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Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Sizzla rejects claim he demanded Kartel’s fee to perform

by

Guardian Media Limited
122 days ago
20250608
Jamaican reggae artiste Sizzla Kalonji

Jamaican reggae artiste Sizzla Kalonji

KERWIN PIERRE

Reg­gae artiste Siz­zla has re­ject­ed as false a claim that he de­mand­ed a fee equal to that of fel­low Ja­maican artiste Vy­bz Kar­tel to close the One Caribbean Mu­sic Fes­ti­val af­ter Kar­tel failed to ap­pear.

Kar­tel’s fee was US$1.35 mil­lion to per­form in Trinidad.

Pro­mot­er Dane An­der­son told re­gion­al me­dia that Siz­zla’s team re­vised their fee up­wards af­ter learn­ing that Kar­tel would no longer per­form. Ac­cord­ing to An­der­son, the new de­mand matched Kar­tel’s con­tract­ed amount—an in­crease he said was not fea­si­ble due to the fes­ti­val’s strained bud­get.

“We were pre­pared to pay Siz­zla’s bal­ance as agreed,” An­der­son said. “Un­for­tu­nate­ly, there was a re­quest for sig­nif­i­cant­ly more, and when we could not meet the new de­mand on such short no­tice, they opt­ed to with­draw.”

In an of­fi­cial state­ment, Siz­zla de­scribed that ver­sion of events as a “bla­tant lie.” He said that dur­ing a meet­ing with the pro­mot­er—who had not yet paid the 50 per cent de­posit out­lined in their agree­ment—his team mere­ly sug­gest­ed that the un­paid bal­ance be cov­ered us­ing the funds al­ready al­lo­cat­ed for the miss­ing head­lin­er.

“We sim­ply said to the pro­mot­er in a meet­ing, when he still didn’t of­fer to pay us the 50 per cent of our orig­i­nal con­trac­tu­al amount, that he should pay us the 50 per cent that he was go­ing to pay the artiste that was to head­line the show and didn’t ap­pear, and I will head­line the show,” he wrote.

Siz­zla fur­ther re­vealed that, al­though his con­tract stip­u­lat­ed a 50 per cent ad­vance, he had al­ready ar­rived to per­form at the event af­ter re­ceiv­ing on­ly ten per cent of the agreed fee.

“This is not ac­cept­able—all be­cause of Trinidad—and you still didn’t give us the 50 per cent owed to us, even up­on my ar­rival at the ho­tel,” he said.

De­spite the dis­pute, he ac­knowl­edged the ef­forts of the fes­ti­val’s or­gan­is­ers. “I gen­uine­ly think the pro­mot­er and spon­sors did a very good job; it’s just that the head­lin­er didn’t ap­pear.”

He added that he and his team wait­ed at the ho­tel for hours af­ter the meet­ing, ex­pect­ing a res­o­lu­tion that nev­er came. “The pro­mot­er didn’t get back to us the whole night—we wait­ed and wait­ed, and noth­ing hap­pened. I fell asleep.”

Siz­zla said that even if he had been will­ing to per­form with­out the out­stand­ing pay­ment, the pro­mot­er failed to fol­low up with him.

He closed his state­ment on an up­beat note. “I went to the stu­dio and com­piled my al­bum with some very tal­ent­ed lo­cal acts. We’re mov­ing on. We love Trinidad. One love, Trinidad.”

Mean­while, the fall­out from the col­lapsed fes­ti­val con­tin­ues. Tick­et­ing plat­form Is­land eT­ick­ets is threat­en­ing le­gal ac­tion against pro­mot­er Ja­cho En­ter­tain­ment, de­mand­ing the re­turn of US$80,000 ad­vanced to head­line act Adid­ja “Vy­bz Kar­tel” Palmer.

How­ev­er, Ja­cho En­ter­tain­ment is push­ing back. The com­pa­ny has ac­cused Is­land eT­ick­ets of breach­ing its re­fund pol­i­cy and warned the plat­form to halt all re­pay­ments un­til a full au­dit is com­plet­ed.


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