Shenseea
A multitalented artist makes her name from a little island in the sea.
Photographer Martei Korley
In Jamaica with Shenseea

The FADER's longstanding GEN F series profiles emerging artists to know now.

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Chinsea Lee, the 21-year-old who performs as Shenseea, is a DJ, a singjay, a rapper, a singer, and a songwriter. “I said to myself that I’m going to be able to go and perform on any platform they put me on, and it’s actually working,” she tells me over Skype. When we speak, she is in Jamaica enjoying much-needed downtime before a flight to New York for an upcoming show. She seems relaxed, wearing a light denim jacket with her hair slicked back into a ponytail. But in true Jamaican fashion, she still ah pop style with a fusion of yellow, orange, and red eyeshadow, plus mint-green, coffin-shaped acrylics.

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In Jamaica with Shenseea
In Jamaica with Shenseea

“As soon as I land back in Jamaica, I go straight to my son’s house and I bond with him,” she says. If you’ve followed her career at all, then you probably know her playful 2-year-old son, Rajeiro. “I don’t hide my child from social media,” Shenseea explains, “and a lot of my fans, they love me for that, because they feel that attachment — not only to me, but to my son.” That openness contours her personality, making her reach more expansive. “I’ve been receiving a lot of love from the Caribbean people. And if I can be bigger… I wouldn’t mind,” she says near the end of our chat.

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“That’s the goal right now: to be an everybody artist,” she says self-assuredly. “I’m going to be remembered [as] a girl that came from Jamaica, started out really young, very fast uprising, but really left a [mark].” Her career so far includes brand ambassadorships with the Jamaican branches of Pepsi, Campari, and the telecommunications giant Flow. But her greatest flex is positioning herself between genres, as she’s done with features on songs by Bunji Garlin to Christina Aguilera. Dipping in and out of worlds is part of who Shenseea is.

In Jamaica with Shenseea
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Her first world was her family. She was born in Mandeville — a town of 50,000 in the center of the island — and lived there until her family moved to the nation’s capital, Kingston, when she was 3. Her second world was church, which she attended throughout her childhood. That’s where she first developed an affinity for music. “Being in a choir, I could not stand it because I could hardly hear myself,” she says, laughing. “My voice was drowning and I was like, ‘No, I want everybody to hear me!’” At 8, she performed a solo cover of Whitney Houston’s “Greatest Love of All” before the congregation.

In high school, she began DJing. Around the same time, she started writing a song inspired by heartbreak but, frustrated, gave up. She finally finished one day in 2015 and posted it to Facebook. To her surprise, “Perfect Sidechick” went viral. “A boy that I was in a relationship with, we couldn’t cope together anymore, so he started having other girls,” she remembers. The boy was history but her music career was just beginning. She met her current manager, Romeich Major, in February 2015, when she was under his employ as a bottle girl at various events around the island. When he realized her music talent, they decided to work together. In 2016, her infectious and upbeat record “Loodi,” which features kingpin Vybz Kartel, shot her into the limelight and earned her the unofficial title of “Princess of Dancehall.”

As she prepares to release a reggae EP called Real and True, out in mid-autumn and stacked with tracks she’s written herself over the years, there’s one paradoxical factor: “Time is my only challenge from the start because a lot of things are happening so fast,” she says. And even greater stardom is well within reach, especially when you consider how much she’s accomplished from a little island in the sea. It makes me think of the Jamaican expression “Wi likkle but wi tallawah”: we’re small but full of heart.

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In Jamaica with Shenseea

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Watch Shenseea's "Instruction" music video.
In Jamaica with Shenseea