A recent study, carried out on behalf of the Jamaican newspaper Jamaica Observer, shows that for every six Rasta men there's only one Rasta queen out there! Now that Etana has also turned her back on Rastafarianism, we better treasure Queen Ifrica. These days Montego Bay is just about synonymous with an all-in holiday in one of the many exclusive resorts the seaside town counts, but it's also the place where Queen Ifrica grew up and now also the title of her second album. Opener 'T.T.P.N.C.', a nyahbinghi medley like we haven't heard for a while, is a tribute to the Pitfour Nyahbinghi Center, the Rasta commune where Ifrica used to live with her mother and stepfather. Don't be fooled by the upbeat 'Welcome To Montego Bay'; this is by no means a promo song for the local tourist board, but rather a harsh criticism of the prevailing inequality in the seaside resort: "...a long time we suffer let we make a statement/children nah have nowhere fi play, people fed up in every way, welcome to Montego Bay...". Finally, the album of course also contains Ifrica's big hit 'Daddy', a song that hits like a hammer and in which Ifrica takes the role of an incest victim crying out against her father. As for her previous album, 'Fyah Muma', mentor Tony Rebel produced most of the tracks on 'Montego Bay'. Respect due!