Thanks to his success as a live performer, Tuff Gong subsidiary Ghetto Youths International signed him and in 1996, released his first solo album, Mr. Marley. The sessions were co-produced by his brother Stephen and featured Damian's unique dancehall-meets-hip-hop DJ style. His next album, 2001's Halfway Tree, earned a Grammy nomination, but the public generally overlooked the ambitious effort. Not so for the reggae-meets-hip-hop single "Welcome to Jamrock," which became an urban phenomenon soon after its summer 2005 release. Street-level mixtapes began featuring it, radio couldn't get enough of it, and remixes -- both legal and not so legal -- began appearing at a fast pace. The well-rounded album Welcome to Jamrock delivered on the promise of the single that same year, reaching the Top Ten and eventually winning a Best Reggae album Grammy. It featured a wide range of guests, from Bobby Brown to Bunny Wailer, as it blended hip-hop, classic reggae, dancehall, and modern R&B.
In the years that followed, Marley kept up a busy schedule of guest appearances on albums by the likes of Snoop Dogg, Gwen Stefani, Mariah Carey and his brother Stephen. In 2010, he teamed with Nas on the Africa-themed album Distant Relatives, that made even more clear Marley's link to the hip-hop community. The next few years found Marley back as a featured player on albums by Bruno Mars, Joss Stone, Sean Paul, and Shaggy, and releasing a single with Skrillex in 2012, all while touring and working on a new album. The long-awaited Stony Hill, which featured the Stephen Marley-assisted single "Medication," was issued by Island Records in 2017, the same year he guested on Jay Z's 4:44 album. April 2018 saw the release of a remixed version of "Medication" featuring Wiz Khalifa and Ty Dolla $ign. ~ John Bush, Rovi