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Genre

australian hip hop

Top Australian hip hop Artists

Showing 25 of 53 artists
1

6.8 million

37.4 million listeners

2

800,831

4.1 million listeners

3

977,028

2.5 million listeners

4

374,648

608,555 listeners

5

189,880

580,281 listeners

6

145,202

564,932 listeners

7

303,545

490,209 listeners

8

192,259

320,730 listeners

9

95,793

290,554 listeners

10

137,039

287,760 listeners

11

127,475

282,557 listeners

12

75,638

212,354 listeners

13

119,239

179,063 listeners

14

11,215

164,678 listeners

15

54,381

119,811 listeners

16

52,848

99,774 listeners

17

55,672

99,246 listeners

18

36,933

65,380 listeners

19

9,319

63,143 listeners

20

13,778

61,021 listeners

21

17,835

51,882 listeners

22

35,656

51,706 listeners

23

25,460

38,419 listeners

24

5,235

38,319 listeners

25

30,916

29,961 listeners

About Australian hip hop

Australian hip hop is a distinct, evolving voice within global rap, born from sunburnt suburbs, coastal cities, and a diverse mix of immigrant and Indigenous experiences. It began to take shape in the late 1980s and early 1990s when MCs in Melbourne, Sydney and beyond started rhyming over beats that ranged from boom-bap to darker, more sample-forward productions. It wasn’t an immediate national phenomenon; it grew in pockets—sound systems, community radio and underground clubs—before finding a larger audience. Early pioneers like Def Wish Cast helped put Australian voices on the map, proving that the local experience could travel beyond American templates while still paying homage to hip hop’s roots.

The 2000s marked a turning point as a network of crews and labels—most notably Obese Records, a platform that helped bring a robust, homegrown sound to a wider audience—pushed the scene into the national spotlight. Pioneering groups and artists such as Hilltop Hoods, Bliss n Eso, Downsyde, The Herd, Pegz and others built a self-sustaining ecosystem: independent releases, cross-country tours, and increasingly polished productions. Hilltop Hoods, in particular, emerged as the country’s most commercially successful act and became widely regarded as ambassadors of Australian hip hop. Their rise helped change perceptions of what Australian rap could achieve—without losing the local flavor that defines the scene: witty wordplay, everyday storytelling, and a critique of suburban life, sport, and social issues, all delivered with unmistakable Australian accents and slang.

Sound-wise, Australian hip hop has never sounded monolithic. It embraces a wide spectrum: boom-bap and jazz-leaning beats, gritty street rap, party anthems, and increasingly melodic, crossover-friendly tracks. Indigenous and multicultural voices have enriched the genre, bringing distinct storytelling traditions and perspectives. Artists from remote communities and cities alike have used rap to express identity, history, and resilience, expanding the genre’s emotional and sonic palette. Contemporary voices continue this tradition, blending hip hop with elements of electronic, R&B, and pop, and reaching new audiences without losing the DIY, community-driven ethos that defined its early days.

In the newer generation, names like Sampa the Great and Tkay Maidza have helped Australians make a mark on the international stage, melding African rhythms and global pop sensibilities with distinctly Australian storytelling. Baker Boy and other Indigenous artists have also pushed the culture outward, highlighting language, dance, and regional pride within a global genre. The genre’s ambassadors now travel far beyond Australia, bringing the local scene to clubs and festivals around the world, while regional scenes at home continue to mentor new artists and innovate.

Today, Australian hip hop is diverse, dynamic, and unmistakably local, yet globally aware. It remains a music of real-time stories—about work, family, mates, and identity—delivered with punchy slang, clever lines, and a rhythm that belongs to the Southern Hemisphere as much as to the world stage.