Spotted singing in his local church at just seven-years-old, Jamaican Windel
Edwards was transformed by the tutelage of producer Ravin Wong into one of the
island's leading reggae stars. Nicknamed Gyptian because of the way he hung his
shirt over his head and twisted his facial hair like a pharaoh, he mixed roots
reggae with smooth, romantic ballads and rose to fame locally with the hits
Serious Times, Is There A Place and Mama Don't Cry before the release of debut
album My Name is Gyptian (2006). Refusing to follow the dancehall genre's
inclinations towards songs about misogyny ...