Tag: rap caviar

Spotify’s Artists To Watch Are Primed To Make Moves in 2023

It’s always exciting when artists enter the realm of bonafide stardom and bring new sounds and ideas to the music world. And it’s even more exciting to follow along as it happens. That’s why, at the start of each year, we tap our influential playlists to reveal our Artists To Watch. 

With this list, we’re amplifying the next wave of music stars who we predict will make an impact in 2023. As we considered this year’s Artists To Watch, we were guided by four main playlists: 

  • RapCaviar’s Most Necessary, our playlist for the next generation of voices in hip-hop 
  • Viva Latino, our flagship playlist for today’s top Latin hits
  • Hot Country, our flagship country playlist
  • Are & Be’s R&B Rising, our newest playlist for emerging artists

“Spotify has always been a place for music discovery and artist growth, and our Artists To Watch lists allow us to showcase up-and-coming talent with serious momentum behind them,” said Sulinna Ong, Global Head of Editorial. “We use our fan-favorite editorial playlists, including Hot Country, Viva Latino, Most Necessary, and for the first time, R&B Rising, to tap into existing listener bases. In return, artists are introduced to listeners who will love their sound.”

The end result is 40 artists—10 from each list— representing each playlist that should be on your radar in the coming year. Keep reading for our full list of picks.

Most Necessary’s Artists To Watch

Our picks from Most Necessary, who hail from Atlanta, Brooklyn, London, and beyond, are ready to impact hip-hop culture and make their mark in the music industry. 

GloRilla
Rising to prominence following her Grammy-nominated 2022 song “F.N.F. (Let’s Go),” GloRilla has gone on to record chart-topping collaborations with Cardi B and Latto.  

Finesse2tymes
Revered for his thunderous voice and motivational lyrics, this Memphis rapper recently collaborated with Gucci Mane, Lil Baby, and others on his debut mixtape 90 Days

SleazyWorld Go
SleazyWorld Go went viral in 2022 with his track “Sleazy Flow” and later collaborated on an official remix with Lil Baby; he’s also collaborated with MigosOffset

Central Cee
Known for his upbeat and melodic approach to UK drill, this British rapper and songwriter topped the UK album charts with his first two mixtapes, Wild West and 23

Destroy Lonely
The No Stylist rapper resonates with fans for the dynamic and eclectic beats featured in his music.

Ice Spice
This Brooklyn drill artist seized the rap world’s attention in 2022 with her viral, chart-topping track “Munch (Feelin’ U).”

Babyface Ray
After collaborating with Big Sean and Hit-Boy on his 2021 single “It Ain’t My Fault,” the Detroit native released his album Face in 2022, featuring collaborations with Pusha T, Wiz Khalifa, and more. 

Saucy Santana
This makeup artist turned rapper commanded the spotlight when his tracks “Walk” and “Here We Go” went viral in 2021. Notable collaborations include the remix of his song “Material Girl” with the “Queen of Pop” Madonna, hip-hop duo City Girls, and Latto

2Rare
This Philly rapper stands out for his 2022 collaboration “Q-Pid” with Lil Durk, and later appeared on NLE Choppa’s “Do It Again.” 

Real Boston Richey
Catching the ear of listeners with his Michigan-style hip-hop production, he’s recently collaborated with Future and Lil Durk

Viva Latino’s Artists To Watch

With a selection of artists representing a wide range of styles and countries, Viva Latino’s picks are ready to go worldwide in 2023.

Emilia
Finding fame with hits such as “Recalienta” and “No Soy Yo” featuring Darell, this Argentine artist continues to generate buzz. Her first album, Tú crees en mí?, debuted at No. 4 on Spotify’s Top Albums Global chart.

Ivan Cornejo
A California native and one of the most promising voices in the sad sierreño scene, Ivan caught the attention of the music world with his debut album Alma Vacía, and is a pivotal figure in exporting Música Mexicana out of the U.S. 

Chris Lebron
This rising Dominican artist already has a few notable collaborations under his belt, most notably teaming up with Romeo Santos on his popular track “SIRI.”

Kevin Kaarl
His most recent album, Paris Texas, debuted at #5 on the Top Albums Global Chart which experiments with traditional folk, rock, and lush dream-pop and. In addition to being an Artist To Watch in 2023, the Mexican singer was also part of our RADAR Class of 2022.

Paopao
A Latin Grammy award-winning artist known for her mix of reggaeton and alternative pop, this Puerto Rico native released the all-female EP hembrismo in 2022.

YOVNGCHIMI
A rising star from Puerto Rico, this Latin trap artist is best known for his debut single “Glizzy’s Walk.” He has numerous collaborations with prominent artists in the Latin trap scene, including Arcangel, Anuel AA, and Ozuna.

Villano Antillano
One of the leading figures of the queer movement within the urban genre in Puerto Rico, Villano was most recently selected as an ambassador for RADAR US, Spotify’s global program for emerging artists.

Young Miko
This Puerto Rican artist burst onto the scene in 2021 with the release of her first single, “105 Freestyle.” Her debut EP Trap Kitty and US Tour solidified her as a Spotify RADAR US artist. 

3AM
A duo made up of Venezuelan brothers Richard and Christian Bermúdez, 3AM started their musical career after leaving their home country and settling in Boston. They are best known for their songs “Por Ti” and “Vuela.” 

Fuerza Regida
Trailblazers of the urban corrido movement, this California group is making waves for a new generation of Mexican Music artists.

Hot Country’s Artists To Watch

Our picks from Hot Country bring a fresh and unique sound to the world, and these artists are primed to make their mark on the country music scene this year. 

Avery Anna
Having opened for acts like Josh Turner and Martina McBride, the Nashville singer-songwriter is best known for her 2022 single “Narcissist,” featured on Spotify’s New Music Friday playlist.

Dylan Marlowe
Popping up on the scene with his viral cover of Olivia Rodrigo’s “Driver’s License,” he’s continued to make waves with his catchy breakup track “Goodbye Gets Around.”

Ella Langley
The “Country Boy’s Dream Girl” singer is known for her unique blend of country and rock. 

ERNEST
Known for “Flower Shops,” his hit collaboration with Morgan Wallen, this country singer got his start writing music for fellow artists including Florida Georgia Line, Sam Hunt, and Chris Lane. As a performer, he has also collaborated with Diplo

49 Winchester
This Virginia-based country group is known for its distinct brand of tear-in-your-beer alt country, sticky-barroom floor rock-n-roll, and high-octane Appalachian folk. 

Jackson Dean
Jackson Dean embodies the old-school, lyric-driven, outlaw style of country, and his hit song “Don’t Come Lookin’’ was recently featured in the series Yellowstone.

Josh Ross
Topping the charts with his singles “First Taste of Gone” and “On a Different Night,” this Canadian singer-songwriter was nominated as a “Rising Star” at the 2022 Canadian Country Music Awards. 

Megan Moroney
The Georgia native made her debut in 2022 with her EP Pistol Made of Roses, and has since built on that momentum with the release of her viral hit “Tenessee Orange.”

Restless Road
This Nashville-based country music band first attracted fans with their song “Take Me Home,” a collaboration with Kane Brown that was inspired by John Denver’s iconic track “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” They went on to reach new heights in 2022 with their hit single “Growing Old With You,” which they performed on Season 26 of the television series The Bachelor.  

Tanner Adell
Bringing a fresh new vibe to country music, Tanner’s catchy and dance-worthy singles “Country Girl Commandments” and “Honky Tonky Heartbreak” have continued to generate buzz.

R&B Rising’s Artists To Watch

To cap things off, R&B Rising also revealed its first-ever roster of emerging stars who are primed to make waves in R&B music this year. 

CoCo Jones
Working in TV and film since she was a tween, and most recently starring as Hilary Banks in Bel-Air, Coco has moved into the R&B spotlight with a soulful sound and honest, powerful storytelling. In 2022, she made her major label debut with her EP, What I Didn’t Tell You, and was featured on Babyface’s “Simple.”

FLO
This British girl group took the world by storm in 2022 with their breakthrough single “Cardboard Box.” They closed out the year winning the 2023 Rising Star Award and BBC’s Sound of 2023 poll. 

Alex Vaughn
Alex first disrupted the industry in early 2022 with the release of Voice Notes, an honest and raw EP constructed entirely by using the voice notes app on her phone. She followed up the project with her debut album The Hurtbook

DESTIN CONRAD
A native of Florida, Destin first found internet fame on the social media app Vine thanks to his lush, intimate earworms. That same sound, infused with a gentle touch, can be heard on his latest EP, Satin

Fana Hues
Known for her vulnerable voice and woozy vocals, she’s featured on Tyler, The Creator’s Call Me if You Get Lost and released her latest album, flora + fana, in 2022.

LAYA
This dynamic NYC native has made waves by taking ’90s R&B and giving it a current, authentic spin, like she did with her breakout hit “Sailor Moon.”

Q
With a powerful falsetto and a stripped-back, emotionally complex sound, this alternative R&B artist went viral with his track “Take Me Where Your Heart Is” and has continued to win fans with his most recent release, “Today.” 

RAAHiiM
The Toronto artist first hit the R&B scene in 2020 with his EP ii Knew Better. Known for his multidimensional vocals and sultry production, he has since collaborated with Shantel May and Rory

JVCK JAMES
After initially gaining recognition for his viral internet videos, this East London artist’s star has continued to grow thanks to his ‘90s R&B-inspired tunes and 2021 standout single “No Drama.”

Dylan Sinclair
This Candian singer-songwriter earned immediate acclaim for his debut album Proverb, which was nominated for Traditional R&B/Soul Recording of the Year at the 2021 Juno Awards.

Looking to discover more of the hottest emerging artists who are ready to step into the spotlight? Stream our RADAR US playlist now.

 

Spotify’s RapCaviar Pantheon Unveils New Class of Honorees with Cardi B, Jaden Smith, Gunna, and Juice WRLD

In 2017, Spotify’s RapCaviar created a real-world Pantheon, complete with life-sized sculptures of the three biggest breakthrough artists of the year. Today, RapCaviar is announcing the return of Pantheon, as well as its 2019 inductees—Cardi B, Jaden Smith, Juice WRLD, and Gunna—four cultural disruptors who are making an undeniable impact on hip-hop.  

Through Pantheon, Spotify equates the art form of rap to the origins of art and civilization. Much like the ancient Greeks, rap has a pantheon of icons, names that are forever etched into culture, and songs that no one will ever forget. This year’s honorees will forever be part of hip-hop’s cultural fabric.

In ancient times, when a hero was celebrated, they were solidified in materials like stone, marble, or bronze in positions that embodied their achievements. The four 2019 RapCaviar inductees will be honored similarly, with masterfully crafted, ornate, life-size sculptures that capture their vibrant personalities. The unique structures in our Spotify activation will be on display to the public at the Brooklyn Museum in New York from April 3-7.

“Spotify is committed to supporting young, innovative artists who also have a positive impact on the music industry, culture, and society,” said Carl Chery, Spotify’s Hip-Hop curator and Head of RapCaviar. “These four bold and fearless artists are striving to make changes with their music, and we’re thrilled to induct them into the program.”

Read a little about each of the artists and their sculptures below.

Cardi B has cemented herself not only as one of the top acts in hip-hop, but also as one of the most important artists in all of pop culture. She was the first solo female rapper to win a Grammy for Best Rap Album with Invasion of Privacy, but her work doesn’t just appeal to rap fans. She’s been bridging the gap between two of the fastest-growing genres in the world (hip-hop and Latin), while setting records along the way. This past year, Cardi owned the cultural conversation, and the phone in her sculpture is a nod to her influence going beyond music.

Cardi B

Juice WRLD’s blurring of the lines between hip-hop, pop, rap, and emo makes him a breakout in every sense of the word—not to mention his debut single, “Lucid Dreams,” which has over 700 million streams on Spotify. His sculpture is inspired by the idea of mythological Greek Titan Atlas—who was condemned to carry the universe—at rest, a nod to the vulnerability in his music.

Juice WRLD

Gunna is your favorite rapper’s new favorite rapper. He has emerged as one of the most popular artists in hip-hop today. Gunna has worked with nearly every notable rapper in the genre over the past few years. He’s earned respect from fans and artists alike, and his music has shown tremendous success on RapCaviar. The snake is a nod to the recurring serpent iconography he uses throughout his visual language.

Gunna

Jaden Smith’s artistry defies convention, and the best is yet to come. His statue represents both his highly conceptual music and his unconventional journey from child actor to rapper and artist. The two heads in his sculpture also signify the dueling characters in Jaden’s music. Jaden’s ever stoic personification in SYRE sits atop his body like any normal head and represents teenage emotion and heartbreak. As SYRE, Jaden holds a screaming head, ERYS, a fiery representation of materialism and anger, to demonstrate how light conquers chaos.

Jaden Smith

The inaugural Pantheon included sculptures of 21 Savage, SZA, and Metro Boomin. This year’s inductees are a reflection of hip-hop today and will continue to shape the genre in the years to come.

The Pantheon was created by Spotify’s in-house team. Creative Director Ibra Ake consulted on the project and directed the films.

Metro Boomin and Gunna To Headline Spotify’s RapCaviar Live

Spotify’s RapCaviar Live is returning to the stage with headliners Metro Boomin and Gunna on April 5 at Varsity Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The show will also feature Blueface, Roddy Ricch, and YBN Cordae.

Following the launch of RapCaviar Live in 2017, Spotify continues to showcase some of today’s hottest rappers to their biggest fans around the country. Produced in partnership with Live Nation Urban, RapCaviar Live is inspired by Spotify’s highly influential flagship hip-hop playlist, RapCaviar, which encompasses a collection of fresh hip-hop tracks. RapCaviar is one of Spotify’s biggest playlists, with over eleven million followers.

Since its inception in August 2017 with a kickoff show in Atlanta headlined by Gucci Mane, RapCaviar Live has made stops in Toronto, Chicago, Charlotte, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., New York, and Houston. Previous artists on the tour include Chance the Rapper, Migos, Cardi B, Lil Uzi Vert, Trippie Redd, Juice WRLD, A$AP Mob, Dipset, Lil’ Pump, Playboi Carti, Mike WiLL Made-It, and more.

Presale tickets will be available to Spotify fans through the Spotify Fans First presale on Wednesday, March 6. General on-sale tickets will be available through Ticketmaster.com on Friday, March 8, all at 10:00 a.m. CST.

For more on RapCaviar, check out the playlist here and official Instagram here.

Every Trap at Once: Ten Years in Rap Trends

Since Spotify launched a decade ago, hip-hop has splintered into countless new directions—and streaming culture has only intensified the process. Streaming platforms have become a core part of the music’s story: They’re not just shaping the listener’s experience, they’re informing the sounds and styles of the music itself. But attempting to trace the path of this decade of evolution—in any straightforward way, at least—is enough to give anyone a headache. Hip-hop isn’t just one genre; it’s hundreds of subgenres, forming one hectic, complicated whole.

The gulf between hip-hop’s biggest stars and its lesser-known names has never been wider, yet previously unknown artists can blow up overnight on the momentum of a song they uploaded themselves. Regional rap scenes that were once only for insiders have become the backbone of the mainstream. And thanks to the internet’s everything-at-once-ness, trends often seem to shift in the blink of an eye.

It’s a lot to process. Enter Glenn McDonald, Spotify’s “data alchemist”; in essence, his job is to translate a practically infinite set of cold, hard data—millions of streams, saves, playlists, and beyond—into a reflection of the human experience of listening to music. Applying the rigorous approach of a data scientist to the perspective of a music critic, he can not only identify existing patterns, but catch new genres as they emerge.

Behold McDonald’s passion project, Every Noise At Once. The site is a sprawling, hyper-detailed index of genres, from massive umbrellas like hip-hop or country to the nichest of micro-genres you never knew existed. (Deep discofox, anyone?) Through a combination of machine learning, Spotify’s music intelligence division, and McDonald’s own analysis (plus a bit of creative license when it comes to coining new genre names), the site currently identifies and indexes a whopping 2,215 genres. Click on the map for hip hop and you’ll find yourself entangled in a dense web of associated artists from across Spotify’s database; seen in list form, you can trace the degree of overlap with other genres. You can also branch out into nerdcore or old school nederhop, each accompanied by a representative playlist. It’s not just a data map of Spotify users’ listening habits, it’s a visual deep-dive into how trends emerge and evolve.

Using Every Noise’s data—along with some additional information from McDonald, including the rough number of artists per individual genre and the amount of both casual and serious listeners—we’ve identified the five most significant trends in the past decade of hip-hop, alongside playlists to explore. It’s a means of articulating all the subtleties of the ever-changing culture, at least before the next offshoot is born.

Trap Music

350 major core artists, 3500 relevant artists
10 million serious listeners, 40 million casual listeners

Back when Spotify emerged, trap music had just barely begun to cross over into the mainstream. Mid-‘00s pioneers like Jeezy and T.I. had made their mark on the charts, but in most parts of the country, trap hadn’t had much sway on the sound of popular rap. That’d soon change: Gucci Mane was gearing up to release his breakthrough album, 2009’s unexpectedly pop-friendly The State vs. Radric Davis; meanwhile, the popularity of down-South subgenres like crunk and snap music in the mid and late ‘00s had brought regional rap trends to mainstream prominence. The burgeoning popularity of streaming music doubtlessly played a part in the way the sound of Southern street rap came to influence hip-hop at large: With control in the hands of the users, what was once at the periphery moved toward the center.

As expected, Every Noise At Once shows a significant amount of overlap between what’s considered trap music—which runs the gamut from Jeezy to Waka Flocka Flame to Future to BlocBoy JB—and what falls under the similar categories of southern hip hop and dirty south rap. (There are even further subsections of those categories: Deep trap appears to focus on relatively lesser-known artists, like Nashville’s Starlito and DC’s Fat Trel, where the even more specific deep southern trap skews toward Baton Rouge rappers like Boosie, Webbie, and Kevin Gates.) But it’s equally unsurprising that, within the scope of all that’s considered rap on the site, trap and its related offshoots take up significant real estate near the top of the list: In 2018, trap music is the sound of popular hip-hop.

Emo Rap / “Vapor Trap

Emo rap: 250 major artists, 900 relevant artists
280k serious listeners, 6 million casual listeners
Vapor trap: 300 major artists, 2000 relevant artists
1 million serious listeners, 10 million casual listeners

Odds are you’ve never heard the term “vapor trap” before. The term is one of many that McDonald intuitively coined in order to more precisely identify genres as they form in real time. (See also: escape room, slow game, electrofox.) But its artist map and associated playlist is immediately recognizable to anyone who’s acquainted with the movements often referred to as “Soundcloud rap” or “emo rap” that have dominated streaming sites and, increasingly, the Billboard charts in recent years. The artists indexed here have significant overlap with those grouped under Every Noise’s emo rap category, though its most central acts—Lil Peep, XXXTENTACION, Yung Lean—do skew further toward guitar-driven interpolations of alt-rock, emo, and grunge than those listed as vapor trap. Still, they are easily understood together—the sound of a new generation of rap forming a newer, more lawless canon.

The burgeoning scene’s marquee artists and songs—think Lil Xan, Wifisfuneral, and Ski Mask The Slump God, alongside slightly older internet-rap predecessors like Denzel Curry and Xavier Wulf—are generally understood as being connected by their youth-driven audience and provocative personal style just as much as they are by a unified aesthetic; these are rappers and producers who emerge less from distinct geographic regions as from the internet itself. But visualized in McDonald’s data map and through the associated playlists, themes emerge: a tendency toward distortion, blown-out bass, and purposeful rawness on one side of the spectrum, and toward wallowy trap beats that emphasize emotion and melody on the other. And there’s a swath of darkness, too, from sedated rap-rock to grimy Three 6 Mafia homage—the natural result of the omnivorous DIY alchemy that comes from growing up on the internet, and perhaps the best indication of where rap is right now.

Gangster Rap

350 major artists, 3000 relevant artists
1.5 million serious listeners, 18 million casual listeners

When you think gangster rap, your first association might be the late ‘80s into the ‘90s, when artists from coast to coast—from N.W.A. and 2Pac to Public Enemy and Biggie to the Geto Boys and 8Ball & MJG—took mainstream rap from “hip-hop hooray” to hardcore. And for the most part, that’s reflected in the artist map for Every Noise’s gangster rap index, with Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Too $hort, and all the other canonical gangster rappers featured prominently.

But throughout the past decade of hip-hop, new generations of gangster rappers have emerged, many of them rising to the upper echelons of the mainstream and influencing the sound of popular rap at large, just as their ‘80s and ‘90s forebears did. Think Kendrick Lamar, whose poetic but grounded storytelling and impeccably crafted full-lengths won the Compton rapper a Pulitzer Prize; or YG, a fellow Compton native who, alongside DJ Mustard, cracked the pop charts with his bouncy, post-ratchet street tales without sacrificing his edge. Less known but still integral to the story of the past decade of hip-hop are gangster rap preservationists like Freddie Gibbs and his cold-blooded, clear-eyed Midwest narratives, or Memphis realists like Don Trip, who probes the streets and the psyche in equal measure. It may not sound like the gangster rap of the ‘90s, but it’s no less crucial.

Latin Hip-Hop / Trap Latino

100 major artists, 1000 relevant artists
1 million serious listeners, 13 million casual listeners

For most of the 21st century, reggaetón was the dominant sound of Latin American street music, even crossing over into stateside radio (from Daddy Yankee’s “Gasolina” to Luis Fonsi’s “Despacito”). But in recent years, a new sound—generally referred to as Latin trap, or trap Latino—has grown from an underground phenomenon to a massive cultural movement. Originating in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, Latin trap takes cues both from reggaetón and from American trap music, with Spanish-language vocals that veer between rapping and singing (just as, say, Travis Scott or Future might).

But the relationship with mainstream rap goes both ways: Over the past two years, stars like Bad Bunny, Farruko, and Ozuna have crossed over onto the Billboard charts and racked up countless millions of Spotify streams on playlists like ¡Viva Latino! Often, that sense of crossover even applies to the song’s language: think Bad Bunny and Drake’s recent “MIA,” on which Drake sings in Spanish, or DJ Snake’s “Taki Taki,” where Cardi B and Selena Gomez deliver bilingual verses in between Ozuna’s Spanish hook. The artist map for trap Latino on Every Noise might appear small, as the genre is still relatively new; but the Latin hip-hop map provides more context, grounding the scene’s new stars amongst established reggaetón artists. And it’s no surprise that, in addition to reggaetón, the genre has stylistic crossover with American hip-hop as well as an array of international offshoots, from Romania to Indonesia. In other words, the story of contemporary hip-hop is much bigger than the U.S.

Pop Rap

450 major artists, 3500 relevant artists
20 million serious listeners, 70 million casual listeners

On Every Noise’s all-encompassing list of genres, ordered in terms of popularity, “pop rap” comes in fourth—ranked beneath only pop, dance pop, and rap. As you might expect, the range of sounds under this umbrella is intimidatingly broad—how exactly does one connect the loose ends of pop rap when you could argue that, in 2018, rap music is pop music? (At least, in its most mainstream iterations.) But perhaps the category’s all-encompassing sprawl proves its own point: A decade of Spotify streaming data is evidence of rap’s constant expansion, its ability to bend itself to simultaneously accommodate both the ultra-niche and the ultra-mainstream—and to make even traditional pop music shift to better match its rhythms and cadences.

The most central names in McDonald’s pop rap map are exactly who you’d expect: Artists like Lil Wayne and Kanye West, who were crucial in hip-hop’s shift toward pop in the ‘00s and who now represent its old guard, appear alongside superstars like Drake—undoubtedly the single most influential figure in the past decade of rap and pop’s increasing synonymity. More surprising among the scene’s central figures, though, are relatively new names like Lil Baby and Gunna—artists who could easily do double time in the trap music index. And there’s a significant number of R&B artists listed, albeit ones whose styles are increasingly indistinct from straight-up rappers as rap grows ever more melody-oriented and R&B vocalists borrow from rap’s pacing and production. Think 6LACK, Jeremih, and Bryson Tiller. In short, in an apt homage to McDonald’s site’s title, pop rap in 2018 sounds like everything at once.

To dive even deeper into what may be the hip-hop trends of tomorrow, there’s much more to explore on Every Noise at Once. From there, check out Spotify’s finger-on-the-pulse Rap Caviar playlist, where you can hear those same trends come to life.

— Meaghan Garvey