Lula Chinx 🆕 High Speed
During his incarceration, the music industry moved on. Newer artists like Roody Roodboy, BélO (in the roots scene), and the rise of Trap Kreyòl (Baky, 5LAN) changed the sonic landscape. Fans wondered: Would Lula Chinx be relevant when he got out? Lula Chinx was released in late 2022. Unlike many ex-convicts who hide from the spotlight, Lula leaned into it. His first interview post-release—a 45-minute conversation with a popular Haitian YouTuber—drew over 500,000 views in 48 hours.
His early mixtapes were underground anthems. Songs like "Nan Pwen" and "Ghetto Yon Fwa" resonated deeply because they didn't pretend to be glamorous. Lula spoke about "jalouzi" (jealousy), police brutality, and the struggle to send money back to family in Port-au-Prince. For listeners in Boston, Miami, and Montreal, Lula Chinx was the voice of the voiceless. lula chinx
As he chants in his comeback single "Mwen La" (I’m Here): "Yo te panse mwen mouri / Men mwen soti nan kavo a." (They thought I was dead / But I rose from the grave.) During his incarceration, the music industry moved on
