Bounty | Killer Jam 2006 Nah No Mercy The Warlord Scrollszip 18

Nah No Mercy: The Warlord Scrolls is a definitive two-disc compilation album by legendary Jamaican dancehall artist Bounty Killer, released on November 7, 2006, through VP Records. Often referred to as "The Warlord," Bounty Killer used this 41-track collection to cement his legacy as one of the most influential lyricists in reggae history. Overview of the "Warlord Scrolls"

The album serves as a retrospective journey through Bounty Killer’s career, featuring a mix of his most aggressive "war" tracks and his social commentary anthems. The title itself, Nah No Mercy, draws from a notable catchphrase first popularized in his track "Gun Thirsty". Key Tracks and Highlights

The compilation is split into two discs, covering different facets of his musical persona:

Disc 1: The Hardcore Warlord – This disc focuses on the high-energy, aggressive tracks that defined 90s dancehall. Notable tracks include "Coppershot," "Lodge," and "Dead This Time". It also features the clash song "Suspence," which was a direct response to Beenie Man's "Memories".

Disc 2: Social Reality and Collaborations – The second half showcases his versatility, including hits like "Fed Up" (produced by Sly & Robbie) and "Look Into My Eyes" (produced by Dave Kelly), which highlight government corruption and social inequality. Iconic collaborations like "Living Dangerously" with Barrington Levy and "Bwoy Nuh Run" with Ninja Man are also included. Album Production and Legacy

The project features production from dancehall's elite, including King Jammy, Dave Kelly, Bobby Digital, and Sly & Robbie. By 2006, Bounty Killer had established himself as the "Poor People’s Governor," and this release served as a comprehensive archive of the "scrolls" of his lyrical dominance over the previous 15 years.

For fans looking for the complete experience, the album is available for streaming on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music.

by Bounty Killer - Nah No Mercy (The Warlord Scrolls) - Spotify

Title Bounty Killer — JAM 2006: Nah No Mercy (The Warlord Scrolls) [18]

Short description A raw, hard-hitting 2006 JAM session from dancehall legend Bounty Killer — "Nah No Mercy (The Warlord Scrolls)" captures his signature aggressive style, social commentary, and streetwise lyricism across gritty riddims and militant delivery. Nah No Mercy: The Warlord Scrolls is a

Release details

  • Artist: Bounty Killer
  • Release: JAM 2006 — Nah No Mercy (The Warlord Scrolls)
  • Format: Digital/mixtape (assumed)
  • Year: 2006
  • Catalogue: [placeholder]
  • Label: [placeholder]

Tracklist (placeholder — replace with verified titles)

  1. Intro — Warlord Scrolls
  2. Nah No Mercy
  3. Street Law
  4. Gun Man Song
  5. Real Bad Man
  6. Government Crime
  7. Warlock Riddim
  8. Prayer for Mi Yard
  9. Officer Man
  10. Dancehall War
  11. Message to the Youth
  12. Outro — Warlord Reprise

Promotional blurb Unleashing uncompromising bars and militant energy, Bounty Killer's "Nah No Mercy (The Warlord Scrolls)" is a must-hear for fans of raw dancehall. Expect razor-sharp verses over pulsating riddims — a 2006 snapshot of one of Jamaica's most feared deejays.

Metadata / Tags

  • Dancehall, Reggae, Jamdown, Bounty Killer, Warlord, 2006, Nah No Mercy, mixtape

Usage notes

  • Verify track titles, label, and catalogue info before publishing.
  • Add cover art, credits (producers, featured artists), and licensing info where available.

Nah No Mercy: The Warlord Scrolls is a definitive retrospective double-album by Jamaican dancehall icon Bounty Killer, released on October 28, 2006, through VP Records.

The compilation serves as a "Warlord" history lesson, gathering over 40 tracks that span his most aggressive "war" anthems to socially conscious ghetto chronicles. Album Structure & Highlights

The set is divided into two discs, capturing different eras and styles of his career: Disc 1: The Hardcore Era

Features essential early hits like "Coppershot", "Spy Fi Die", and "Lodge". Artist: Bounty Killer Release: JAM 2006 — Nah

Includes the scathing social commentary "Fed Up", originally a massive hit in 1996.

Contains several tracks produced by legendary figures such as King Jammy and Sly & Robbie. Disc 2: Collaborations & Classics

Showcases major collaborations, including "Living Dangerously" with Barrington Levy and "Sufferer" with Wayne Marshall.

Features the rivalry-fueled track "Not Another Word" and the Ninja Man collaboration "Bwoy Nuh Run".

Ends with the "King Addies Multi Mega Death Mix", a six-minute intensive sound system-style megamix. Discography Context

Released during a period of transition in dancehall, this 2006 collection solidified Bounty Killer's status following his acclaimed "Ghetto Dictionary" series (2002). The album is highly regarded by fans, maintaining a strong rating on platforms like Discogs for its comprehensive coverage of his "Warlord" persona.

‎Nah No Mercy - The Warlord Scrolls - Album by Bounty Killer


The Warlord’s Scrolls: Revisiting Bounty Killer’s 2006 Era and the Digital Battlefield

In the vast, often chaotic archive of dancehall history, certain file names act as time capsules. A search string like "Bounty Killer JAM 2006 Nah No Mercy The Warlord Scrollszip 18" might look like digital debris to the uninitiated—just another zip file on a forgotten forum. But to the student of the culture, those keywords unlock a specific, volatile moment in Jamaican music history.

It points to 2006: a year where the "Warlord" Bounty Killer was defending his crown in a rapidly changing musical landscape, battling not just lyrical rivals, but the shifting tides of the music industry itself. Tracklist (placeholder — replace with verified titles)

The Lost Artifact: Unpacking Bounty Killer’s “Nah No Mercy” (JAM 2006) and The Warlord Scrollszip 18

In the sprawling digital graveyards of early 2000s file-sharing forums, buried beneath layers of broken RapidShare links and defunct Soulseek queues, lies a holy grail for dancehall purists: Bounty Killer – JAM 2006 – Nah No Mercy – The Warlord Scrollszip 18.

To the uninitiated, this appears to be a nonsensical string of SEO clutter. To the selectors and sound system killers, however, it represents a specific temporal snapshot of Rodney Price (Bounty Killer) at his most ferocious, captured during the transitional era when dancehall was migrating from physical vinyl to compressed digital files.

The Legacy of the Scrollszip

While Bounty Killer has since moved to streaming platforms (his official discography is clean and remastered), the Scrollszip 18 file remains a cult object. It represents the last era of "hidden" dancehall—music never intended for commercial release, only for the sound system and the street.

In 2024, Bounty Killer himself addressed the bootleg leaks on Instagram Live. When a fan asked about "Nah No Mercy" from 2006, the Warlord smirked and said: "Yuh have di Scrollszip? Dat was fi di dog dem. Keep it. Nuh business fi di public."

And so, the file lives on. It is traded via encrypted USB sticks at blues dances in Brooklyn. It is uploaded to obscure file hosts and deleted within 48 hours. It is the "Nah No Mercy" ethos preserved in zeros and ones.

Why Track 18? The Numismatic Value

In the hierarchy of lost dancehall media, track position matters. "Track 18" is significant. On a standard CD-R, tracks 1–5 are usually the "hits." Tracks 10–15 are filler. Track 18? That is the deep cut. That is the track the artist forgot he recorded.

According to liner notes reconstructed from 2007 blog posts (now defunct), Track 18 of the Scrollszip features a rare verse where Bounty Killer addresses the "Daggering" controversy of 2006, warning that while the youth are dancing lustfully, the "Nah No Mercy" doctrine applies to informers.

Lyrical Sample (Transcribed from the JAM 2006 audio):

"Mi give dem Nah No Mercy / Like Saddam in the bunker dirty / 2006, di Warlord still sturdy / Scrollszip leak it, now di whole city hurry."