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S.T. Universal Video introduced Luj Yaj to the Hmong entertainment industry in the early 1990s. The production company is also credited for introducing Tsab Mim Xyooj, Pov Thoj, Maiv Muas, and other well-known artists in the mid-1990s. A decade later, corruption ruined the S.T. Universal Video company, leaving many of its stars to join other Hmong production companies.
S.T. Universal Video introduced Luj Yaj to the Hmong entertainment industry in the early 1990s. The production company is also credited for introducing Tsab Mim Xyooj, Pov Thoj, Maiv Muas, and other well-known artists in the mid-1990s. A decade later, corruption ruined the S.T. Universal Video company, leaving many of its stars to join other Hmong production companies.

In the year 2007, he decided to go through the traditional Hmong culture to. . . .


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 06:15, 6 December 2016

Luj Yaj
Birth nameLuj Yaj
Born1970
Years active1991-Present
Websitehttp://www.loojceebentertainment.com/music_video/musics/male/lujyaj.htm

Luj Yaj is a popular Hmong singer from Thailand.[citation needed] He is considered to be one of the most well known of Hmong singers to date. He gained notoriety when two of his songs appeared in a Hmong dubbed Thai film called "Kev Hlub Txiav Tsis Tau".[1] Those two songs were "Nco Koj Ib Leeg" (Miss You Only), which later became known to many under the title of "Nco Kuv Me Me" (Miss Me A Little), and "Nyob Ib Leeg" (Living Alone).[2] "Nco Koj Ib Leeg" and "Nyob Ib Leeg" are his most famous works, and still remain popular among Hmong youth in America.

He has also starred in movies like "Vim Tsawg Ib Los Lus", and was the first Hmong singers from Thailand to have come to the United States.

S.T. Universal Video introduced Luj Yaj to the Hmong entertainment industry in the early 1990s. The production company is also credited for introducing Tsab Mim Xyooj, Pov Thoj, Maiv Muas, and other well-known artists in the mid-1990s. A decade later, corruption ruined the S.T. Universal Video company, leaving many of its stars to join other Hmong production companies.

In the year 2007, he decided to go through the traditional Hmong culture to. . . .

References