Overview:
The Montréal-based group, rooted in Haitian culture, celebrates its comeback with a Creole-language album and plans for a world tour
A quarter century after first electrifying Montréal’s Afro-Caribbean music scene, Black Parents is stepping back into the spotlight with Agreable, a Creole-language album released Aug. 20.
Formed in 1999 by siblings Wesly, Wesendave, Mario and Béatrice Parent, the group quickly distinguished itself with Sensualité, a debut album that introduced its Ragga Konpa style, a fusion of Haitian konpa and Jamaican reggae. The band became a fixture in the diaspora, performing from Québec to Paris to Port-au-Prince, with songs such as Vacances and My Number One earning both commercial success and critical recognition.
The new 11-track project is a statement of renewal, drawing from everyday experiences of love, struggle and joy. Anchored by the single Paka Sipòte, it reflects the band’s long-standing ethos of unity and hope. “This new record is our way of thanking longtime fans, reaching new ears and proving that Black Parents is more alive than ever,” Wesendave said.
For Agreable, Black Parents collaborated with artists across borders, including David Estellis of Paris, Montréal’s Geena Titus and Mixsy Lova and Haitian performers Bob Cailloux and Art Love. Producer Atrel Extra helped shape the arrangements, blending contemporary textures with the group’s signature sound.
The release also sets the stage for an international tour that will take the group through Europe, the Americas and the Caribbean, reaffirming its role as a cultural bridge between Haiti and its diaspora.
Even as the band evolves, it remains rooted in the musical traditions of Pétion-Ville, where the siblings first learned music from their uncle Jean-Jacques Clark Parent— composer-singer and founder of Les Frères Parent, a gospel genre group, made up of him, his brother Alain Picard and sister Claire Ludy. Their latest chapter, like their earliest, speaks to resilience — a hallmark not only of their career but also of the wider Haitian diaspora.
Over the years, Black Parents has built a catalog of songs that remain touchstones for fans. The breakout single Sensuel from their 1999 debut Sensualité introduced the group’s Ragga Konpa style and quickly spread across the diaspora. The 2006 hit Vacances became a summer anthem in Haiti, North America and the Antilles, while My Number One and Vini’m Pale W drew millions of streams online.
Those songs remain part of the soundtrack of Haitian diaspora life — whether at family gatherings, festivals or on dance floors. With Agreable, the group aims to add a new chapter to that legacy.
“Black Parents’ “Agréable” album touches my soul!,” commented one fan on the official music video for their single “Pa ka Sipòte.” “It’s not just music, it’s emotion in sound!”