Chino XL Lyrics — by Popularity
88 songs · Page 1 of 2
| 1 | Nahh! |
| 2 | Freestyle Rhymes |
| 3 | Buried in Vocabulary |
| 4 | Arm Yourself |
| 5 | No Complex |
| 6 | 90 Bars of Intervention |
| 7 | Father's Day |
| 8 | The Shabba-Doo Conspiracy |
| 9 | Kreep |
| 10 | Bad Man Bible |
| 11 | Wicked Church |
| 12 | Partner To Swing |
| 13 | Many Different Ways |
| 14 | Hell Song |
| 15 | It's All Bad |
| 16 | Ghetto Vampire |
| 17 | What Am I? |
| 18 | Deliver |
| 19 | Kings |
| 20 | Crazy Love |
| 21 | Thousands |
| 22 | Take It Back |
| 23 | Waiting To Exhale |
| 24 | Sleep in Scarlet |
| 25 | Figure It Out |
| 26 | Rise |
| 27 | Here To Save You All |
| 28 | Afraid of Nothing |
| 29 | Mama Told Me |
| 30 | Riiiot! |
| 31 | Have 2 |
| 32 | Broken Halo |
| 33 | It's Not Too L8te |
| 34 | Xross Your Heart |
| 35 | Can Be |
| 36 | No Damn Good For Me (Scarlet Intro) |
| 37 | Eye |
| 38 | Silent Art Child |
| 39 | Anything |
| 40 | Latino's Stand Up |
| 41 | Eight Beginnings |
| 42 | Black Rosary 8am |
| 43 | Gone |
| 44 | Reguarding Elizbeth (Save Me) |
| 45 | Closer to God |
| 46 | Little Man |
| 47 | Rain |
| 48 | The Hype Man (Interlude) |
| 49 | Missing You 8pm (Interlude) |
| 50 | All I Wanna Do... (Bout Nothin') |
Chino XL Albums
About Chino XL
Chino XL was a Bronx-born rapper who emerged in the 1990s as one of hip-hop's most lyrically dense and intellectually complex artists, known for his rapid-fire multisyllabic rhyme schemes and encyclopedic vocabulary. His debut album "Here To Save You All" (1996) and later "RICANstruction: The Black Rosary" showcased his ability to weave intricate wordplay with social commentary, while tracks like "Kreep" and "No Complex" demonstrated his technical prowess that influenced a generation of lyrical purists. Though he never achieved mainstream commercial success, Chino XL's uncompromising approach to lyricism and his fusion of Puerto Rican heritage with hardcore East Coast rap earned him respect as an underground legend. His 50-year career spanning from 1974 to 2024 solidified his reputation as a rapper's rapper, inspiring countless MCs to elevate their pen game and proving that intellectual hip-hop could coexist with street credibility.