Chronic Law Drops Emotional New Single Trust Issues on Streaming Platforms
Chronic Law dropped "Trust Issues" on Big Zim Records March 27, a betrayal-themed dancehall single from the artist whose "Empty" has crossed 50 million YouTube views.

The selectors know the type of track "Trust Issues" is before they finish the first listen: bass locked in, percussion forward, Chronic Law's voice sitting in that familiar pocket where vulnerability and street credibility occupy the same bar. Released March 27 on Big Zim Records, the single dropped into one of the year's most congested dancehall windows, and the question on every selector's mind is whether it earns a forward at the dance before it reaches the stage.
Born Akeeme Campbell in Yallahs, Saint Thomas, on Jamaica's east side, Chronic Law has built a catalogue that consistently converts personal weight into dancefloor fuel. His 2018 breakthrough "Government" turned him from a street name to a sound-system staple almost overnight, and his single "Empty" has since crossed 50 million YouTube views, an anchor figure that gives every new drop instant credibility with playlist curators, promoters, and streaming algorithms alike.
"Trust Issues" stays squarely within his emotional territory: suspicion, fractured relationships, the cost of betrayal. The Big Zim Records production is engineered for room play, built around a tight kick, rolling bass, and a hook designed for the hands-in-the-air moment that separates a song from an anthem. This is not a laid-back one-drop; it is a modern dancehall single built to test well in a warm-up set before it takes over the main slot.
For selectors building out March sets, RiddimWorld flagged the month as a "powerhouse" period for fresh dancehall material, with high-demand releases from Shenseea, Vybz Kartel, Skeng, and Masicka already dominating crates. "Trust Issues" lands inside that same wave, distributed simultaneously to Spotify, Apple Music, Audiomack, and YouTube, positioning it for both room play and algorithm-driven discovery at the same time.
The Big Zim Records imprint is not a new collaborator for Chronic Law. The label produced "Blind" and has contributed to a string of his single-format drops over the years, making "Trust Issues" a continuation of a working partnership rather than a pivot. That institutional familiarity shows in the mix: clean headroom, forward vocals, and a low end that will translate from a Bluetooth speaker at a back-road session to a full wall of bass bins at a proper dance.
Where the record goes now depends on those early forwards. The first test is the sound-system circuit. If selectors pull it back in the yard-party setting, the TikTok snippets follow, the playlist placements stack, and a video becomes the natural next move. Chronic Law has run that road before. With "Trust Issues," he is running it again.
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