Listening to Bay Area rap can feel like going to another country. The beats, the slang, the sheer energy of it—the wrapper might look kinda familiar, but bite into it and you’ll find something entirely new. Years on from the pioneering work of Too $hort, Mac Dre, and E-40, the Yay's music is still singular, a secret track running parallel to mainstream rap without ever crossing over (because when you’ve got your own thing going, why do it like everyone else?). At the heart of the sound is an addictive kind of bounciness, a propulsion that keeps things moving no matter how heavy the subject matter gets. Explore the latest in one of rap's most idiosyncratic scenes. Our editors update picks regularly, so if you hear something you like, add it to your library.