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Genre

emo rap

Top Emo rap Artists

Showing 25 of 204 artists
1

52.6 million

33.0 million listeners

2

43.8 million

31.0 million listeners

3

7.0 million

13.2 million listeners

4

7.6 million

5.4 million listeners

5

1.4 million

3.9 million listeners

6

3.7 million

3.5 million listeners

7

1.5 million

3.1 million listeners

8

317,905

1.9 million listeners

9

643,174

1.4 million listeners

10

621,520

1.4 million listeners

11

607,695

1.3 million listeners

12

1.3 million

1.1 million listeners

13

429,305

1.0 million listeners

14

683,764

979,546 listeners

15

39,480

950,651 listeners

16

456,775

806,854 listeners

17

55,208

782,043 listeners

18

308,208

732,425 listeners

19

395,203

703,199 listeners

20

266,291

676,745 listeners

21

525,017

630,631 listeners

22

161,418

615,018 listeners

23

156,059

552,035 listeners

24

288,905

539,639 listeners

25

290,313

532,749 listeners

About Emo rap

Emo rap is the intersection where confessional emotion meets melodic hip-hop. It blends the raw vulnerability and introspection of emo with the groove and cadence of rap, often layering moody guitar textures or melancholic synths over trap-influenced drums. The result is music that sounds pleader and defiant at once: hooks you can sing along to, lyrics that pry open the psyche, and atmospheres that feel like late-night drives through rain-soaked city streets.

The genre’s modern birth, if not a single moment, crystallized in the early to mid-2010s on the U.S. underground and SoundCloud scenes. It built on precursors who fused pop-punk temperament with hip-hop cadence, but found its public voice through artists who could turn heartbreak into songcraft. Kid Cudi’s late-2000s albums provided a blueprint for melancholic vulnerability in hip-hop, while the 2010s’ DIY digital networks allowed a wave of bedroom producers and rappers to cross-pollinate emo aesthetics with rap flows. Emo rap didn’t arrive as one polished scene; it grew from scattered movements, then coalesced into a recognisable sound and culture around melodic hooks, emotional honesty, and a stark, sometimes brutal honesty about mental health, loneliness, and substance use.

Among the ambassadors and defining figures, a few names stand out. Lil Peep is widely cited as a pioneer of emo rap, bridging melodic, guitar-laced textures with candid lyrics about heartbreak and drug use. His work, especially the Come Over When You’re Sober era, helped legitimize the mood and the look—tattoos, oversized hoodies, pastel aesthetics—that would become part of the genre’s identity. XXXTentacion expanded the emotional range with fragile ballad-rap, aggressive outbursts, and experimental production, drawing huge mainstream attention before his untimely death. Juice WRLD popularized a stream of melodic, freestyled lamentations—“Lucid Dreams” being a flagship track—that underscored how emo-inflected rap could achieve massive commercial success. Trippie Redd, with his emotive vocal carries and cinematic hooks, expanded the spectrum of vocal styles in emo rap. Then there are acts like $uicideboy$, who lean darker and more noir, and Ghostemane, who fused industrial and metal textures with hip-hop energy to push the heavier edge of the genre. Beyond the U.S., the mood and approach resonated globally—artists and fans in Europe, Latin America, and Asia embraced the style, contributing to a worldwide emo-rap ecosystem.

Geographically, emo rap has been most popular in the United States, especially among younger listeners drawn to its confessional honesty and meme-friendly aesthetics. It also found significant scenes in the UK, Germany, Brazil, and parts of Scandinavia and East Asia, where fans connect through streaming platforms, DIY venues, and online communities. The genre’s appeal lies in its honesty and immediacy: it treats heartbreak, anxiety, and doubt as currency, while still delivering the infectious energy of a modern rap track.

For enthusiasts, emo rap offers a bridge between two worlds: the cathartic cathode of emo’s lyricism and the rhythm-driven pulse of hip-hop. It’s a landscape of vulnerability sung over bass-heavy grooves, an ongoing conversation about what it means to feel deeply in a world that moves fast.