Dancehall fable Sean Paul has released a video for his Live N Livin single "Guns of Navarone."

The song features Ghanaian dancehall singer, Stonebwoy, Jamaican singer Jesse Purple, and Jamaican poet Mutabaruka. The track addresses the gun violence Jamaica has been grappling with, along with the struggles of people who reside in the nation'due south ghettos. The video opens with a quote from Mutabaruka, "How tin a people exist then traumatized that them commencement to love them traumatic experiences? Nosotros are defining we self through the colonizers, still how can we be so blind."

The video tells a story of the cycle of violence in Jamaica with a swain protecting his sister later on their fathers' death, and continually throughout the video. It is his protectiveness that lands him in prison house later on he murders a man for violating his sister. Some years earlier, the video shows him receiving a gun from an older human. He returns from prison in 2022 and seeks a job but lands one equally a contract killer. He is contracted to kill a human who was dating his sis, as information technology turns out. He ends killing his sister, whom he loves so much.

Mutabaruka returns with the outro saying, "Aye, di hunter kill the lion and say him was hunting, is a game / But when the lion kill the hunter / Y'all hear seh him is a beast and a savage / A homo similar Marcus Garvey come tell nosotros."

Sean Paul is not the start artiste to record a song with this title. The Skatalites in 1965 released a ska instrumental called "Guns of Navarone." At the introduction of the instrumental, one member said:

"In the winter of nineteen 60-iv this movie came to Jamaica / The Skatalites took the music from the movie and put it into ska / And came up with this song, it's called / BAP… BAP… BAP..BA..BAP… the Guns of Navarone."

The music was adapted from the 1961 World War 2 product with the same title. The movie illustrated the story of a team of Greek soldiers fighting confronting German artillery units.