Puppy Irie - Fight Fi Puney (poco Man Jam) -
Dancehall enthusiasts often highlight the rhythmic importance of this specific era and riddim.
“The term 'dembow' is often used to describe this percussion style... but it was the Poco Man Jam riddim that actually describes and popularizes the beat first.” Jamaicans.com · 9 years ago Puppy Irie - Fight Fi Puney (Poco Man Jam)
The song was produced by and William Maragh (better known as Super Cat) and released under the Wild Apache label. It is part of a wider cultural wave where the "Poco" beat—a percussion-heavy style influenced by Jamaican Pocomania church rhythms—became a staple of early 90s dancehall. Key Facts about the Track It is part of a wider cultural wave
“Poco Man Jam... set the dancehall scene on fire in the 90s... This track brought a fresh, hypnotic beat that still gets the party started today!” TikTok · dancehallchronicles876 · 1 year ago This track brought a fresh, hypnotic beat that
Poppie Irie / Sugar Banton – Fight Fi Punny / Punny Stop Light
: The Poco Man Jam riddim (initially popularized by Gregory Peck's track of the same name in 1989) is historically significant because it served as one of the foundational beats for the development of Reggaeton .
is a classic 1991 dancehall track by the artist Puppy Irie , released on the legendary Poco Man Jam riddim .