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Genre

hip pop

Top Hip pop Artists

Showing 25 of 57 artists
1

Nicki Minaj

United States

34.5 million

44.5 million listeners

2

15.8 million

22.7 million listeners

3

Cassie

United States

2.0 million

13.5 million listeners

4

1.6 million

8.2 million listeners

5

Kelis

United States

758,329

7.0 million listeners

6

1.6 million

4.9 million listeners

7

1.3 million

4.9 million listeners

8

Keri Hilson

United States

2.2 million

4.5 million listeners

9

657,899

3.9 million listeners

10

Blu Cantrell

United States

380,734

3.8 million listeners

11

849,290

3.5 million listeners

12

Nina Sky

United States

173,263

2.1 million listeners

13

982,546

2.0 million listeners

14

Khia

United States

258,625

1.6 million listeners

15

B2K

United States

903,014

1.6 million listeners

16

Terror Squad

United States

324,319

1.5 million listeners

17

Rasheeda

United States

207,989

1.4 million listeners

18

Kris Kross

United States

571,421

1.3 million listeners

19

Cherish

United States

702,171

1.3 million listeners

20

Lumidee

United States

182,584

1.0 million listeners

21

Kat Dahlia

United States

330,851

959,815 listeners

22

Juelz Santana

United States

867,151

874,371 listeners

23

Trina

United States

1.1 million

768,732 listeners

24

106,195

635,626 listeners

25

869,449

631,006 listeners

About Hip pop

Hip pop is a crossover music style that blends the rhythmic fire of hip-hop with the catchy, chorus-driven logic of pop. It rewards memorable hooks, melodic hooks, crisp production, and a radio-friendly feel, while keeping rap’s cadence, swagger, and rhythmic play. In short, it’s hip-hop’s street energy wrapped in pop accessibility, designed to travel across clubs, playlists, and mainstream airwaves at once.

Origins and evolution
The roots of hip pop trace to the late 1990s and early 2000s, when producers and artists began tying hip-hop’s rhythmic bravado to pop songcraft. The objective was simple: make tracks that could work on radio while still sounding unmistakably hip-hop. As the decade progressed, more songs moved toward singable choruses, lighter bounciness, and hook-centered structures. By the 2010s, the fusion had solidified into a recognizable lane: artists who could rap with cadence and bite, then pivot into melodic, pop-ready refrains that invited broad, international appeal. The sound matured with the help of cross-genre collaborations, mainstream pop stars lending their melodies to rap records, and hip-hop artists embracing pop-leaning production and structure.

Ambassadors and key figures
Hip pop has been championed by a wide array of artists who straddle the line between rap bravura and pop accessibility. Figures who helped define the sound include those who consistently deliver catchy choruses, danceable rhythms, and cross-genre collaborations. In the 2000s and 2010s, acts notable for their hip pop orientation include artists who built global audiences with hooky songs and chart-friendly formats. In more recent years, major artists such as Drake, Rihanna, Pitbull, Flo Rida, Jason Derulo, Nicki Minaj, and Doja Cat have embodied the genre’s spirit—melding rap verses with chart-topping melodies, guest appearances that cross into pop, and production aimed at both clubs and streaming playlists. The genre’s ambassadors aren’t limited to one country; they come from North America, Europe, and beyond, reflecting its worldwide reach.

Geography and audience
Hip pop has found a particularly strong footing in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, where radio formats reward cross-genre appeal and streaming platforms surface melodic rap alongside pop hits. Beyond English-speaking markets, the style resonates globally through collaborations with Latin, Caribbean, and European artists, broadening its footprint in Latin America, Western Europe, and Asia. In an era of global playlists and social media virality, hip pop tracks often travel quickly across borders, aided by bilingual or bilingual-friendly hooks and a flexible sonic palette.

Sound, form, and culture
Musically, hip pop favors tight, radio-friendly song structures—verses leading into a memorable chorus, a clean bridge, and a tempo that sits comfortably for both dancing and singing along. Production tends toward polished synths, punchy bass, and melodic hooks; vocal performance often blends confident rapping with melodic singing, sometimes aided by Auto-Tune or lush vocal layering. Lyrically, the content tends toward universal themes—celebration, aspiration, romance, hustle—while still preserving hip-hop’s streetwise edge.

Today, hip pop remains a central artery of contemporary pop music, a testament to how easily hip hop can ride the most universal of melodies. It continues to evolve as new artists blend global influences, new production techniques, and the unlimited reach of digital platforms.