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Genre

witch house

Top Witch house Artists

Showing 25 of 1,905 artists
1

3.5 million

8.2 million listeners

2

Snow Strippers

United States

429,896

6.0 million listeners

3

LONOWN

Russian Federation

125,721

6.0 million listeners

4

491,149

4.6 million listeners

5

Mr.Kitty

United States

863,706

3.8 million listeners

6

Pastel Ghost

United States

992,267

3.2 million listeners

7

akiaura

Russian Federation

218,105

3.1 million listeners

8

plenka

Russian Federation

195,427

1.5 million listeners

9

HEALTH

United States

340,330

1.5 million listeners

10

Altare

Singapore

20,502

1.2 million listeners

11

IC3PEAK

Russian Federation

1.4 million

1.1 million listeners

12

Skeler

Australia

181,237

888,541 listeners

13

Sace

Sweden

13,673

707,326 listeners

14

Lorn

United States

356,536

704,038 listeners

15

iwilldiehere

Russian Federation

29,402

528,387 listeners

16

289,585

521,257 listeners

17

82,060

508,052 listeners

18

REDCHINAWAVE

Russian Federation

44,967

501,467 listeners

19

141,273

493,853 listeners

20

606,487

459,211 listeners

21

Witchouse 40k

United States

159,407

441,821 listeners

22

37,814

418,794 listeners

23

CASHFORGOLD

United States

31,780

367,319 listeners

24

214,660

357,023 listeners

25

barnacle boi

United States

53,917

346,697 listeners

About Witch house

Witch house is a dark, hypnotic branch of electronic music that feels like a haunted broadcast from a late-night club in a forgotten mausoleum. Characterized by slowed, chopping-down-the-beat tempos, muffled vocals pitched down to misremembered whispers, and heavy, reverberant textures, it folds together elements of dream pop, industrial, chopped-and-screwed hip-hop, and hauntology. The result is a sound that sits somewhere between a séance and a club, with visuals that lean into pentagrams, VHS grain, black lipstick, and occult iconography.

The scene crystallized in the late 2000s and early 2010s, largely on the internet’s music blogs and indie labels rather than through traditional radio or big-stage debuts. While there is no single founder, the mid-2009 to 2010 period is widely recognized as the birth of what listeners would come to call “witch house.” The production approach—loud muffled drums, cavernous reverb, ditched-by-light synths, and vocals that sound as if they’re being whispered from a fog machine—became the genre’s calling card. The term itself emerged within online circles, serving as a shorthand for a family of dark, occult-tinged electronic experiments rather than a tightly scripted, studio-defined movement.

Key artists and ambassadors helped establish witch house as more than a mood or a meme. Salem, a US duo, is routinely cited as a pioneering force; their 2010 album King Night became a touchstone for the sound and its attitude. White Ring, another essential act from the United States, built a reputation with tracks that traded pop hooks for immersive, coffin-lit atmospherics. oOoOO, an American producer, helped codify the ethereal side of the scene with slowed vocal samples and ghostly timbres that felt both intimate and void-like. Balam Acab, also from the US, offered a more pastoral, dreamlike take on the aesthetic with See Birds (2010) and related works. Together, these artists helped define the core palette: murky basslines, foggy pads, vocal chops, and an atmosphere that could feel almost ritualistic.

Beyond these trailblazers, witch house found a home on niche labels like Disaro and similar imprints, and it spread through a tight-knit network of DJs, producers, and visual artists who shared a fascination with occult imagery and eerie, lo-fi presentation. The genre’s appeal isn’t limited to the United States; the United Kingdom, mainland Europe, and parts of Asia and Australia developed their own micro-scenes, with local producers remixing, reinterpreting, and pushing the sound in new directions. The aesthetics—grimly glamorous, often DIY, with a heavy reliance on analog lo-fi textures—translated well into live sets and gallery-style events, where the music was as much about mood and theater as about dancefloor dynamics.

In listening, witch house can be a doorway into “ghostly” clubland: it isn’t chasing a four-on-the-floor rush so much as offering a late-night ritual of sound, image, and memory. Over the years, its influence persists in related genres—hauntier techno, dreamier bass music, and the broader “goth-tinged” electronic spectrum—where artists borrow its signature serenity and menace to craft new nocturnal experiences. If you’re exploring these circuits, witch house stands as a historical snapshot of a moment when online culture, subcultural aesthetics, and experimental sound design converged into a singular, unmistakable mood.