A classic don’t need a release date. It just needs time.
On May 8, 2026, the British Phonographic Industry officially certified Sister Nancy’s “Bam Bam” Gold in the United Kingdom — 400,000 units moved, measured by the Official Charts Company. Not a streaming spike, not a playlist push. Forty-four years of organic, unstoppable rotation.
This isn’t the first time the UK put respect on the record. Bam Bam picked up a Silver certification back in 2022 at 200,000 units. It’s been climbing ever since.
Where It Started
The song was first recorded in 1982 for Sister Nancy’s debut album One, Two, produced by the late Winston Riley. It’s gone on to become one of the most sampled reggae tracks in history — flipped and replayed across hip-hop, pop, Latin, and EDM for four decades, and it still hits different every single time the needle drops.
Sister Nancy made history as one of the first female dancehall deejays to break through in a sound system culture dominated by men. That Gold plaque from the BPI puts numbers to what the culture already knew.
The queen’s reign never ended. Some songs just live forever.
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