top of page
Creatorz+_Beatz+_HipHip_ID_wtpkudba.webp

đŸŽ€ In Case You Didn’t Know: A-Z of Hip Hop & Urban Music Genres

  • Writer: Nick Gran
    Nick Gran
  • Jul 2
  • 3 min read

Updated: Jul 10

— Because Not Everything Is Just “Rap”


Let’s clear it up once and for all — hip hop is more than just beats and bars. It’s an ecosystem, a culture, and a soundscape that keeps evolving. Here’s your fast pass through the alphabet of styles that shape the game:


Boom Bap

The dusty drums. The raw loops. Boom bap is golden-age NYC energy, named after the punchy kick-and-snare rhythm. This is the sound of 90s East Coast—hard-hitting, sample-heavy, and lyric-focused.


Chopped & Screwed

A Southern remix style made famous in Houston. Tracks are slowed down and warped to syrupy perfection. It’s hypnotic, bass-heavy, and often psychedelic in vibe.


Crunk

Turnt-up Southern party anthems. Known for its shouted hooks and heavy synths, crunk is about energy, chaos, and pure adrenaline.


Drill

Hard, aggressive, and raw. Born in Chicago and rebooted in the UK, drill is built on dark beats and street-coded lyrics. Modern, minimal, and heavy with attitude.


Freestyle

Not just off-the-dome rap. In some regions (especially Miami), freestyle refers to a Latin-influenced electronic/hip hop crossover sound from the ‘80s. Confusing? A little. But both versions are dope.


Gangsta Rap

Street narratives, hard truths, and unfiltered aggression. It’s not a style — it’s a reality check with beats.


G-Funk

West Coast’s smooth operator. Funk samples, melodic synths, and laid-back delivery. Picture palm trees, lowriders, and Nate Dogg on the hook.


Grime

The UK’s answer to raw street poetry. Fast tempos, hard-hitting beats, and rapid-fire flows. A cousin to garage and dubstep, but with way more bite.


Hardcore Hip Hop

No frills. No filter. Think M.O.P., DMX, Onyx — rappers who bark on beats and punch through speakers.


Hyphy

Bay Area bounce with an electric soul. Car culture, dance moves, and a whole lotta ghost riding the whip.


Jazz Rap

Laid-back flows meet jazz loops. Think A Tribe Called Quest or Guru’s Jazzmatazz. Introspective, musical, timeless.


Lo-fi Hip Hop

Beats to study to. Chill, fuzzy, sample-based instrumentals with a dusty vibe. It’s mood music for modern minds.


Mumble Rap

Melodic, vibe-driven, and sometimes hard to decipher. Love it or hate it, it’s dominated the charts and redefined vocal delivery in the trap era.


New School / Trap

Modern soundscapes defined by 808s, autotune, and rapid flows. Dominant in the 2010s and still evolving today.


Old School

The foundations. Breakbeats, party rhymes, scratching. A time when the mic was golden and the Bronx was buzzing.


Phonk

A lo-fi horrorcore-trap hybrid with roots in Memphis tapes and Houston screw. Often paired with retro visuals, VHS textures, and a sinister aura.


Political Rap / Conscious Hip Hop

From Public Enemy to Kendrick Lamar. Lyrically dense, socially aware, and driven by the desire to educate and inspire.


R&Bass / Ratchet R&B

Where smooth vocals meet trunk-rattling bass. A fusion of modern R&B vibes and aggressive hip hop production.


Snap Music

Minimal beats, finger snaps, and catchy hooks. Atlanta in the early 2000s. Dance-friendly and infectious.


Soul Trap / TrapSoul

R&B meets trap drums. Think Bryson Tiller, 6LACK, or early Tory Lanez. Emotional bars, hard beats.


Turntablism

The DJ as the center of attention. Scratching, beat juggling, and live performance skills elevated to art.


Underground Hip Hop

The stuff that lives on Bandcamp, in record stores, and in the hearts of purists. Creative, experimental, and anti-mainstream.


West Coast Hip Hop

From the G-Funk days to Kendrick’s lyrical supremacy. Funky, innovative, sun-soaked, and deeply political.


X-Perimental (Experimental Hip Hop)

Genre-bending, boundary-pushing sounds. If it makes you say “what the hell is this?”—it probably belongs here.


Youth Rap / Kidz Flow

Made for younger audiences with cleaner lyrics. A rising niche in educational and kid-friendly media.


Zealot Rap

Okay, we made this one up. But if you spit with unmatched passion and obsessive drive—you just might be a Zealot MC.


đŸ’„ Bottom Line:

Hip hop is layered. It's global. It's constantly evolving. And no — it’s not all just "rap." Welcome to the breakdown. This is just the beginning.


Let us know which of these styles you want us to dive into next — we’ve got libraries for days.



Recent Posts

See All

Comentarios


bottom of page