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Sweet Micky: The New Generation of Konpa

Michel Martelly's synth-driven konpa made him a superstar — and later Haiti's president

Pioneers1 min read2 citations

No konpa star of his era burned brighter — or more provocatively — than Sweet Micky, the stage name of Michel Martelly.[1]

Ou La La and the new generation

Michel Joseph Martelly recorded his first single, "Ou La La," in 1988, and it became an instant hit.[1] As a singer and keyboardist, he popularized a "new generation" of konpa built on smaller bands and synthesizers rather than big horn sections — a leaner, electronic sound that dominated Haitian dance floors.[1]

The showman

"Sweet Micky" became a star as much for his outrageous live performances — dressing in drag, shedding clothes onstage, trading patter with the crowd — as for his music, and he was widely regarded as an important innovator in konpa.[1]

From stage to palace

Positioning himself as a political outsider after Haiti's devastating 2010 earthquake, Martelly won the 2011 presidential runoff and served as the 47th President of Haiti from 2011 to 2016.[2] His later public life proved controversial — in 2024 he was sanctioned by the United States — but his place in konpa history was already secure.[2]

Why it matters

Sweet Micky modernized konpa for the synthesizer age and carried it to a vast diaspora audience, becoming one of the most famous Haitian entertainers of his generation.[1]

References

  1. 1.Michel MartellyWikipedia, 2026
  2. 2.Michel MartellyEncyclopædia Britannica, 2026