Latest Release
- 25 OCT 2024
- 1 Song
- Evil Genius · 2018
- Hot Pink · 2019
- SremmLife 2 (Deluxe) · 2016
- The Return of East Atlanta Santa · 2016
- Culture · 2017
- Might Delete Later · 2024
- Mr. Davis · 2017
- Heartbreak On A Full Moon Deluxe Edition: Cuffing Season - 12 Days Of Christmas · 2016
- Fetish (feat. Gucci Mane) - Single · 2017
- Confessions of a Dangerous Mind · 2019
Essential Albums
- Mr. Davis was the artistic and commercial apex of the Gucci Mane renaissance of the mid-to-late 2010s. The 2017 album was the influential Atlanta rapper’s fifth solo release after a three-year prison stint from which he emerged a changed man in many senses, from his svelte physical appearance to his newfound sobriety. With a dense roster of all-star guests—including some of the biggest names in hip-hop at the time—and concise run time by his standards (a mere hour), Mr. Davis feels like a marquee Gucci release in a dense discography that often feels too sprawling to sift through. The LP turned out to be not only the commercial peak of the reborn Gucci Mane era, but of his entire career until that point. The track that catapulted Mr. Davis up the Billboard charts was the Migos collaboration “I Get the Bag”, a radio smash before the album dropped in October. Aside from its infectious hook and round-robin energy, the song also represented students paying tribute to their master. Before his sentencing in the early 2010s, Gucci Mane had championed Migos in their formative years; by 2017, the motormouthed Atlanta trio had scored a viral No. 1 with “Bad and Boujee” and became one of the industry’s most in-demand Southern rap acts. Here, Quavo and Takeoff’s live-wire energy and natural star power help to fuel Gucci’s standout performance. The “Versace”-famous group is not even the most high-profile turn on Mr. Davis. On previous 2016 and 2017 Gucci projects, Drake offered up sleek hooks on some of the releases’ highest-streaming cuts; on Mr. Davis, The Weeknd assumes the mantle of superstar crooner du jour on the deadly catchy and suitably sleazy “Curve”. Other hooks come from reliable hitmakers like Ty Dolla $ign (“Enormous”), while ’90s R&B luminary Monica’s dense harmonies brighten up the glitchy, cinema-scale production of “We Ride”, a tribute to Gucci’s then-fiancée Keyshia Ka’Oir. In the middle of all of this disparate action, Gucci inevitably provides an anchor point for the project with his sturdy flows. These include ones that date back to the rapper’s earliest releases and fresh and offbeat cadences that animate songs that might otherwise feel unassuming (see solo highlight “Members Only”).
- There’s no better evidence of Gucci’s potential as a mainstream rap force than The State vs. Radric Davis, with glossy pop hooks sitting surprisingly naturally alongside synth-heavy trap beats. Gucci brings the best out of a murderer’s row of Atlanta producers: Bangladesh’s hyperactive keys score one of Gucci’s all-time best pop songs on album highlight “Lemonade”. But “Worst Enemy” closes the otherwise club-friendly album on an introspective note, as Gucci raps with eerie prescience about his reckless habits.
- 2019
Artist Playlists
- His flows, slang, and mumbled rap style changed the game forever.
- His Trap God persona didn't materialise out of thin air.
- Storytelling is central to the Trap God's appeal.
Live Albums
- Aritra, Radence & Yayati
- Mr. Green & Garden of Fire
- The East Atlanta Santa dropped Evil Genius five years ago.
- Zane Lowe talks to Gucci Mane about his song with Lil Baby, “Bluffin.”
- Two titans of the trap compare catalogs.
- Gucci Mane introduces The New 1017 and plays So Icy Gang Vol. 1.
- Lil Wayne is back with exclusive mixes and special guests.
- Lil Wayne is back with exclusive mixes and special guests.
- Interviews with Gucci Mane, A-Trak, Grimes, and Kenny Mason.
More To See
About Gucci Mane
Some rappers do it for the culture. Some do it for the clout. Some do it because they need to quote-unquote express themselves. Gucci Mane? “Man, I started rapping for money,” he told Apple Music in 2018. Really? That’s it? “I was selling dope!” But doesn’t money change things? Like, make life more complicated? “Life shouldn’t get tough when you got a bunch of money in the bank,” he said. “Why would it? Life should get easier.” One of the first great rappers of the trap era, Gucci—born Radric Davis in 1980—helped bring the sound of Atlanta street rap into the mainstream, turning out tough, funny records that examined his hustle with equal parts ruthlessness and glee, not to mention showcasing a string of producers that became superstars in their own right: Zaytoven (“Pillz”, “Bricks”), Southside (“Trap House 3”), Mike WiLL Made-It (“1st Day Out Tha Feds”) and so on. The pace of the work—more than 100 releases between 2005 and 2020—not only pointed to his day-in, day-out work ethic, but his intoxicating confidence: He put teardrops under his eye because he wished he could cry. But lose his self-respect? He’d rather die.
- FROM
- United States of America
- BORN
- 12 February 1980
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap