• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Our history archive

Our History

Empowering through historical knowledge

General

  • About
  • Cookies and your privacy
  • Privacy policy
  • Contact

Categories

  • Home
  • Colonisation
  • World History
  • Civil Rights
  • World cultures
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Popular Culture
  • Home
  • Colonisation
  • World History
  • Civil Rights
  • World cultures
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Popular Culture

MBE for David Rodigan, Reggae-Dancehall DJ

Popular culture
15 February, 2012

Dancehall DJ David Rodigan has been awarded an MBE.

David Rodigan’s career spans almost 35-year years, in which time he has devoted himself to promoting reggae music through his various radio programs and in musical battles against some of Jamaica’s most famous sound system selectors. He has received several major awards for his work but none is as prestigious as the Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE), which was bestowed by the Queen in a ceremony on Valentine’s Day, at Buckingham Palace. The MBE is the UK’s fifth highest award.




One of the reasons I feel so honored to be awarded for services to broadcasting is because it is so important for reggae music and, without being patronising, for the Jamaican people who migrated to this country in the 50s and 60s and brought their music with them,” explained Rodigan in an interview with Billboard.biz.

Named Broadcaster of the Year in May 2009 at the Sony Radio Academy Awards, David Rodigan was born June 24th, 1951 on a military base in Hanover, Germany to Scots-Irish parents and raised in North Africa until he was eight years old when the family moved to England. A trained actor who had a recurring role as Broken Tooth in the Doctor Who serial The Mysterious Planet, it was Rodigan’s obsession with Jamaican music, which he first heard in the mid ’60s, that ultimately defined his career path.

“There was about a four-year phenomenon of Jamaican hits impacting British pop culture like a whirlwind from the West Indies: Millie Small’s “My Boy Lollipop” (which topped the Hot 100 in 1964 and was the first major hit for Chris Blackwell’s Island Records via the Fontana imprint); “Israelites” by Desmond Dekker, the first British no. 1 for a Jamaican artist (peaking at no. 9 on the Hot 100 in 1968) among many others, that’s when I fell in love with this music and started playing it at youth clubs and at parties,” Rodigan reminisced.

Rodigan began his broadcasting career in 1978 on BBC Radio London. He moved to Capital Radio in 1979, where he remained for 11 years, hosting his legendary Roots Rockers program, cassettes of which were prized commodities among reggae fans. He further solidified his reggae street-cred when he began broadcasting his Capital Radio show live from Jamaica. He engaged in a series of on-air competitions with renowned presenter Barry “Barry G” Gordon of (Jamaica’s now defunct) JBC radio, their lively exchanges garnering a widespread audience that included Jamaicans on the island and those living in England and throughout North America.

David Rodigan can be heard each Sunday night 11 p.m. – 1:00 a.m. on London’s Kiss FM, and for the second consecutive year, he will also host a weekly summer program devoted to reggae commencing May 23 through August 13 on BBC Radio 2, which reaches an audience exceeding 14 million in the UK, according to the BBC’s website.




Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Related

You May Also Like…

happy women s day box

International Women’s Day 2025: Accelerate action for equality

Black History Month UK 2024 Reclaiming Narratives

Celebrating 31 Days of Black History

Black History Month UK 2024 Reclaiming Narratives

Reclaiming Narratives: The theme of Black History Month 2024

International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition: A day to reflect and educate




Reader Interactions

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Sidebar

This Day In History

No Events

Recent posts

happy women s day box

International Women’s Day 2025: Accelerate action for equality

Black History Month UK 2024 Reclaiming Narratives

Celebrating 31 Days of Black History

Black History Month UK 2024 Reclaiming Narratives

Reclaiming Narratives: The theme of Black History Month 2024

Recent posts

International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition: A day to reflect and educate

Paris Olympics 204

Paris Olympic opening ceremony: Highlights and controversies

photo of men having conversation

What is mentoring, and how can it help you? 

Trending

  • What are British values?
    What are British values?
  • The Rosetta Stone: A key to ancient Egypt
    The Rosetta Stone: A key to ancient Egypt
  • Flore Bois Gaillard – Saint Lucian revolutionary
    Flore Bois Gaillard – Saint Lucian revolutionary
  • Why did Britain abolish slavery?
    Why did Britain abolish slavery?
  • The major branches of Islam: History, beliefs, and differences
    The major branches of Islam: History, beliefs, and differences
  • Understanding Sharia Law: Principles, practice, and global context
    Understanding Sharia Law: Principles, practice, and global context
  • Boy with 'elephant' legs fighting for his life
    Boy with 'elephant' legs fighting for his life
  • The meaning of "Semite"
    The meaning of "Semite"
  • The history of Eswatini
    The history of Eswatini
  • Ancient Semitic people: The Canaanites
    Ancient Semitic people: The Canaanites

Connect

  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • Bluesky
  • About
  • Cookies and your privacy
  • Privacy policy
  • Contact

Copyright © 2025 · Our History · All Rights Reserved