While Gucci Mane’s first No. 1 song was “Black Beatles” with Rae Sremmurd in 2016, the Atlanta rapper has been pioneering one of hip-hop’s most influential subgenres, trap music, for over a decade. Born Radric Davis, his 2005 debut, Trap House, was the beginning of a career rich in mixtapes (he’s released over 70 to date), high-profile collaborations, legal hardships, and, ultimately, monumental success. Gucci Mane’s sound—street-heavy yet whimsical with an odd, addictive cadence—has evolved alongside prominent trap producer Zaytoven. The rapper founded his own label, 1017 Records, in 2007, where he helped foster talents such as Young Thug, Chief Keef, Migos, Sonny Digital, 808 Mafia, and many more.
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Most used scores! Most reviewed artists! Every 10.0 ever! And a whole lot more.
Featuring Megan, Cardi, Rico Nasty, Flo Milli, Lil Baby, Jay Electronica, Saweetie, and more
The 43-year-old rapper, producer, DJ, and label exec talks about the songs and artists that have meant the most to him—Dionne Warwick, Sha Na Na, Gucci Mane—five years at a time.
Beyoncé at Coachella. Kendrick winning a Pulitzer. Michelle Williams and Phil Elverum. Cardi’s “SNL” pregnancy reveal. And other distractions from the hellscape that was 2018.
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Kendrick’s triumphant victory lap, Radiohead’s technical difficulties, Migos’ unexpected ubiquity, and more from the California desert.
From David Bowie's swan song to Beyonce's call to arms, Anohni's war lament to Frank Ocean's return, 2016 was a year of big artists making big statements. These are our picks for the best songs of the year.
From Lil Wayne to Max B to Nicki Minaj, a look at the best free downloads, tapes, and CD-Rs released since 2000
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Jayson Greene on the current sound of street-rap production-- popularized by beatmakers including Metro Boomin' (Future) and Young Chop (Chief Keef)-- which flips Lex Luger's minor-key formula into something lighter and more playful.