Is music actually evolving—or quietly losing its value? In this Reggae Hour conversation, Seth Caro joins us for a deep, unfiltered reasoning session on music, thinking, and the role AI plays in exposing an industry already under pressure. Seth reflects on growing up with hip-hop before discovering reggae, crossing genres without copying culture, and why scenes and slogans often limit creativity. He challenges the fear surrounding artificial intelligence, suggesting that AI may not destroy music—but instead force artists and listeners to confront how little value we’ve allowed music to hold. The discussion moves through producer mindset, streaming economics, and cross-genre philosophy, touching on moments like Keith Murray’s “Jah Rx (Redeye Remix)” as evidence that true crossover comes from shared values, not marketing strategies. This isn’t a promo interview. It’s a conversation about time, responsibility, and learning how to think for yourself. Follow Venice Beach Dub Club and stay connected:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/venicebeachdubclub/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/venicebeachdub/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiyVWHdm4QPQ_aH70kQdZggAll links & releases: https://linktr.ee/VBDCIf this conversation resonated, don’t let it end here. Follow the artist. Support the work. Stay with the questions. Follow Reggae Hour for long-form conversations that move slower, think deeper, and honor music beyond the algorithm. 🔗 Carrying Value Beyond the Conversation A central question in this episode is whether music is truly evolving — or whether we’ve slowly allowed it to become disposable. That question doesn’t stop with sound. It applies to how we create, how we consume, and how we choose to represent what we value. At Reggae Hour, we partner only with brands that understand that craft takes time, and that meaning is built — not optimized. That’s why we align with Old Glory. 👕 Old Glory — Craft Over Algorithms Old Glory is a heritage lifestyle and apparel brand rooted in craftsmanship, durability, and cultural identity. Their philosophy mirrors the ideas explored in this conversation: resisting shortcuts, honoring process, and standing for something even when it’s slower. Old Glory isn’t about chasing attention. It’s about holding value in a system that constantly tries to strip it away. If this episode resonated with you — if you believe music, culture, and identity deserve more than speed and surface — you can support Reggae Hour using the official link below: 👉 https://oldglory.com/discount/REGGAEHOUR ⚖️ FTC Disclosure This episode description contains affiliate links. If you choose to make a purchase through the link above, Reggae Hour may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. Affiliate support helps keep Reggae Hour independent, long-form, and committed to conversations that move slower and think deeper. Value doesn’t disappear overnight. It erodes when we stop protecting it. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/reggae-hour--2646280/support. 🌍 Roots. Culture. Revolution. Every episode of the Reggae Hour Podcast dives deep into reggae’s heartbeat — the stories, struggles, and spirit that unite the African diaspora. From Kingston to Cape Town, London to Lagos, we bring reggae’s message of truth, love, and liberation to the world. 🎙️ Subscribe & Tune In: Watch the full episode on YouTube → https://www.youtube.com/@ReggaeHourPodcast Listen worldwide on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeartRadio, & Amazon Music. 💬 Join the Movement: Follow us on Instagram → https://www.instagram.com/ReggaeHourPodcast Visit → https://www.ReggaeHour.com 🔥 Let your voice be heard! Drop a comment, share your thoughts, and tag a bredren or sistren who needs this message. The conversation continues in the comments — we reason, we rise, we build. #ReggaeHourPodcast #ReggaeCulture #Rastafari #RootsAndReality #OneLove #fyp