Biography

Haji Mike (Mike Hajimichael) is a Cypriot-born artist, academic, broadcaster and cultural thinker whose work bridges reggae music, media scholarship and storytelling. For more than four decades, he has moved fluidly between the lecture hall, the recording studio and the radio booth—developing a distinctive voice that connects Cyprus to the wider world through sound, ideas and narrative.

Haji Mike began his radio journey in 1980 at University Radio Essex (URE) in the UK. What started as a student passion for vinyl and broadcasting became a lifelong commitment to reggae culture and independent media. Over the years he has worked on commercial land-based stations and pioneering online platforms, becoming one of the first broadcasters to podcast reggae shows internationally from Cyprus. His long-running programmes—including The Outernationalist and A World of Reggae—have aired on stations in the USA, Jamaica, Ireland and Cyprus, building a global listenership rooted in conscious music and cultural dialogue. He is also the founder of Koubebi Radio, an independent online station that reflects his philosophy of “roots and routes”—local identity with global reach.

Alongside his broadcasting career, Haji Mike developed as a recording artist and dub poet. His music blends reggae rhythms with Mediterranean sensibilities, storytelling traditions and social commentary. Across ten album releases, he has explored themes of identity, migration, resistance, and belonging. His tenth LP, The Chiofta Chronicles, to be released in April 2026, continues this journey—an Africa-Cyprus collaboration recorded between Cyprus and Lagos, Nigeria. The project highlights his belief in transnational creativity and the idea that music is a living bridge between cultures.

As an academic, Mike Hajimichael has been teaching at the University of Nicosia since 1997, where he serves as Professor/Adjunct Faculty in Communications and Sociology. His research focuses on popular music, media representation, diaspora, identity and cultural theory. He is widely known for his work on Bob Marley, culminating in his 2023 monograph Bob Marley and Media: Representation and Audiences. The book examines how radio, television, and print media represented Marley during his lifetime and how those representations shaped his global legacy. In 2025 the title was taken over by Bloomsbury Publishing and released in paperback, extending its reach to new audiences.

Haji Mike’s scholarship often intersects with his creative practice. He has written on the concept of the “organic artist,” exploring how musicians operate as both cultural producers and social commentators. His work appears in international edited collections on protest music and media culture, and he has delivered lectures across Europe and the Caribbean, including a prestigious address at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica.

In 2025 he published The Living Chiofta—some stories that come out of songs, a book that merges autobiographical reflection with lyrical storytelling. The Chiofta series represents his broader vision: music as narrative, narrative as memory, and memory as cultural archive.

Whether behind a microphone, in front of students, or on stage with a band, Haji Mike remains committed to conscious sound, independent thought, and creative collaboration. His work embodies a simple but powerful principle: out of many voices, many stories—and through them, a shared human rhythm.