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Genre

slowed and reverb

Top Slowed and reverb Artists

Showing 25 of 126 artists
1

915,379

4.6 million listeners

2

108,114

1.6 million listeners

3

103,624

1.5 million listeners

4

6,769

911,829 listeners

5

14,475

720,418 listeners

6

50,543

437,944 listeners

7

16,958

333,286 listeners

8

15,815

283,495 listeners

9

27,529

258,795 listeners

10

28,867

249,061 listeners

11

29,828

151,293 listeners

12

8,009

133,562 listeners

13

8,863

129,796 listeners

14

8,506

120,337 listeners

15

4,372

109,691 listeners

16

6,789

108,715 listeners

17

23,306

106,664 listeners

18

7,118

101,338 listeners

19

12,669

96,105 listeners

20

16,431

93,870 listeners

21

11,474

89,352 listeners

22

5,724

86,571 listeners

23

16,545

85,312 listeners

24

12,460

83,868 listeners

25

6,281

78,197 listeners

About Slowed and reverb

Slowed and reverb is best described as a sonic aesthetic rather than a rigid genre: a deliberate deceleration of tempo paired with expansive, cavernous reverberation, often layered with chopped or looping vocal fragments. It grew out of the broader “screwed and chopped” culture that Houston, Texas, fostered in the mid-1990s, where DJs slowed records to a fraction of their speed, stretched the tracks, and repeated phrases to create a hypnotic, almost hypnotic drunkenness. The reverb layer—an echoing space that swallows the voice and melodies—combined with the slowed tempo to yield a dreamlike, memory-like listening experience.

Origins and birth: The practice is most directly linked to DJ Screw, the late-90s Houston innovator whose Screw Music and Screwed Up Click collective defined the movement. Tracks were slowed to around 60–70 BPM, with the vocal cadence and drum hits stretched and chopped, producing that signature draggy, lulling feel. The “screwed” technique—slowing, pitch-down, and stuttering sections—appeared first in hip-hop circles and spread through mixtapes and local clubs. The reverb component came later in many remixes and newer productions, giving voice and instruments a spacious, cathedral-like quality that contrasts with the tightness of the original rhythm.

Influence and ambassadors: The Houston screw lineage remains the cornerstone, with artists such as Fat Pat, Lil’ Keke, Big Hawk, and other members of the Screwed Up Click carrying the aesthetic into their records. Beyond Houston, slowed and reverb became a widely adopted remix approach within the broader hip-hop and R&B scenes, particularly in environments that prize texture and atmosphere. In the internet era, a new generation—producers and remixers who operate online—has embraced the technique as a flexible tool for reinterpretation: slowing mainstream tracks, creating mood-forward versions of pop, trap, and indie cuts, and pushing the sound into subtler, more reflective territory. The aesthetic has found a home in many regions through online communities, YouTube channels, and SoundCloud collabs, turning the method into a global conversation about tempo, space, and memory.

Geography and popularity: Slowed and reverb thrives wherever online music communities flourish, but its roots are American—primarily in Houston—and its modern reach is international. It has resonated especially with listeners and producers in the United States who celebrate screw heritage, while fans across Europe, Southeast Asia, and the wider world have adopted the technique to reimagine familiar tracks. The appeal is universal: a sense of immersion, a vehicle for nostalgia, and a method to reveal hidden melodies buried beneath a veil of decay and echoes.

What to listen for: expect a track that feels like time has slowed, with vocals that glide rather than punch, drums that breathe with a long tail of reverb, and occasional chopped phrases that reappear in skewed time. The genre’s strongest trait is its mood: intimate, contemplative, and expansive all at once. Slowed and reverb remains a versatile approach to sound design and remixing, inviting listeners to hear familiar songs through a new, spacious lens.