
FREE Every Sunday at The Lazy Pirate Sports Bar and Grill from 5 - 9 pm Featuring The Night Nurse and Island Style Prize Giveaways.
Vendors Needed Weekly. Call 910.458.5299 for more information.
The Night Nurse
For the past 18 years Kimberly has produced her own radio program focusing on reggae and world music. On the radio she is known as “The Night Nurse”. She began her broadcasting career with NPR affiliate WHQR 91.3… in 1993. She was assigned what is best known as “the graveyard shift” 12am-4am. At that time, she called the show “Reggae Nites”.
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Weekly Featured Artist:
Midnite Reggae Band
Redemption Gallery
Here you will find photos of recent Reggae Redemption Radio events and appearances by the Night Nurse.
- Night Nurse
- Recent Events
- Featured Artists
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This Weeks Winners
Congratulations to our weekly winners Holly Vanek, Tiffany Matthews and Teresa Rodgers! They won tickets to see Steel Pulse and SOJA at the House of Blues in Myrtle Beach (SC).
Listen for next weeks contest to win prizes!
Advertise on Reggae Redemption Radio.com
We offer flexible packages for any marketing budget. Your ad can run by the week or month. We can re-size your image at no charge. Don't have one? We are glad to offer graphic design services from Snow Dog Studios. Contact us for a quote.
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Today - Jah Itagaki's "Reggae Life" highlights This Day in Reggae and Nubian, Rasta herb and related history. Click here for today in reggae.
Various Dates - Click here for upcoming events in the Reggae Festival Guide 2012.
History of Reggae
Reggae was born amidst poor blacks in Trenchtown, the main ghetto of Kingston, Jamaica, who listened to radio stations from the United States. Jamaican musicians, many of them Rastas, soon blended traditional Jamaican folk music and drumming with American R&B, and jazz into ska, that later developed into reggae under the influence of soul.
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Rasta Reasoning Blog
The Meaning of Reasoning by Ras Mandingo Jahson
Greetings Idrens and Sistrens,
I was wondering about the word "reasoning". That's something I feel happy I can exercise here. I was trying to find a word in Portuguese, and ended up building one, as I couldn't find one that I felt really represented this feeling. When we translate, we actually make an interpretation, looking for ideas that can be compared.
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