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Genre

rage rap

Top Rage rap Artists

Showing 25 of 576 artists
1

16.1 million

42.5 million listeners

2

Yeat

United States

6.4 million

18.7 million listeners

3

Ken Carson

United States

3.5 million

6.5 million listeners

4

Whethan

United States

340,518

6.0 million listeners

5

Rich Amiri

United States

867,140

4.2 million listeners

6

Destroy Lonely

United States

1.8 million

4.0 million listeners

7

Cochise

United States

880,022

2.7 million listeners

8

SoFaygo

United States

970,778

2.6 million listeners

9

OsamaSon

United States

631,959

1.9 million listeners

10

468,848

1.7 million listeners

11

DC THE DON

United States

379,568

1.5 million listeners

12

Glokk40Spaz

United States

421,559

1.5 million listeners

13

ZillaKami

United States

629,665

1.4 million listeners

14

Che

United States

433,321

1.2 million listeners

15

171,088

1.2 million listeners

16

Lancey Foux

United Kingdom

408,666

1.1 million listeners

17

34,202

935,511 listeners

18

JELEEL!

United States

221,305

797,753 listeners

19

192,201

791,955 listeners

20

UnoTheActivist

United States

511,103

758,249 listeners

21

Matt OX

United States

329,635

708,698 listeners

22

Kankan

United States

436,310

705,088 listeners

23

City Morgue

United States

525,386

643,844 listeners

24

SosMula

United States

161,584

629,105 listeners

25

Slump6s

United States

175,937

592,852 listeners

About Rage rap

Rage rap is a high-velocity subgenre of hip‑hop that centers sheer intensity, raw emotion, and a confrontational vocal approach. It grew out of the mid‑2010s SoundCloud rap moment in the United States, when producers and artists began pushing past polished hooks into rougher, more visceral sounds. Think of it as a fusion of trap’s pounding drums, punk’s ethic of rebellion, and emo‑rap’s willingness to wear vulnerability on the sleeve, all delivered with a microphone‑shredding urgency.

Sonic characteristics give rage rap its signature feel. Expect heavily compressed 808s, distorted or abrasive synths, and sometimes guitar or industrial‑tinged textures that cut through the mix. Vocals are often shouted, screeched, or delivered in a breathless, rapid-fire cadence, creating a sense of almost physical propulsion. The tempo can swing, but the overall vibe remains relentlessly aggressive. Production favors loud drums, aggressive hi‑hats, and minimal melodic decoration so the listener’s focus stays on the impulse and energy driving the performance.

Lyrically, rage rap grips themes of anger, fame pressure, mental strain, street realities, and the search for catharsis in a world that feels overwhelming. The style prioritizes mood and intensity over tidy storytelling. Hooks tend to be punchy and anthemic, sometimes turning the track into a chant that mirrors a live‑crowd scream. The result is music that feels like a release—a sonic outlet for listeners to vicariously vent their own frustrations.

The genre’s origin narrative centers on a cohort of early torchbearers who embodied both fury and vulnerability. XXXTentacion’s early work, with its raw honesty and volatile delivery, helped popularize a template where pain and rage coexist with melodic moments. Ski Mask the Slump God brought speed, wit, and a ferocious edge to the equation. Trippie Redd fused melodic singing with explosive verses, expanding rage rap’s emotional spectrum. Lil Uzi Vert contributed manic energy and high‑octane charisma, while Smokepurpp and Playboi Carti helped push the sounds into club‑ready intensity and a broader streaming audience. Ghostemane later crossed over from rap into industrial and metal textures, further widening the sonic palette associated with rage‑driven performance.

Geographically, the genre is most strongly rooted in the United States, but its reach quickly spread through streaming culture. It has cultivated listening communities in the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, among other parts of Europe, while Latin America—particularly Brazil and Mexico—has produced its own intersecting scenes where local artists reinterpret the rage ethos through regional sensibilities. Online platforms, playlists, and video channels have helped rage rap circulate globally, often blending with other aggressive forms like drill, punk‑rap, and noise influences.

Ambassadors of the genre aren’t a single figure so much as a continuum of artists who consistently lean into intensity while remaining emotionally legible to fans. The term “rage rap” itself can be fluid—used by fans and critics to describe a mood, a production aesthetic, and a performance posture as much as a strict catalog of sounds. For many listeners, its appeal lies in the visceral release it offers: music that sounds like a reaction to pressure,an anthem for exhilaration and struggle alike.

If you’re new to rage rap, start with XXXTentacion’s early rage‑tinged tracks, move to Trippie Redd’s explosive versatility, then explore Ski Mask’s rapid fire energy and Lil Uzi Vert’s manic charisma, and finally dip into Ghostemane for a heavier, more industrial edge. The genre remains a moving target, but its core impulse is unmistakable: unleash the energy, feel the catharsis, and let the scream carry you.