We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Genre

chicago drill

Top Chicago drill Artists

Showing 25 of 746 artists
1

Lil Durk

United States

10.2 million

19.1 million listeners

2

Chief Keef

United States

5.9 million

13.8 million listeners

3

King Von

United States

8.9 million

13.3 million listeners

4

G Herbo

United States

2.6 million

8.1 million listeners

5

BabyChiefDoit

United States

560,227

2.5 million listeners

6

197,792

2.2 million listeners

7

375,865

1.7 million listeners

8

BloodHound Q50

United States

205,638

1.3 million listeners

9

127,795

1.2 million listeners

10

264,463

1.2 million listeners

11

346,345

1.2 million listeners

12

232,754

1.1 million listeners

13

241,824

941,666 listeners

14

Raq baby

United States

195,043

908,118 listeners

15

Zaytoven

United States

421,939

725,392 listeners

16

BigKayBeezy

United States

160,161

594,867 listeners

17

Lil Zay Osama

United States

457,281

562,314 listeners

18

38,537

560,554 listeners

19

167,946

530,933 listeners

20

Doodie Lo

United States

111,505

527,541 listeners

21

577,115

500,215 listeners

22

Booka600

United States

159,686

468,466 listeners

23

771,871

395,489 listeners

24

PGF Nuk

United States

333,961

324,268 listeners

25

1,967

324,126 listeners

About Chicago drill

Chicago drill is a stark, minimalist strain of rap born on the South Side of Chicago in the early 2010s. Rooted in the city’s street narratives, it distinguishes itself by pared-down beats, brutal 808 bass, snapping hi-hats, and a relentless, tempo-pressed flow that often leans into the triplets and cadences of street patter. The sound is as much about space as sound—moments of silence punctuating a rapid delivery, creating a percussive mood that matches tales of crime, retaliation, and survival.

It emerged from neighborhoods like Englewood, Chatham, and especially the O-Block corridor, where young rappers and producers traded ideas on homemade rigs and studios. Chief Keef looms as the movement’s principal herald: a string of viral mixtapes that culminated in the 2012 single I Don't Like, whose Kanye West remix helped push Chicago drill into a national spotlight. Producers such as Young Chop shaped the early texture with neon-dark, drum-machine-centered tracks that fused street melodrama with club-ready crunch. From there, Lil Durk, G Herbo (formerly Lil Herb), Lil Reese, and Fredo Santana built parallel identities, turning drill into a broader movement, not just breakout records.

Musically, Chicago drill favors stark, repetitive motifs, menacing bass, and sparse melodies—often built from a single hypnotic loop. The storytelling centers on urban life, friendship and loyalty under pressure, rivalries, and the rhetoric of deterrence and self-preservation. Ad-libs are a defining feature—shots of energy scattered through verses that codify the genre’s confrontational mood. The pacing can feel hurried, sculpted for tight club slots and radio-free zones alike, with producers encouraging a claustrophobic, tunnel-like atmosphere that amplifies the verbal aggression.

Although rooted in Chicago, drill’s influence rippled outward. In the United States, it informed scenes in other cities and cities developed their own variants. The most consequential offshoot is UK drill, which borrowed Chicago drill’s tempo, bass rhetoric, and rapid-fire flows to forge a UK scene that rose to international prominence in the late 2010s. Chicago drill is thus often studied as the Chicago-originating backbone of a broader global drill movement, even as UK and other regional scenes diverged with their own slang, production aesthetics, and delivery. Outside North America, streaming and social media made songs widely accessible, and fans in Canada, parts of Europe, and beyond followed the genre’s milestones with enthusiasm.

Ambassadors of the Chicago sound include Chief Keef, Lil Durk, King Von, G Herbo, and Lil Reese, who sustained the sound through collaborations, mixtapes, and charting projects. They personify both the genre’s grit and its resilience, translating a neighborhood vocabulary into a portable, international grammar of rhythm. Critics point to the genre’s violent imagery, generating debate about representation, accountability, and the ethics of glamorizing crime; supporters argue drill provides a microphone for overlooked experiences and a platform for entrepreneurial energy and precision storytelling. Regardless of stance, Chicago drill remains a landmark in the broader history of drill music, a progenitor of a tempo, tempo-laden cadence, and a stark, unflinching mood that continues to influence producers and rappers around the world. Its influence endures.