L’ENTOURLOOP ROAR OUT OF JAMAICA ON MUFFIN KINGS
French beatmakers L’Entourloop have dropped an epic tribute to sound system culture’s golden era. Their electrifying single Muffin Kings brings together six Jamaican vocalists in one powerhouse recording session.
This is no ordinary collaboration. Jamaican dancehall artists Danny English, Bunny General and Hollow Point represent raggamuffin‘s pioneering spirit. Echo Minott and Triston Palmer deliver classic rub-a-dub flavour.
Rising star Eesah carries the torch for tomorrow. Evidence Music and Little Lion Sound captured everything during the same session in Jamaica, preserving each voice with crystalline clarity.
L’ENTOURLOOP REPRESENT RAGGAMUFFIN’S PIONEERING SPIRIT
The track pulses with L’Entourloop’s trademark hip-hop inna yardie style. It’s already proven itself live. European tour crowds went wild for the unreleased version. The run culminated at Paris’s Adidas Arena, with three UK dates along the way.

But Muffin Kings carries weight beyond its vivacious energy. The collective dedicates it to Danny English, a beloved figure in early 2000s dancehall who sadly passed away shortly after recording, and to Hurricane Melissa’s Jamaican victims. The accompanying video draws from Llewellyn BigDaddyLeo O’Reggio’s iconic 1980s footage, edited and animated by L’Entourloop with Studio Rafale and Alexandre Bertrand.
The timing feels right. With a fourth album brewing for late 2026 and Boomtown Festival’s Grand Central stage beckoning, L’Entourloop are cementing their place as torch-bearers for sound system culture’s enduring legacy.
ABOUT L’ENTOURLOOP

French duo L’Entourloop fuse cinematic samples with sound system culture, creating what they call Banging Hip-Hop Inna Yardie Style. Since 2015, they’ve collaborated with reggae royalty, including Capleton, Ken Boothe, Queen Omega and Bounty Killer.
Their 2022 album La Clarté Dans La Confusion featured 32 guests across 20 tracks. They’ve amassed hundreds of millions of streams and sold out Paris’s Olympia. Consequently, King James and Sir Johnny have become Europe’s most inventive architects of reggae-hip-hop.