAH and reggae speaks clearly
The 68th GRAMMY Awards (2026) once again put reggae at the center of the global conversation. Not as a passing trend, but as a spiritual, political and cultural language, as it has been since its origins. The night left a strong message: reggae continues to tell truths.
The big winner in the Best Reggae Album category was KEZNAMDI with BLXXD & FYAH, a project that connects roots, identity and contemporary vision without diluting the message.
KEZNAMDI is not a new name for those who follow modern reggae closely. Son of the renowned musician Fearless, his career has been marked by a strong connection with spirituality, the African diaspora and the reality of the Jamaican people.
BLXXD & FYAH is an album that does not seek to please algorithms, but rather express purpose. Socially charged lyrics, solid beats between reggae and conscious dancehall, and a coherent narrative from beginning to end.
This GRAMMY does not come by chance: it is the result of consistency, message and respect for culture.
During his acceptance speech, KEZNAMDI was clear and direct, leaving one of the most authentic moments of the night:
The Best Reggae Album category at the 68 GRAMMYs brought together projects that represent different visions of current reggae: roots, spirituality, introspection, heritage and sound evolution.
The officially nominated titles were:
📝 Pull It Up Radio will continue to expand this information once the Academy publishes the official full artist-album breakdown.
This recognition reaffirms something that at Pull It Up Radio we have always maintained: Reggae is not nostalgia, it is present and future.
KEZNAMDI represents a generation that:
🎧 Listen to BLXXD & FYAH
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