Shawn Thwaites addresses Grammy fallout

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

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Steff London to launch Don Beauty fragrance

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

Shenseea makes history despite MTV VMAs loss

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

Shenseea confident after second VMA nomination

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

Reggae Sumfest 2025 to honour icons with Tribute to the Legends segment

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

One Caribbean meltdown: Promoter urges Kartel & Sizzla to make it right

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

T&T Finance Minister launch probe into USD payments made to several acts at the One Caribbean Music Festival

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More

One Caribbean Music Fest sparks backlash after Kartel, Sizzla, Moliy pull out

Shawn Thwaites, the former Grammy Awards Genre Manager who flagged Moliy’s Shake It to the Max as ineligible, says he was fired shortly after Billboard published an article about the controversial decision.

Thwaites, who is receiving support and messages of solidarity from reggae greats including Cat Coore of Third World and members of Morgan Heritage, insists he would never snub African music.

All this stems from the ruling that Moliy’s track Shake It to the Max did not qualify for the 2026 Grammy Awards. The song was submitted as a remix and Grammy rules state that remixes cannot compete in the Best Global Music Performance or Best African Music Performance categories.

Despite its global reach and its features from Dancehall artists Skillibeng and Shenseea, the song was declared ineligible.

Read More