Thursday, October 9, 2025

Bishop Herro Blair excited at Sterling ‘Kingdom Stalwart’ Award

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From the 1970s into the 1990’s Voice of Deliverance, a gospel and worship programme hosted by Bishop Dr Herro V Blair, was the rage on Sunday mornings on local television. But before he got into television, the pastor had already established his ministry on AM radio and was a force to be reckoned with.

The industry veteran is among five people from the gospel fraternity who will be honoured at this year’s staging of the Sterling Gospel Music Awards with the KFC Big Deal Kingdom Stalwarts Award.

The event takes place on October 4 at Emmanuel Apostolic Church, Braeton Parkway, in Portmore, St Catherine.

When the Jamaica Observer caught up with Bishop Blair on Friday he was overwhelmed at the recognition by the Sterling Gospel Music Awards committee.

“I have been following the Sterling Gospel Music Awards over the years and I am honoured to be a recipient of one of the awards this time around,” said Bishop Blair, who will next year celebrate 50 years of the existence of his Deliverance Evangelic Association.

Blair has won several awards and has been recognised through the years for the philanthropic work that his ministry has done.

“I started out in 1968 on the radio; I was doing Caribbean Beacon on the AM band on radio in Anguilla, which was heard in dozens of countries at the time. When I came back to Jamaica I went to RJR and did a gospel show during the graveyard shift and that was what catapulted me. Radio was what brought me a level of recognition, and it carried me into more countries than television did,” Bishop Blair shared.

Born in Somerton, St James, Bishop Blair’s parents were pastors. He is the cousin of reggae legend Jimmy Cliff.

In the mid-1960s Bishop Blair pioneered the very first Pentecostal Church in the Cayman Islands before returning to Jamaica to start the Deliverance Evangelic Association. Today, he is the senior pastor at Faith Cathedral Deliverance Centre on Waltham Park Road, of which he is the co-founder.

Asked what the high point of his journey through the years has been, Bishop Blair said: “I’ve been able to serve my country, head the Peace Management Initiative in Jamaica, and going into most of the communities across Jamaica as a peacemaker. Just the ability to serve has been a blessing.”

He added: “I have dined with presidents of the United States, Her Majesty the late Queen Elizabeth II a couple of times, and I’ve been honoured by my country. Today, I am still serving in many positions.”

Among the many institutions and programmes that he has helped to establish are the Deliverance Centre Basic School, Deliverance Centre Commercial Institute, Deliverance Centre Bible Institute, the Yadar Kinder Preparatory School, and street feeding programme and soup kitchen at his church, Faith Cathedral Deliverance Centre, 104 Waltham Park Road.

Bishop Blair was appointed in various capacities and served as general secretary of the National Religious Media, chairman of the National Democratic Movement, vice-president of Caribbean region for Full Gospel Fellowship International, member of the Rent Assessment Board, chairman of National Religious Affairs – Jamaica Festival, and co-founder of Jamaica Cultural Development Commission Gospel Festival Song Competition.

He currently serves as chairman/director of National Religious Media, founding member of Correctional Services Production Company, and member of the International Communion of Charismatic Churches & Bishop’s Council.

In 2007 Bishop Blair was vested into the Order of Jamaica (OJ).

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eNGee Dadon pushes social commentary

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Dancehall artiste eNGee Dadon has been creating more momentum with the tracks Crocodile Masicka and Is Masicka A Nanny?.

The entertainer, who was formerly known as Pickney, explained that these songs are social commentary based on observations in the industry.

“Crocodile Masicka” came from a review on the present Dancehall situation. The fans [have] been talking about Masicka’s sidekick who got whipped by Devin Di Doctor and Masicka didn’t defend his bro — that was the spark. I didn’t jump in to throw shade, I just analysed the conversation through music. Dancehall is commentary, so I put the narrative in melody form. It’s social reflection mixed with lyrical observation. The crocodile in the story represent fear and pride hiding behind silence,” eNGee Dadon said.

Crocodile Masicka was released on August 9 and has since earned thousands of streams. The other release made its debut at the beginning of October, and has upped the ante on discourse among music fans and analysts.

Reiterating that there is no bad blood between him and Masicka, the deejay anticipates that listeners will be able to appreciate music artistry and its link between current happenings.

“My hope is that Crocodile Masicka open people eyes to how powerful Dancehall still is when it mirror the culture. I want it to show that you can address current issues without losing creativity. If it sparks more artistes to go lyrical again, mission complete. And if it cross over to international audience, even better—because the world love truth told with rhythm,” he explained.

As for the second track, eNGee Dadon noted that some listeners have found the title bold, while some have found humour and others appreciate the literary devices in the lyrics.

“That one came straight from curiosity and cultural debate. Everybody was calling themselves GOATs (greatest of all time) in dancehall, and mi just flip it. If the goat is a female, is the goat a nanny? It’s satire mixed with wordplay. The title itself is a question — not an insult, but a mirror to how titles and ego move in the game. It’s dancehall theatre; intelligent provocation with humour,” he explained.

Amidst the new releases, eNGee Dadon is also celebrating his second place ranking on the Brando Music Review Show’s weekly chart for the track Dancehall Jealousy.

“It’s a blessing and a big acknowledgment of the work I’ve been putting in. Brando Music Review is respected, so being number two shows that independent artistes like me can move the space without major label push. It’s fuel for the fire. I appreciate the recognition but I’m still aiming for that number one spot. It also validate the fans who been supporting eNGee Dadon from day one,” he said.

The deejay is currently pushing multiple projects under New Generation Music Entertainment including: Venus Inna Vans, Christian Girl Gone, and Thanks You.

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