A revelatory examination of Emo Rap, from its inception to its incendiary ascent into the mainstream, including the critical artists that defined its sound and ethos, from Kid Cudi to Lil Peep, Lil Uzi Vert, XXXTentacion, and Juice WRLD.
When Kid Cudi dubbed himself the âlonely stoner,â the texture of contemporary hip-hop was forever changed. The young rapper droned over purple blips and skitters on âDay âNâ Nite,â unaware that he was terraforming the foundation of rap. As the decades wore on, the song came to symbolize a changing of the guard, and the next generation of kids were about to get really sad on the mic.
Crybaby: The Artists Who Shaped Emo Rap chronicles the rise and fall of a genre born from suburban malaise. From Atmosphere giving emo its name in the late â90s, to Juice WRLD capturing every corner of rapâs attention with his wailing high school angst, this was the definitive sound of bugged out youth. Emo rap is visceral. Itâs Lil Peep with the pink and black split dye, singing about bleeding out after getting dumped; Lil Uzi Vert making a suicidal club smash that soundtracks lavish Las Vegas day parties; XXXTentacion stirring controversy while topping the charts with âSad!â
Artists recorded into old computers and these records traveled through the digital portals of SoundCloud. They didnât need record deals; they just needed WiFi. Listeners and their favorite acts had a singular meeting ground: everyone was trapped in their bedrooms and hoping to feel something. A network of reposts, comments, and word-of-mouth allowed the genre to bubble up nationally. While the press didnât know what to make of Yung Lean and the Sad Boysâ viral rise online, the fans understood on contact that this was their music.
By the turn of the decade, the three most prominent emo rappersâLil Peep, XXXTentacion, and Juice WRLDâhad lost their lives to overdoses and gun violence. Stunted by tragedy, Emo shrunk down into an ornament to decorate pop-rap tunes. Weâre now a far cry from Juiceâs âAll Girls Are The Sameâ rewriting the mainstream playbook as the next iteration of âDay âNâ Nite.â
But the numbers for the young artists weâve lost tell a story of resilience. For those who were there during the whirlwind of the 2010s, emoâs imprint has not faded. Millions upon millions of fans worldwide turn to this music as twilight grips them and they stare off into their own emotional voids. Itâs whiny. Itâs base. And it speaks to the truth of the matter: every era will have its crybabies.