I don't think this has anything to do with Jamaica or regional dialect. It helps to read the lyrics in their entirety. This song is a confession by a young man who is seriously immature and has a history of beating his girlfriends (John Lennon said that he was responsible for the reference to beating women, and that it was based - remarkably - on his personal behaviour). The young man's belief that things are "getting better" - which is the title of the song - is doubtful at best.
The lines:
"Me used to be angry young man/
Me hiding my head in the sand"
do a great job of emphasising how self-centred (me, me, me) and childish ("Me happy" and "Me angry" are baby talk) this guy is.
They also work with the song's meter (rhythm) in a way that grammatically correct constructions don't.
The original question was "I am wondering how common such a use of 'me' is."
The answer is that it is not common and that it is illiterate, like the young man in the song. McCartney and Lennon would never have spoken like this in their own speech.