Yours truly would be very surprised if you hadn't heard about SuperHeavy, the super project uniting Dave Stewart, Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, A. R. Rahman and of course Damian Marley, yet. The fact this wouldn't immediately result in a reggae album comes as no surprise, but 'SuperHeavy' still offers Jamaican vibes a plenty. Not surprising when you know Shiah Coore (son of Third World legend Cat Coore) and Courtney Diederick (together Damian Marley's regular riddim tandem), were responsible for most of the instrumentation. And then of course there's Mick Jagger's vague reggae past: in the late 1970s and early 1980s The Rolling Stones worked with Peter Tosh for a while (a number of his albums appeared on their Rolling Stones Records label) and Jagger can be heard on Tosh's super hit '(You Gotta Walk) Don't Look Back'. Even though the whole supergroup concept has gone somewhat out of style, SuperHeavy delivers an extremely successful album in which genres like reggae, soul, pop, rock and even Indian vibes (the input of Bollywood composer A. R. Rahman) blend together effortlessly. According to originator Dave Stewart, we shouldn't focus too much on the composition of the band; it's all about the fun of it and nothing is chiseled in stone. What is certain is that with this project Damian Marley has come another step closer in fulfilling his father's dream of spreading reggae all over the world.