Spice is reminding the world exactly why she sits firmly on the throne of dancehall. Her Grammy-nominated debut studio album 10 has officially re-entered the Billboard Reggae Albums Chart, returning at No. 8 in November 2025—four years after it first debuted at No. 6 in August 2021. Released via VP Records, the project’s renewed chart momentum underscores a fresh global wave of interest surrounding both the album and its record-breaking singles.
But 10’s impact extends far beyond a Billboard comeback. The project has become a defining force in modern dancehall, ranked as the highest-selling and most-streamed dancehall album in over a decade. In the U.S. alone, it has moved more than 140,000 units, including 21,000 pure sales, while surpassing 448 million lifetime Spotify streams—solidifying its title as the most-streamed dancehall album in Spotify history. In August 2025, Spice also made history as the first Jamaican woman to receive a U.S. certification under Luminate’s new A2IM sales recognition program, earning a prestigious 2-star certification for 10.
The album’s certifications continue to climb with over five international plaques, plus Gold eligibility in the U.S., U.K., Canada, and France for both “So Mi Like It” and “Go Down Deh.” This officially positions 10 as the most-certified album by a female dancehall artist, marking a monumental achievement for the genre.
Meanwhile, the album’s lead single “Go Down Deh”—featuring dancehall heavyweights Sean Paul and Shaggy—continues to dominate globally. As of November 9, 2025, the track was observed re-entering multiple worldwide digital charts, including returning to No. 1 on the U.S. iTunes Reggae Songs chart for a second consecutive week. It also reclaimed positions across Canada, Singapore, Denmark, South Africa, the U.S., U.K., India, and Germany. On Shazam, it re-entered the Top 200 Global Songs at No. 36.
“Go Down Deh” remains a streaming juggernaut, averaging more than 322,000 daily Spotify streams, pushing it past 329 million Spotify plays. On YouTube, the official video has skyrocketed to over 663 million collective views, and the track’s reach extends even further: over 9.9 million YouTube Shorts/Reels have featured the song, accumulating more than 13 billion combined views—making it one of the biggest reggae/dancehall songs of the modern era.
Earlier in 2025, the single earned Gold certification in France and became the first lead track by a Jamaican female artist to surpass 300 million Spotify streams, solidifying its status as one of the most impactful dancehall records of this generation.
As Spice enjoys this unprecedented surge across charts, streaming platforms, and certification systems, she continues her philanthropic mission through the Grace Hamilton Foundation—providing relief to victims of Hurricane Melissa. Whether breaking records, championing women in dancehall, or lifting her community, the Queen of Dancehall shows no signs of slowing her reign.


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