2011
A PA TAW (Kassidje Gazagirl feat. Doc J)
featuring on Bouyon Gwada track
Bouyon artist · first Gwada wave
December 31, 2011. Kassidje Gazagirl's "A PA TAW" single drops with Doc J as feature — one of the oldest catalogued Bouyon Gwada releases. And Doc J is already there. For six years, he becomes one of the male voices of the first hardcore wave with Suppa, DJ Joe and Weelow. His "doc-j-officiel" SoundCloud drops "WE LOVE BOUYON" with Kassidje in September 2012. Le Courrier de Guadeloupe cites him in print. The "Bouyon Hardcore 2k13" mix lists him among the five names defining the era. Not a global Bouyon name, but a pillar of Gwada hardcore memory.
Doc J is one of the documented male voices of the first hardcore Bouyon Gwada wave, and two types of sources prove it. Le Courrier de Guadeloupe — local press — cites him in print alongside Gaza Girls and Weelow. les plateformes streaming and SoundCloud lock the dates: "A PA TAW" on December 31, 2011 with Kassidje, then "WE LOVE BOUYON" on September 29, 2012. Two features with Kassidje in less than a year: Doc J is one of the earliest men connected to the Gaza Girls, at a moment when female spots in Bouyon are being built. The "Bouyon Hardcore 2k13" Mixcloud mix (December 2013, 70 minutes at 155 BPM) places him alongside Suppa, Gaza Girls, DJ Joe and Weelow. The most-streamed Bouyon names worldwide are elsewhere today — Asa Bantan, Mr Ridge, Theodora — but Doc J remains one of the historical pillars of the Gwada 2009-2015 scene.
Estimated start marker of Doc J's Bouyon Gwada activity — 2009-2015 period framed by SoundCloud / Le Courrier archives.
Kassidje Gazagirl's `A PA TAW (feat. Doc J)` dated 31 December 2011 (Apple Music / Amazon Music) — earliest documented catalogue marker.
`WE LOVE BOUYON` Doc J feat. Kassidje on SoundCloud — proof of Doc J's Bouyon 2012 activity, doc-j-officiel channel.
`Bouyon Hardcore 2k13` mix (Rebel Up / Mixcloud, 70 minutes at 155 BPM) tags Doc J with Suppa, Gaza Girls, DJ Joe and Weelow.
End-of-cycle trace in the massive 2011-2015 SoundCloud scene reconstructed by the editorial archives.
Globalisation audit pass 4: Doc J explicitly re-classed as Gwada connector of Era 3. Chapter IV `la-traversee` keeps him as a historical marker.
2011
featuring on Bouyon Gwada track
2012
lead artist, doc-j-officiel channel
2013
trace in 70 min 155 BPM Mixcloud mix
2009-2015
mix and Le Courrier registry presence
Cites Doc J with Gaza Girls and Weelow as Bouyon Gwada names — local press source.
https://lecourrierdeguadeloupe.com/34-vrai-phenomene-de-societe/Single dated 31 December 2011 — early catalogue marker.
https://music.apple.com/29 September 2012 — proof of Doc J's Bouyon Gwada activity.
https://soundcloud.com/doc-j-officiel/we-love-bouyon-doc-j-featBouyon hardcore mix December 2013 — Doc J tagged with Suppa, Gaza Girls, DJ Joe, Weelow.
https://www.rebelup.org/tag/french-antilles/Reconstructs the massive 2011-2015 Bouyon Gwada SoundCloud scene.
https://tiitii-nba.com/bouyon/Re-classes Doc J as Gwada connector of Era 3, not a global pillar.
https://tiitii-nba.com/bouyon/Editorial chronology of Bouyon eras — locates the first wave 2009-2015.
https://tiitii-nba.com/bouyon/Bouyon artist · first hardcore Gwada wave
December 31, 2011. Kassidje — real name Jessica Petro — drops "A PA TAW" featuring Doc J. One of the oldest catalogued Bouyon Gwada releases, and she's a woman, at 160 BPM, in a scene with no streaming platform yet. With Gaza Izzy, La Barbie, DJ'Angel and Ghetto Princess, she forms the core of Gaza Girls Crew — distinct from Gaza Crew (Suppa) and Yellow Gaza (Vador, DJ Joe, Asa Banton). Fifteen years later, she's back: "Deja Koke" with Gwada G drops in 2026 and places her back in the present. The bridge between the first hardcore wave and today's female generation.
Bouyon artist · Gaza Crew founder
On November 16, 2011, Suppa uploads "I Don't Kow" to the Vadore Concept SoundCloud. Nobody knows it yet, but it's one of the very first public audio traces of Bouyon Gwada that survives today. Lincoln Robin by his real name, Suppa is Dominican-born, Guadeloupe-based, and he carries the lead voice of the first wave (Act II). He founds Gaza Crew, crosses the Atlantic to Paris in December 2012, and keeps circulating across the European scene through 2013. That same year, he is killed in Guadeloupe. The scene loses its central singer barely 25 years old.
Bouyon Gwada collective · founded by Suppa
In the early 2010s, when Suppa (Lincoln Robin) lands in Guadeloupe from Dominica, he does not just join Yellow Gaza. He founds his own collective: Gaza Crew. Not a clone, not a branch — a neighbouring entity, centred on him. For three years, this collective carries 160 BPM hardcore Bouyon with releases that stay in people's memory: the Vadore Concept SoundCloud trace in 2011, the Gaza Girls' "Sa Zot Vle" single the same year, the December 2012 Paris set in the diaspora. In 2013, Suppa dies. The collective stops, but its memory still feeds the entire contemporary Bouyon Gwada.
Female Bouyon Gwada collective
2010, Bouyon Gwada starts circulating between Dominica and Guadeloupe. Five women form Gaza Girls Crew: Kassidje (Jessica Petro), Gaza Izzy, La Barbie, DJ'Angel and Ghetto Princess. They ride at 160 BPM hardcore in a scene institutions are already trying to slow down — la presse dominicaine documents the tension in 2012. Distinct from Gaza Crew (Suppa's collective) and Yellow Gaza (Vador, DJ Joe, Asa Banton), they drop "Sa Zot Vle" on the Bouyon Concept label in 2011, then "A PA TAW" the same year. The December 2012 Paris set takes them into the diaspora. Bouyon's women are there more than ten years before the New Bouyon Wave.
DJ · producer · Bouyon Gwada connector
2007. Bouyon has just landed in Guadeloupe, and DJ Joe sets his decks on the first Yellow Gaza sets. With Vador and Asa Banton, he's one of the three who carry the 160 BPM hardcore sound from Dominica to Pointe-à-Pitre. In December 2012, he hits a Paris stage with Suppa and the Gaza Girls — one of the first times Bouyon Gwada steps outside the Caribbean. Ten years later, he drops "Bwé rhum" with Asa Bantan in 2023 and proves he never left the table.
Bouyon artist · first Gwada wave
In 2012, Weelow (also known as Wee Low, possible identity Wilow Desirade) drops two singles on the Bouyon King / Label Bouyon Music label: "Ni Sa La" and "Frappéy". les plateformes streaming still holds them today — catalogue proof of the first hardcore Gwada wave. Le Courrier de Guadeloupe cites him in print with Gaza Girls and Doc J. The "Bouyon Hardcore 2k13" mix places him with Suppa, DJ Joe and Doc J as one of the five names of the era. Not a global pillar — his role is historical, anchored in the first Gwada wave — but without him, the Bouyon Gwada 2012 label infrastructure would not exist the way we read it today.
Bouyon Gwada collective
Yellow Gaza is one of the pillar projects of Act II of Bouyon in Guadeloupe (2007-2013). Driven by Vador, DJ Joe and Asa Banton, the collective was the first stage bridge between Dominica and Guadeloupe: it opened the road for Gaza Girls, Suppa and the whole Guadeloupean generation that followed. Distinct from Gaza Crew (founded by Suppa), Yellow Gaza remains a founding trace in the Bouyon Gwada memory long before the platform era.