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For a tragically brief time, Pittsburgh-based rapper and producer Mac Miller connected with legions of listeners through the appeal of both his curious, jazz-flecked instrumental style and heartfelt lyrics that laid bare his struggles with depression and addiction. Though his 2011 studio album debut Blue Slide Park topped the charts, his style and lyrical focus changed on subsequent, more personal releases like 2016's The Divine Feminine, which dominated the R&B and rap charts. Miller followed up with Swimming in 2018, but he died from an overdose one month after the album's release. His early output had an immediate resurgence as longtime fans mourned and those who just learned about the rapper explored his work for the first time. Posthumous releases followed Miller's death, such as 2020's Circles, and the 2025 release of "lost album" Balloonerism.

Born Malcolm McCormick, Miller first used the alias Easy Mac, a name referenced on his debut mixtape, 2007's But My Mackin' Ain't Easy. His KIDS mixtape became his breakthrough when it was released in August of 2010, earning plenty of attention from hip-hop blogs and landing Miller a recording contract with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Rostrum+Records%22">Rostrum Records</a>. <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Rostrum%22">Rostrum</a> released his debut EP, On and on and Beyond, and his debut album, Blue Slide Park, in 2011. The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200. His seventh mixtape, Macadelic, arrived the next year, featuring appearances by <a href="spotify:artist:2YZyLoL8N0Wb9xBt1NhZWg">Kendrick Lamar</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5gCRApTajqwbnHHPbr2Fpi">Juicy J</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:7iMvwE8qANp3aIfAGKEAwS">Cam'ron</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:55Aa2cqylxrFIXC767Z865">Lil Wayne</a>, and more (the set was later remastered for a spring 2018 release). The more experimental effort, Watching Movies with the Sound Off, followed in 2013, with left-field hip-hop names like <a href="spotify:artist:7BMccF0hQFBpP6417k1OtQ">Action Bronson</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:3A5tHz1SfngyOZM2gItYKu">Earl Sweatshirt</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:29XOeO6KIWxGthejQqn793">Flying Lotus</a> lending a hand. A year later, Miller issued the mixtape Faces, signed with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Warner+Bros.%22">Warner Bros.</a>, and launched his own imprint, <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22REMember+Music%22">REMember Music</a>, under the major label.

GO:OD AM followed in 2015 with <a href="spotify:artist:4bbjivSh1oG4NOc7uYHfw5">Lil B</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:15iVAtD3s3FsQR4w1v6M0P">Chief Keef</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:360IAlyVv4PCEVjgyMZrxK">Miguel</a> on the album's guest list. The single "100 Grandkids" peaked appropriately at number 100, while "Weekend" was certified gold. Just a year after GO:OD AM ascended to the Top Five of the Billboard 200 and rap charts, Miller returned with his fourth LP, The Divine Feminine. The album featured contributions from guests like <a href="spotify:artist:2YZyLoL8N0Wb9xBt1NhZWg">Kendrick Lamar</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5nLYd9ST4Cnwy6NHaCxbj8">Cee Lo Green</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:66CXWjxzNUsdJxJ2JdwvnR">Ariana Grande</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5cM1PvItlR21WUyBnsdMcn">Robert Glasper</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:3jK9MiCrA42lLAdMGUZpwa">Anderson.Paak</a>, who lent his soulful rasp to first single "Dang!" A pair of non-album singles ("Buttons" and "Programs") kept Miller busy into 2018, when he issued his fifth album, Swimming. Debuting at number three on both the Billboard 200 and R&B/hip-hop charts, the set included the songs "Small Worlds," "Self-Care," and "What's the Use?" A month after the release of the effort, Miller died from a suspected drug overdose in his San Fernando Valley home. He was 26 years old. Following his death, seven of his full-lengths posthumously hit the Billboard 200 (the mixtapes Best Day Ever and Macadelic made their chart debuts), and Swimming was nominated for a Grammy in the category of Best Rap Album. In early 2020, his first posthumous set was released. Intended as a companion to Swimming, Circles featured vocals recorded for this eventual project, which was completed by producer <a href="spotify:artist:57YJQe0ayvIaRZJ3PW5nFP">Jon Brion</a>. The LP became Miller's fifth Top Three showing on the U.S. charts. Later that year, KIDS was released to streaming services for the first time, which helped place it back on the Billboard 200. A revised edition of another mixtape, Faces, was issued commercially in 2021. The following year, his 2011 mixtape I Love Life, Thank You arrived on streaming services, which sent the collection to number 22 on the Billboard 200 (and into the Top Five on the U.S. indie album list). In 2025, the long-shelved album Balloonerism finally saw proper release. Recorded between 2013 and 2014 around the same time Miller was working on Faces, Balloonerism took a darker and more psychedelic tone than much of his other work. The album was released in tandem with a short film of the same name in January of 2025. ~ David Jeffries & Neil Z. Yeung, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

29.2 million

Followers

12.5 million

Total Streams

125.5 million

Top Cities

515,757 listeners
515,379 listeners
517,474 listeners
456,428 listeners
460,588 listeners

Popular Tracks

342 tracks
1
The Spins

The Spins

Aug 13, 2010

1.2 billion

streams

2
Self Care

Self Care

Jul 13, 2018

822.6 million

streams

3
Weekend (feat. Miguel)

Weekend (feat. Miguel)

Sep 18, 2015

763.6 million

streams

4
Weekend (feat. Miguel)

Weekend (feat. Miguel)

Sep 18, 2015

763.4 million

streams

5
The Way

The Way

Jan 1, 2013

565.3 million

streams

6
Good News

Good News

Jan 9, 2020

518.1 million

streams

7
Small Worlds

Small Worlds

May 29, 2018

489.9 million

streams

8
Congratulations (feat. Bilal)

Congratulations (feat. Bilal)

Sep 16, 2016

487.5 million

streams

9
Congratulations (feat. Bilal)

Congratulations (feat. Bilal)

Sep 16, 2016

487.2 million

streams

10
Donald Trump

Donald Trump

May 17, 2011

475.1 million

streams