His work as a music journalist specialising in all forms of reggae, from ska to bashment began in 1988 when he started writing for
Echoes, a UK weekly black music newspaper formerly known as Black Echoes. In 2000 this publication became a monthly magazine, still called Echoes, for which he continues to write full-length features, singles and album reviews on the genre's artists and producers. For the first eight years he worked in tandem with portrait photographer Tim Barrow on location in the UK and Jamaica. John Masouri's extensive list of interviewees from the past thirty years include
Jimmy Cliff,
Bunny Wailer,
Gregory Isaacs,
Toots and the Maytals, UB40,
Burning Spear,
Lee "Scratch" Perry, Sean Paul, Shaggy,
Maxi Priest, Damian Marley, Stephen Marley, Chronixx, Vybz Kartel, Garnet Silk, Sizzla, Shabba Ranks, Super Cat, Bounty Killer, Capleton,
Prince Buster,
Augustus Pablo,
Alton Ellis and
Beres Hammond, among many others. In 2011 he appeared as a talking head in the film
The Story of Lovers Rock directed by Menelik Shabazz. Additionally he has contributed to several radio and television documentaries commissioned by the
BBC (
The Story Of Jamaican Music,
Blood And Fire: Reggae And Rastafari and Arise Black Man: The Peter Tosh Story),
Channel 4, and the
BBC World Service. As a co-
curator of the
London Sound System Culture exhibition at the Tabernacle in Notting Hill, London during January 2016 he provided research and wrote all the accompanying text. Later that same month he was a guest speaker at the London Sound System Culture symposium held at Goldsmiths College, New Cross. He has also been a guest speaker and panellist at events, including the Rototum Festival (in 2008, 2012 and 2017) and the
Reggae Symposium of Film and Music held at Nottingham Broadway Arts Centre in 2015. His articles on reggae have appeared in
Mojo,
Music Week,
The Guardian and
NME, as well as magazines in Japan (RM) and Germany (Style Magazine). He is a regular contributor to reggae publications in Germany (Riddim Magazine) and France (Reggae Vibes). ==Works==