Wayne Jobson: How A Law Student Faked It Into A Record Deal With Reggae Legends
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概要
There's a moment when a teenage law student in England, armed with nothing but a demo and the whispered endorsement of Johnny Rotten, walks into record company offices and lies with such confidence that they hand him money. He doesn't have a band yet. He barely has a story. But he has the audacity to become one anyway—and the world shifts. This is not a story about getting lucky. It's a story about what happens when luck finds someone already moving.
Native Wayne Jobson spent his childhood in Jamaica's hills watching greatness work: his father building industries, his cousin launching legends through Island Records, Bob Marley refusing anything but total commitment. When the world opened, he didn't hesitate. He walked through. In this episode of Echoes Across Time, listeners will discover how a Jamaican storyteller became the architect of global soundtracks—from Grammy-winning reggae reimaginings to Disney films to radio stations—not by chasing fame but by staying rooted in what matters: craft, humility, and the relentless practice of one's gift.
Tim Levy, himself eighth-generation Jamaican, meets Wayne as a mirror—two men from an island that produces confidence the way other places produce anxiety. Their conversation explores what it means to build a life when you've been surrounded by the world's greatest minds, carrying the weight of real inheritance: what you keep, what you pass on, what it costs to stay humble when you're standing next to genius.
About the Guest: Native Wayne Jobson is a music producer, entrepreneur, and creative strategist whose work spans Grammy-winning albums, film soundtracks, and broadcast media. Based between Jamaica and the United States, he bridges Caribbean heritage with global creative vision.