Rising reggae star Mortimer delivers stunning visualiser for ‘Flowers and Flames’. Reggae Tastemaker

RISING STAR MORTIMER DROPS STUNNING VISUALISER FOR ‘FLOWERS AND FLAMES’

Grammy-nominated reggae artist Mortimer has unveiled an enchanting visualiser for Flowers And Flames, his standout cut from Protoje’s celebrated Feel It (Deluxe) juggling riddim, released via In.Digg.Nation Collective and Ineffable Records.

Directed by Samo, the visual unfolds against the hushed nightscape of Treasure Beach in St. Elizabeth, Jamaica. Moonlight catches the waves. Ocean breezes carry Mortimer’s soulful voice, a raspy alto feathering into falsetto, as he pledges devotion, protection, and emotional shelter to his lover. It’s quietly breathtaking.

“For aren’t we all flower and flame? One in the same?” Mortimer asks. The line cuts to the heart of everything: love’s contradictions, its tenderness and its heat, its wounds and its warmth.

ROOTS REGGAE SOUNDS EXACTLY THIS ALIVE IN HIS HANDS

The track sits on the Feel It Riddim produced by The Indiggnation and Winta James, the same Winta James behind the artist’s Grammy-nominated debut album From Within. The project fused classic reggae with R&B, 1980s pop textures, and rhythmic invention. It earned Mortimer widespread acclaim from Billboard, Rolling Stone, and The New York Times alike.

Flowers And Flames confirms what his growing audience already knows: Mortimer transforms vulnerability into something luminous. Roots reggae sounds exactly this intimate, this alive, in his hands.

ABOUT MORTIMER

Rising reggae star Mortimer delivers stunning visualiser for ‘Flowers and Flames’. Reggae Tastemaker

Mortimer’s voice is extraordinary. The Kingston-born singer glides between smoky alto and silky falsetto, bridging roots reggae and contemporary Jamaican sounds with effortless grace. Early collaborations with Protoje and producer Winta James laid the foundation for a formidable creative partnership. 

His debut EP, Fight The Fight, showcased conscious lyricism and soulful live musicianship. BBC Radio’s David Rodigan, Caribbean Music Awards, and a 2026 Grammy nomination have all taken notice.

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