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Genre

bedroom r&b

Top Bedroom r&b Artists

Showing 25 of 84 artists
1

d4vd

United States

4.9 million

22.4 million listeners

2

Malcolm Todd

United States

1.2 million

14.3 million listeners

3

ThxSoMch

Canada

584,316

4.7 million listeners

4

80purppp

Canada

292,316

3.3 million listeners

5

Luke Chiang

United States

596,656

2.8 million listeners

6

624,203

2.5 million listeners

7

thủy

United States

425,663

2.3 million listeners

8

Riovaz

United States

314,737

2.1 million listeners

9

Eem Triplin

United States

446,783

2.1 million listeners

10

grentperez

Australia

815,390

1.9 million listeners

11

169,970

1.7 million listeners

12

Rocco

United States

361,530

1.2 million listeners

13

179,582

1.1 million listeners

14

tana

United States

471,247

1.0 million listeners

15

MICO

Canada

383,573

995,058 listeners

16

47,856

970,592 listeners

17

Dept

Korea

287,340

823,680 listeners

18

378,665

787,318 listeners

19

Sarah Kang

United States

199,580

766,950 listeners

20

eaJ

United States

276,977

730,459 listeners

21

Emi Choi

Canada

45,352

712,232 listeners

22

brb.

Singapore

195,089

698,642 listeners

23

101,255

609,188 listeners

24

130,327

573,157 listeners

25

63,044

553,984 listeners

About Bedroom r&b

Bedroom R&B is a DIY, late-night strain of contemporary R&B that centers intimacy, vulnerability, and a lo-fi, home-studio aura. It grew out of the era when affordable recording tech and social media made it possible to craft songs in a bedroom or small project space, rather than a polished professional studio. The result is music that sounds like a private conversation set to softly smoldering beats—soulful voices braided with sparse percussion, hazy synths, and effects that feel like a candle-lit ambience. In press and fan communities it’s often discussed alongside terms like PBR&B or lo-fi R&B, all signaling a shared aesthetic: mood over megaphone swagger, nuance over gloss, and a DIY ethos that foregrounds personal storytelling.

Historically, bedroom R&B coalesced in the early 2010s as artists blurred boundaries between R&B, electronic music, indie, and hip-hop. The Weeknd’s early 2011 mixtapes introduced a nocturnal, drug-schmoothed sound that could be consumed in the glow of a smartphone screen; Frank Ocean’s Nostalgia, Ultra (2011) and Channel Orange (2012) pushed confessional, cinematic textures into mainstream consciousness. James Blake’s debut in 2011 brought a minimalist, vertically quiet approach to vocal soul, proving that restraint could be hypnotic. Across the Atlantic, UK writers and producers—alongside rising artists like Jhene Aiko in the US—helped push bedroom aesthetics into a broader palette: intimate lyrics, reverbed spaces, and a willingness to synthesize genres rather than imitate a single tradition.

Ambassadors and touchstones of the genre include:
- The Weeknd (Canada): a defining voice of the nocturnal, self-made era
- Frank Ocean (USA): auteur storytelling and experimental textures
- James Blake (UK): sparse arrangements and a vulnerable, quasi-soulful timbre
- Jhene Aiko (USA): confessional, intimate songwriting that bridged indie and mainstream
- FKA twigs (UK): experimental textures and performative vulnerability
- SZA, Kehlani, H.E.R. (USA): later torch-bearers who carried the intimate R&B vibe into broader popularity

Geographically, bedroom R&B found its strongest roots in North America and Western Europe, with the United States and Canada providing a steady stream of artists and listeners who valued mood and introspection. The United Kingdom and Scandinavia contributed producers and vocalists who refined the genre’s tactile, tape-like warmth. By the mid-to-late 2010s, the aesthetic seeped into mainstream R&B and pop, influencing artists who favored slower tempos, softened drums, and autobiographical lyrics, even as the lo-fi, “in-the-bedroom” production continued to signal a preference for inward-facing music.

For enthusiasts, the genre rewards attentive listening: it’s about phrased vocal warmth, rooms that feel tiny yet expansive, and songs that haunt you after the lights go off. Essential listening often centers on the early landmark releases and the artists who maintained a balance between vulnerability and craft. If you’re chasing music that sounds like a late-night chat with a trusted confidant, bedroom R&B remains a compelling doorway into a corner of modern soul where emotion meets an intimate, imperfect sonic texture.