Photo: Eminem in KMazur/WireImage, Gary Miller/FilmMagic and Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

Songbook: A Deep Dive Into Eminem's Inimitable Career
As Eminem's seminal third album, 'The Marshall Mathers LP,' turns 25, revisit all of the 15-time GRAMMY-winning rapper's albums and how each one tells a different chapter of his story.
Marshall Bruce Mathers III is a man of many names. But no matter what you call him — Marshall, Slim Shady, or the name by which he's best-known, Eminem — he's undoubtedly a household name. In fact, he's the top-selling hip-hop artist of all time, and in turn, one of the most popular artists of all time, in any genre.
He's no slouch when it comes to awards, either. Eminem has 15 GRAMMYs, and a total of 47 nominations. His latest album, The Death Of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce), earned three nods at the 2025 GRAMMYs, including his eighth for Best Rap Album — a Category he's won six times.
This year marks the 25th anniversary of one of those GRAMMY-winning albums, The Marshall Mathers LP. After breaking through with his second set, 1999's The Slim Shady LP, Eminem's third album put the rapper into the dead center of early-2000s media and discourse. During that era, Eminem inspired protests, sold a now-unthinkable amount of albums, and inspired seemingly endless amounts of cultural criticism.
The Marshall Mathers LP also saw Eminem reacting to the expectations brought on by the massive success of The Slim Shady LP, beginning a chain of albums that react to the previous album that continues to this day.
Em's 12 studio albums are just one component of his sprawling discography — which, along with several deluxe or extended versions of his LPs, include two separate greatest hits collections, mixtapes, collaborative and group projects, and movie soundtracks. And that's not to mention guest features, unreleased tracks and other rarities.
There's much more to Eminem than what many consider his classic period, which started with The Slim Shady LP and ended right before the release of his fourth album, Encore, in November 2004. But it is that season — where a white rapper from Detroit teamed up with Dr. Dre and rocketed to the peak of popular culture — that is at the center of the rapper's discography and persona, and that he has in some ways been reckoning with since.
The best way to understand Eminem's catalog is to break it down into several eras: his pre-fame output, where he was not yet fully artistically formed; the aforementioned classic period; the fall and subsequent rise that followed; a look back at his classic period, but with mature insights and fresh eyes; and, over the past few years, a reaction to the changed world around him.
Now, dig into each one of these eras, and how they all contributed to making Eminem one of rap's greats.
The Pre-Fame Period (1996-1998)
Eminem's first album, 1996's Infinite, is a project he still seems slightly embarrassed by. It is, notably, not available anywhere online (at least not legally), and only the title track can be found on streaming services.
But it is worth hearing in order to understand Em's whole story. It was recorded before he came up with the Slim Shady persona, and sounds like what it is: the earnest work of a talented mid-'90s underground rapper with an AZ obsession and a chip on his shoulder.
The dense rhyming that would characterize his mature work is there, as are hints of the troublemaker personality that would soon take over the world. All of that is mixed in with the odd cringe-worthy punchline ("I'll run your brain around the block to jog your f—ing memory") and resentment towards local radio stations for ignoring him — stations that, only a few short years later, wouldn't stop playing his records.
That project is followed by the debut of his Slim Shady alter ego on the appropriately-named Slim Shady EP. This is where Em first finds his footing.
Slim Shady is the device Em used to say things you're not supposed to say (one song begins: "Slim Shady, brain-dead like Jim Brady"), while providing a complicated artistic and philosophic out. The character gave Em permission to be extreme, and also room to claw back some of what he was saying, and question whether he really meant it.
The intro of the Slim Shady EP goes into this head-on, featuring tropes Em would use throughout his career. The demonic-sounding Shady tells him, "You're nothing without me," in a skit that could appear verbatim on his most recent project, The Death of Slim Shady.
Musically, Eminem has discovered that evil sells. Letting his most deranged thoughts loose makes him sound far more energized than on Infinite, and already, even before meeting with Dre, he has a unique voice and style.
One other project happened during this era that's worth mentioning: a single with Royce Da 5'9", "Nuttin' to Do"/"Scary Movies," which they released in 1998 under the group name Bad Meets Evil. It is a stellar piece of work, and even at that early stage Shady and Royce have a notable chemistry — one it would take them over a decade to fully explore.
This was the time when Em could not miss. Pretty much everything he put out during this period was both artistically and commercially successful. Even seemingly throwaway efforts like his appearances on DJ Green Lantern's Invasion mixtapes (three volumes of which were released between 2002-2004) were both memorable and newsworthy.
All of this began with Em's discovery by Dr. Dre and the subsequent album The Slim Shady LP. Along with its influence on hip-hop, this album put its maker at the white-hot (pun intended) center of popular culture. Everything Eminem did or said got a reaction, which in turn inspired him to act out, which inspired more outrage. It was a cycle that ultimately led to burnout (more on that later), but for a few years it created something close to magic.
Read More: 4 Reasons Why Eminem's 'The Slim Shady LP' Is One Of The Most Influential Rap Records
The Marshall Mathers LP showed Em at his provocateur best, playing in the sandbox of his newfound stardom and the outrage it inspired. The record has, as of this writing, sold over 11 million copies in the US alone, which should give you some idea of its astronomical impact. Eminem was reckoning with the fact that he moved from overlooked and ignored to multi platinum seemingly overnight — and he didn't seem to be having an easy time of it. All of his grievances with fans, family and pretty much anything else he could think of were given the largest canvas imaginable.
Its follow-up, 2002's The Eminem Show, was just as provocative, but had a wider focus. Slim Shady's name was now being spoken in the halls of power, and he had some thoughts about that (and about America's post-9/11 terrorism obsession) — as well as some jokes about then-VP Dick Cheney's heart problems.
It wasn't just the music that made this season so pivotal for Eminem's career, either. He also starred in 8 Mile, a sort of fictionalized version of his battle rapping come-up, which proved that he was a big enough star that he could be at the center of a massively successful and compelling film. Naturally, he contributed a few songs to the film's soundtrack, including the one that arguably solidified him as a global superstar: the chart-topping and GRAMMY- and Oscar-winning "Lose Yourself."
He also, alongside Dre, discovered and signed 50 Cent, and produced and rapped on Fif's monster 2003 debut, Get Rich or Die Tryin'. There were other major features during this period as well: virtuosic raps on songs by Missy Elliott, Jay-Z, Xzibit, and more. He even appeared on one of the very few worthwhile posthumous Notorious B.I.G. songs, "Dead Wrong."
In addition, he somehow managed to find time during this period to release two albums from his group D12, both of which went platinum.
Eminem himself summed up this period the best. "Them last two albums didn't count," he rapped on Recovery's "Talkin' 2 Myself." "Encore I was on drugs, Relapse I was flushing 'em out."
The rise to megastardom began to take its toll. Em became trapped by the demands of celebrity, and by his own drug use. And it began to show in his work.
Encore contains a number of extremely juvenile songs with titles like "Ass Like That" and "Big Weenie" that would have been better left on the cutting room floor. There are also several tracks that simply retread concepts he had already done on his previous albums ("Mockingbird" is, for example, essentially "Hailie's Song" redux).
That said, there are also occasional great moments: a mature look at the costs of rap beef ("Like Toy Soldiers"), and a glance back at his childhood that, in its seriousness and thoughtfulness, avoids the exaggerated, comic tall tales of his first album ("Yellow Brick Road"). The deluxe version of Encore contains several of his best songs of this era, "We As Americans" and "Love You More," which were inexplicably left off the album proper.
Following Encore, fans would have to wait over four years for Eminem's next release — and the result, Relapse, was a divisive record. Many heard it as a largely sub-par collection of serial killer stories, celebrity insults, pill addiction stories, and bad accents (the last of which he would apologize for later). But it was produced almost in its entirety by Dr. Dre, which has won it no shortage of fans over the years. And those same serial killer tales would become influential on a new generation; it is, notably, an album that Tyler, the Creator has repeatedly and publicly championed.
Recovery marked, well, Eminem's recovery. It also set the template for a sound and a style he would use in future years. Sound-wise, there's a heavy rock and roll influence: drums, guitars and organ that wouldn't sound out of place on a classic rock station (not for nothing, Black Sabbath is sampled on "Changes"). Stylistically, he adds heavy amounts of puns to his repertoire for the first time, a device to which he would return again and again.
Read More: GRAMMY Rewind: Watch Eminem Show Love To Detroit And Rihanna During His Best Rap Album Win In 2011
The project aimed for hits, and it succeeded. Biggest of all, of course, was "Love the Way You Lie," a ballad with Rihanna on the hook that was No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for seven weeks. This is yet another formula that Em would return to, as we shall see.
By the time the 2010s began, Eminem began to acknowledge his past. Two projects in a row, Hell: The Sequel and the suitably-named Marshall Mathers LP 2, looked back at different aspects of his career.
The former of these found him re-teaming with Royce Da 5'9" as Bad Meets Evil, this time for an EP-length project. The pairing hadn't lost a step since the late '90s, when they joined up for a fantastic single and a Slim Shady LP collaboration. Here, Em is less focused on his own story and mythology, and more concerned with simply rapping. He sounds happier and more free, more interested in wordplay than narrative.
Even his by-now-long running ultraviolent worldview is more palatable in tandem with Royce. It also sounds good to have Eminem rapping with someone else (his own records are notably short on guest verses). Hell: The Sequel is largely not thought of as a high point of Em's discography, perhaps because it wasn't released under his name. But in this writer's estimation, it's his best project outside of the classic period.
The sequel to the Marshall Mathers LP also looks back, but in a different way. Em is thinking about the people affected by the often-scattershot insults he hurled at the height of his fame, and treating at least some of them with nuance and empathy — including the frequent villain of many of his early tracks, his mother.
Sonically, the rock-influenced material is still there. And so is the Rihanna duet, repeated on "Monster." There is also perhaps the best-known and showiest example of Em's virtuoso rapping, "Rap God."
This idea of legacy — the album literally has a song by that title — continues on 2017's Revival. He's concerned with how hard it is to live up to the expectations set by his own past work. He also continues to look back on his early years, but this time with a clear-eyed view of how it affected his daughter, which he looks at on "Castle."
One other part of this record is a response to modern rap. Em has heard Migos and their then-ubiquitous triplet flow, and he's got some things to say about it. That will come to a head shortly.
Revival did not have a great critical or popular reception, which did not sit well with Eminem. Within eight months, he released Kamikaze, a record that was largely about that poor response to Revival. It is shorter and more focused than pretty much any other solo album he's ever released.
It's also perhaps the most bitter, which is no small feat. He was angry at the current state of rap and the media that covers it. The only relief comes with the song "Stepping Stone," in which he examines his culpability in the collapse of his group D12.
That same cycle of an album responding to the previous album's reviews continued on Music to be Murdered By, which literally begins with the couplet, "They said last album I sounded bitter/ Nah, I sound like a spitter." He even responded to specific reviews, with this 2.5 star Rolling Stone review of Kamikaze a particular target of ire. He seemed frustrated that neither the seriousness of Revival nor the lashing out of Kamikaze got the acclaim he felt they deserved.
That said, MTBMB does have some standout tracks. There's the moving "Leaving Heaven," where Em responds to his father's death in 2019. And there's "Darkness," which reimages the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting. Plus there's "Yah Yah," an excellent collaborative display of rapping with Black Thought and, yet again, Royce.
Em's most recent project, The Death of Slim Shady, is also a reactionary album. But this time, it's not a response to the reception of a previous album — instead, it's a reaction to a changed social climate.
Eminem (or, more properly, his never-quite-buried alter ego) sounds like your angry uncle at Thanksgiving, or a "South Park" rerun. Gen Z, pronouns, the "PC police," opposition to fatphobia — all of these come under fire. One of the songs, "Brand New Dance," appears to be a slightly reworked 20-year-old leftover, which explains the track's Christopher Reeve jokes.
The album openly deals with the same question that plagued Slim Shady EP's opening: is the bottle-blonde enfant terrible Slim Shady all that Marshall Mathers has to offer the world? He doesn't appear to have come up with an answer yet. But the struggle to figure that out has led to a quarter-century of frequently compelling music, with the promise of a lot more to come.
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9 Powerful Acceptance Speeches From The 2026 Grammys: Bad Bunny, Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga & More
From pro-immigrant statements to vocal support for women in music, these moving acceptance speeches from the 2026 Grammys reflected the moments defining music and culture today.
See the full list of winners and nominees from the 2026 Grammys.
Watch highlights and exclusive Grammys content from the 2026 Grammys all year long.
At the 2026 Grammys, winning artists took to the stage with much more than gratitude on their minds. Grammy winners such as Lady Gaga and Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement Award honoree Cher supported rising artists, particularly women in the music industry. Kendrick Lamar deflected from his own victories to pay tribute to Luther Vandross, namesake of his Record-Of-The-Year-winning tune, and the hip-hop community at large.
In particular, many artists reacted to the ongoing campaign of deportations and anti-immigrant violence happening across the U.S. Bad Bunny, Billie Eilish and Olivia Dean all spoke movingly in support of immigrants, while many other artists wore "ICE OUT" pins.
Below, revisit some of the most moving acceptance speeches from the 2026 Grammys.
Kendrick Lamar Makes Rap History & Shouts Out The Hip-Hop Community
After dominating the 2025 Grammys with "Not Like Us," Kendrick Lamar took home five Grammys this year and became the rapper with the most Grammy wins ever. After winning three Grammys earlier in the day during the 2026 Grammy Awards Premiere Ceremony, the Los Angeles artist won the first Grammy Award of the telecast for Best Rap Album for GNX. With this Grammy win, he topped JAY-Z's 25 wins to snatch the record for most Grammys won by a rapper.
"Every time I tell you this: Hip-hop is gonna always be right here," Lamar said in his Grammy acceptance speech, dedicating his win to the hip-hop movement. "We gonna be in these suits, we gonna be looking good, we gonna be having our folks with us, we're gonna be having the culture with us."
Kendrick also shouted out Clipse, with whom he won Best Rap Performance earlier in the day for their track "Chains & Whips." He would return to the stage once more before the end of the night to take home the Grammy for Record of the Year for his song "luther" with SZA, bringing his career total to 27 Grammy wins.
Bad Bunny Stands Up For Immigrants
Of the many statements made in support of immigrants at the 2026 Grammys, few felt more powerful and resonant than Bad Bunny's, who twice spoke on the issue on the Grammy stage. Accepting the Grammy for Best Música Urbana Album for DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, the Puerto Rican superstar front-loaded his acceptance speech with a rebuke of the dehumanizing rhetoric faced by immigrants, especially Latin Americans such as himself.
"Before I say thanks to God, I'm gonna say: ICE out," he declared. "We're not savage, we're not animals, we're not aliens. We are humans and we are Americans."
Later that night, after winning the Grammy for Album of the Year, a visibly shocked and overwhelmed Bad Bunny returned to the stage to deliver another Grammy acceptance speech, though this time mostly in Spanish. It was an appropriate move considering the history-making album is the first non-English-language album to ever win the Grammy for Album Of The Year. But given his stunned reaction, Bad Bunny may have just been too emotional to so quickly translate most of his thoughts. But in a fitting move, he dedicated his Grammy win to "all the people who had to leave their homeland, their country, to follow their dreams."
Olivia Dean Tearfully Takes Best New Artist
"I never imagined I'd be up here, let alone nominated," Olivia Dean said as she tearfully accepted the Grammy for Best New Artist. Having just performed her U.K. chart-topping single "Man I Need" on the Grammy stage, the British singer used her platform to speak out in support of immigrants, including her own grandmother, who immigrated to the U.K. from Guyana as part of the Windrush generation.
"I'm up here as a granddaughter of an immigrant," Dean said. "I'm a product of bravery, and I think those people deserve to be celebrated."
Lady Gaga Supports Women In Music
As well-known as she is for awards-show spectacles – Remember the meat dress? – Lady Gaga kept things (mostly) low-key and earnest. Following a dynamic performance of "Abracadabra," she returned to the stage to accept the Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Album for MAYHEM.
Thanking her fiancé, Michael Polansky, and her collaborators, including Cirkut, who won the Grammy for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical winner, and Gessaffelstein, the latter of whom won the Grammy for Best Remixed Recording for his remix of "Abracadabra," Lady Gaga offered some encouraging words for women in the music industry.
"When you're in the studio with a bunch of guys, it can be hard," she said. "Always listen to yourself and always fight for your ideas, fight for your songs, fight for yourself as a producer."
"Abracadabra" also won the Grammy for Best Dance Pop Recording, bringing her total career Grammy wins to 16.
Lola Young Swears She Didn't Expect Grammy Win
Though Lola Young certainly had stiff competition in the Best Pop Solo Performance Category, including veterans such as Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga, nobody was more shocked at her Grammy win in than Young herself. The singer, also nominated for Best New Artist, had just wrapped an emotional piano rendition of her track "Messy" earlier in the evening, one of her first live performances in four months following a health scare.
"I don't have any speech prepared," a visibly shocked Young said. "I don't know what to say. Thank you so much!" Utterly overwhelmed and searching for words, Young dropped a few less-than-TV-appropriate words before thanking her friends and mother and fleeing the stage while in a state of pure ecstasy.
Billie Eilish Gets Serious During Song Of The Year Speech
Winning the Grammy for Song of the Year for "WILDFLOWER," her 10th Grammy, didn't seem to weigh heavily on Billie Eilish's mind as she took the stage to accept the award. Flanked by her brother and creative partner FINNEAS, both wearing "ICE OUT" pins, as were many of the other attendees, the pop star weighed in on the current anti-immigration policies being carried out in the U.S.
"No one is illegal on stolen land," Eilish said. "It's just really hard to know what to say and what to do right now … I feel really hopeful in this room, and I feel like we just need to keep fighting and speaking up and protesting, and our voices really do matter, and the people matter."
The more serious tone of the speech contrasted with Eilish's previous wins, but it felt more than appropriate given the current climate.
Cher's Audacious Return To The Grammy Stage
Cher is always a class act. With dozens of hits across a decades-spanning career, she earned the Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement Award deservedly. Her acceptance speech on the Grammy stage quickly became one of the most talked-about moments of the night.
First, she gave a stirring speech reflecting on her storied yet tumultuous time in show business. "I was famous at 19 and had a top-rated show in my 20s, actually, but it didn't occur to me how rough my career was going to be," she said. "I was either a loser or winning an Oscar. I'm sure a lot of you in the audience know what I'm talking about."
Cher also reflected on her stint in the "elephant graveyard" of Las Vegas in the '80s and her pioneering use of AutoTune on her Grammy-winning hit single "Believe." She closed out her speech by encouraging the audience: "Never give up on your dream, no matter what happens. Live it, be it, and if it's not happening now, it will happen soon."
Then things got a little bit … whacky. Apparently unclear that she would be presenting the Grammy for Record of the Year, the singer nearly walked off the stage before the crowd and host Trevor Noah coaxed her back. Then she mistakenly declared the late Luther Vandross the winner, in reference to the winning song, "luther" by Kendrick Lamar and SZA. Oh Cher, don't you ever change!
Jelly Roll Goes Full Country Music
Jelly Roll had already won two Grammys earlier in the day for collaborations with Brandon Lake and Shaboozey, but it wasn't until the evening that he got to ascend the Grammy stage solo. Winning the Grammy for Best Contemporary Country Album for Beautifully Broken, he made his acceptance speech into a sort of country song in its own right, thanking his wife, referencing his Christian faith, and describing the troubles that led him to turn to music.
"I didn't think I had a chance, y'all," he said. "There were days that I thought the darkest things. I was a horrible human … There was a moment in my life that all I had was a Bible this big and a radio the same size and a six-by-eight-foot cell. And I believed that those two things could change my life."
The singer wrapped his speech by once again invoking religion: "Jesus is for everybody. Jesus is not owned by one political party. Jesus is not owned by no music label."
"luther" Wins Record of the Year
Cher may have been a bit off when she confidently misread that the Grammy for Record of the Year was going to "Luther Vandross." But the actual winners, Kendrick Lamar and SZA, made it clear that their chart-topping tune "luther" was a spiritual victory for the legendary R&B star who inspired the song, which prominently samples Vandross' and Cheryl Lynn's 1982 cover of "If This World Were Mine."
"First and foremost, let's give a shout-out to the late, great Luther Vandross," co-producer Sounwave began. "It was very, very, very important to keep the integrity of his record."
Lamar echoed the sentiment. "It's one of my favorite artists of all time, and they granted us the privilege to do our version of it. When we got that clearance, I promise you we damn near all dropped a tear.
"Being able to put our vocals on it, it proves that we were somewhat worthy to be just as great as them individuals," he continued. "They granted us that. They said, 'No cursing,' though."
Finally, SZA struck a note of hopefulness at the end of the speeches. "I know that right now is a scary time. I know the algorithms tell us that it's so scary, and all is lost," she said. "We can go on. We need each other. We need to trust each other and trust ourselves, trust your heart. We're not governed by the government, we're governed by God."
This Grammy win for "luther" puts Lamar in elite territory as a back-to-back Record Of The Year Grammy winner, joining fellow winners like Billie Eilish, U2, and the late Roberta Flack, the latter of whom was tributed in the annual In Memoriam celebration led by Ms. Lauryn Hill earlier in the ceremony.
2026 Grammys: Performances, Winners & Highlights

Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
10 Rappers Who Have Won The Most Grammys: Kendrick Lamar, Jay-Z, Eminem & More
From Jay-Z to Lauryn Hill, Grammy.com highlights 10 artists with the most Grammy Awards. Their impact, influence and innovation have helped shape the culture — and earned them an abundance of accolades.
Editor’s Note: Updated Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, to reflect the results of the 2026 Grammys.
1989 was a year of many highlights, from the debut of "The Simpsons" and "Seinfeld" to the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the beginning of the Game Boy. It was also the first year hip-hop artists won Grammy Awards, an honor that went to D.J. Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince for "Parents Just Don't Understand."
Hip-hop and the GRAMMYs have come a long way in the ensuing decades. While Will Smith and DJ Jazzy Jeff broke barriers with their win for Best Rap Performance, the duo boycotted the show because the rap Category was not televised. The boycott proved successful, as the genre Categories began to be televised during the following year, in 1990, and every year since then.
Read more: Who Are The Top GRAMMY Awards Winners Of All Time? Who Has The Most GRAMMYs?
Now, the Recording Academy celebrates the sounds of hip-hop and acknowledges the genre’s indelible impact; few genres have disrupted and defined music on such a global scale. Hip-hop rappers, producers, and songwriters have significantly shaped the musical landscape, garnering a bevy of Grammy Awards along the way. And although many artists have taken home Grammy Awards since ‘89, there are a few artists in the game who reign supreme.
Read on for 10 rappers who have won the most Grammy Awards
Kendrick Lamar
27 wins, 66 nominations
Kendrick Lamar’s wins represent a return of “conscious” rap that tackles topics such as race and politics while embracing the art of authentic storytelling. As such, his 2015 album To Pimp a Butterfly gave way to many social justice anthems such as “Alright” and “Wesley’s Theory”; the release also took home the award for Best Rap Album at the 58th GRAMMY Awards.
Further reading: Kendrick Lamar's GRAMMY Timeline: From His First Win And Performances To "Not Like Us"
Additionally, Lamar’s most successful album, DAMN — which features hits like “DNA" and “Humble" — won five GRAMMYs Awards. At the 2025 Grammys, the rapper's hit single “Not Like Us” swept its Categories. Among Lamar's wins that night were Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best Music Video. At the 2026 Grammys, he won the Grammy for Record Of The Year for “luther,” Best Rap Album for GNX, Best Rap Song for “tv off,” Best Melodic Rap Performance for “luther,” and Best Rap Performance “Chains & Whips” (his collaboration with Clipse), breaking the record for the rapper with the most Grammy wins.
Learn more: Kendrick Lamar Sweeps The 2025 GRAMMYs With Song Of The Year Win
Kendrick Lamar’s influence extends to broader cultural events, such as his groundbreaking 2025 Super Bowl halftime show. The show set a record for viewership and became one of the most-watched halftime shows since the Super Bowl’s inception, surpassing 130 million views.
Jay-Z
25 wins, 89 nominations
Rapper and business mogul Jay-Z not only holds the record of having the most GRAMMYs of any hip-hop artist, he is also among the most nominated artists of any genre in GRAMMY history.
The rapper’s GRAMMY wins include Best Rap Album, which he won in 1998 for his album Vol. 2…Hard Knock Life. The album, which was nominated for two additional GRAMMYs, was his highest selling and included songs such as “Hard Knock Life” and “Can I Get A…” featuring Ja Rule and Amil.
Learn more: Songbook: How Jay-Z Created The 'Blueprint' For Rap's Greatest Of All Time
In 2006, Jay-Z made his musical debut at the GRAMMYs when he performed “Numb/Encore” with Linkin Park and “Yesterday’ with Paul McCartney. From solo hits to collabs with some of the most legendary artists in music, Jay-Z has dominated the GRAMMYs and shows no signs of slowing down.
Read more: 8 Ways Jay-Z's 'The Black Album' Changed The Hip-Hop Game
His influence was further acknowledged In 2024, when he was bestowed with the prestigious Dr. Dre GRAMMY Global Impact Award. In June 2025, his debut album Reasonable Doubt was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall of Fame. Not only has he been instrumental in East Coast hip-hop, he has had a hand in shaping fashion and other societal pillars on a global scale, opening doors for artists to go beyond music and branch off into other ventures.
Kanye West
24 wins, 76 nominations
Kanye West has the second most GRAMMYs of any hip-hop artist, with 24 awards and 76 nominations. His GRAMMY accolades in multiple fields and Categories highlight his versatility as an artist: such as Jesus is King (Best Contemporary Christian Music Album) and The College DropOut (Best Rap Album), the latter of which was his first GRAMMY win in 2004. His awards also reflect his work as a producer; his GRAMMY wins in this arena include Best R&B Song for Alicia Keys’ hit “You Don’t Know My Name,” which West also co-wrote.
West also took home a golden gramophone Best Rap Solo Performance for the hit song "Gold Digger" with Jamie Foxx. At 2008 GRAMMYs, he performed his hit “Stronger” alongside Daft Punk, complete with illuminated, futuristic visuals. In all, Kanye has pushed boundaries with music and art, sampling songs and turning performances into experiences.
Eminem
15 wins, 47 nominations
Eminem’s influence in the industry is evident not only by his chart-topping hits, but also by the number of golden gramophones he has secured. The Detroit rapper, who has effortlessly merged lyrical skill with shock, is both among the best-selling artists of all time and the rapper with the most GRAMMY awards.
Further reading: Songbook: A Deep Dive Into Eminem's Inimitable Career
He is also the only rapper who has won the award for Best Rap Album for three consecutive LPs. Eminem won his first GRAMMYs for The Slim Shady LP; these awards include Best Rap Solo Performance ("My Name Is"), as well as the award for Best Rap Album. 2000's The Marshall Mathers LP, which features "The Real Slim Shady" and "Forget About Dre," won three GRAMMY Awards/ The album also features Eminem's hit song "Stan," which the artist performed at the GRAMMYs as a duet with Elton John.
Read more: 4 Reasons Why Eminem's 'The Slim Shady LP' Is One Of The Most Influential Rap Records
Pharrell Williams
13 wins, 39 nominations
Pharrell Williams' versatility as a rapper, producer, pop artist and songwriter has garnered 13 GRAMMY wins. His awards showcase different facets of his artistry, from his days as a member of the group the Neptunes, to his work as a solo artist and producer.
From Beyoncé to Britney Spears, he has worked with a range of artists and has thrice taken home the golden gramophone for Producer Of The Year, Non Classical. Highlighting his production work, Pharrell's first GRAMMY was for producing Justin Timberlake’s 2003 album Justified. His collaboration with Daft Punk spawned the popular hit "Get Lucky," which won GRAMMYs Awards for Record Of The Year and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance.
As an artist and producer, Pharrell is able to blend pop and hip-hop effortlessly. Pharrell’s "Happy," from the Despicable Me 2 soundtrack, took home two GRAMMY Awards (as well as an Oscar nomination) and became one of the best-selling singles of the 2010s. Though Pharrell’s ingenuity has opened doors for him to work with an array of artists, he still holds hip-hop in high regard. In recent years, his work on Kendrick Lamar’s albums has spawned several GRAMMYs and nominations–including a win for Kendrick’s song "Alright" off of his album To Pimp a Butterfly.
Learn more: 4 Ways Pharrell Williams Has Made An Impact: Supporting The Music Industry, Amplifying Social Issues & More
Andre "3000" Benjamin
9 wins, 28 nominations
Andre 3000’s innovative sound and style has pushed creative boundaries in music and netted multiple GRAMMY Awards. Andre 3000's wins and nominations–in both rap and R&B–reflect his work as a solo artist and as part of the group OutKast. His wins include Best Rap Album for Stankonia, as well as Best Urban/Alternative Performance for the hit song "Hey Ya," off of the Speakerboxxx/The Love Below album. Additionally, Andre 3000 has also won a GRAMMY for Best R&B Performance for his feature on Anderson .Paak’s song "Come Home."
His versatility as an artist is evident on his recent instrumental jazz album, New Blue Sun, which earned him three nominations at the 2025 GRAMMYs. Additionally, this album showcases a departure from some of the sounds Andre 3000 is known for, and shows audiences that he is unafraid to challenge musical conventions.
Read more: André 3000 On 'New Blue Sun,' Finding Inspiration In Visual Art & His New Musical Journey
Anderson .Paak
9 wins, 14 nominations
Although Anderson .Paak is best known for his contributions to R&B, he has netted GRAMMYs for his work as a rapper. He won his first GRAMMY for "Bubblin," a song which took home Best Rap Performance at the 2019 GRAMMYs. At the 2021 GRAMMY Awards, he won Best Melodic Rap Performance for his single "Lockdown." Additionally, he has also secured multiple GRAMMY wins as part of the R&B duo Silk Sonic with Bruno Mars.
The group’s best-selling album, An Evening With Silk Sonic, features the hit song "Leave the Door Open" and brings together R&B and funk. The melodious genre mix ultimately earned the group GRAMMYs for Best R&B Performance and Record Of The Year.
As a solo artist, Anderson .Paak has also carved out a distinctive and celebrated career, earning multiple GRAMMYs for his genre-bending albums that showcase his unique blend of singing and rapping.
Lauryn Hill
8 wins, 19 nominations
Lauryn Hill has established a benchmark for female artists in hip-hop, setting an exceptionally high bar that many artists still aspire to reach.
Her seminal 1998 album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, achieved widespread critical acclaim before becoming one of the best-selling albums of all time. Additionally, it is the first hip-hop album to win a GRAMMY for Album Of The Year. The album ultimately launched Lauryn Hill’s career into the stratosphere; she became the first female rapper with a diamond-certified album. It is also the only solo album Lauryn has put forward to date. In 2024, the album was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall of Fame.
Although Lauryn Hill’s artistry and lyrical depth has garnered her GRAMMYs as a solo artist, her success also stems from her contributions as a songwriter and vocalist for the hip-hop group the Fugees. The group’s second album, The Score, earned two GRAMMYs and includes the hit song "Killing Me Softly," which is a rendition of Roberta Flack’s original.Additionally, at the 42nd GRAMMY Awards, Lauryn Hill also won a GRAMMY for her work on Santana’s influential album Supernatural, which was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall of Fame this year.
Dr. Dre
7 wins, 26 nominations
Dr. Dre was and remains a highly influential figure in West Coast hip-hop, who has achieved significant success as a rapper, producer and founding member of the group N.W.A.
Throughout his extensive career, Dr. Dre has earned seven GRAMMYs, including the first win for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical by a hip-hop producer and artist.
His acclaimed solo album, The Chronic garnered Dr. Dre his first GRAMMY for his single "Let Me Ride" (Best Rap Solo Performance). His best-selling album 2001, was also GRAMMY nominated and features popular tracks like "Still D.R.E." and "The Next Episode" with Snoop Dogg. Beyond his solo achievements, he has been instrumental in launching the careers of artists such as Eminem and producing classic albums for both Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent.
In 2023, Dr. Dre was honored with having the distinguished GRAMMY Global Impact Award carry his namesake. Since the award’s inception, Jay-Z and Alicia Keys have received this accolade.
OutKast
6 wins, 16 nominations
OutKast’s creative approach to hip-hop has helped them win six GRAMMYs and secure 16 nominations. The duo of Andre "3000" Benjamin and Antwan "Big Boi" Patton, have pushed genre boundaries blending rap, jazz, and pop while staying true to their Southern roots. In 2001, OutKast won their first GRAMMY Awards, one being Best Rap Album for Stankonia.
Their 2004 win for their innovative double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below was a defining moment for Southern rap; it notably became the second hip-hop album to receive the GRAMMY for Album Of The Year and Best Rap Album. The album, which was certified diamond, features multiple chart-topping hits such as "The Way You Move" featuring Sleepy Brown and "Hey Ya."
Honorable Mentions
There are many hip-hop artists who have received extensive nominations but have yet to receive a GRAMMY Award — notwithstanding their important contributions to the genre. Snoop Dogg, Busta Rhymes, Nicki Minaj, Travis Scott and Rick Ross each have numerous nominations but no golden gramophone. Snoop leads this pack with a total of 16 nominations, followed by Busta and Minaj (each with a dozen), Scott (10), and Ross (nine). Post Malone stands out, however, with 18 career nominations and no wins.
2026 Grammys: Performances, Winners & Highlights

Photos (L-R): Rahim Fortune and Bolade Banjo
Clipse & Pharrell Williams To Perform At The 2026 Grammys
Rap all-stars Clipse and superproducer/artist Pharrell Williams are both nominated at the 2026 Grammys for their work on the former's 'Let God Sort Em Out.'
See the full list of winners and nominees from the 2026 Grammys.
Watch highlights and exclusive Grammys content from the 2026 Grammys all year long.
Current Grammy nominees Clipse and Pharrell Williams have been announced as performers at the 2026 Grammys.
Clipse are nominated for five Grammy Awards this year: Album Of The Year (Let God Sort Em Out), Best Rap Performance ("Chains & Whips"), Best Rap Song ("The Birds Don't Sing"), Best Rap Album (Let God Sort Em Out), and Best Music Video ("So Be It").
Thirteen-time Grammy winner Pharrell Williams is nominated for four Grammy Awards this year: Album Of The Year (Let God Sort Em Out), Best Rap Performance ("Chains & Whips"), Best Rap Song ("The Birds Don't Sing"), and Best Music Film (Piece By Piece).
Previously announced performers include current Best New Artist nominees Addison Rae, Alex Warren, KATSEYE, Leon Thomas, Lola Young, Olivia Dean, SOMBR, and The Marías, who will all perform in a special Best New Artist segment at the 2026 Grammys. Sabrina Carpenter will also perform at the 2026 Grammys.
Additional performers at the 2026 Grammys will be announced in the coming days.
See the full list of performers and hosts at the 2026 Grammys to date (updating in real time).
Prior to the 2026 Grammys telecast, the 2026 Grammy Awards Premiere Ceremony will broadcast live from the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles at 12:30 p.m. PT/3:30 p.m. ET and will be streamed live on live.grammy.com and the Recording Academy’s YouTube channel.
Paramount+ Premium plan subscribers will have access to stream live via the live feed of their local CBS affiliate on the service, as well as on-demand. Paramount+ Essential subscribers will not have the option to stream live, but will have access to on-demand the day after the episodes airs.
Fulwell Entertainment is producing the 2026 Grammy Awards for the Recording Academy. Ben Winston, Raj Kapoor, Jesse Collins, and Trevor Noah are executive producers.
2026 Grammys: Performances, Winners & Highlights

Photos: Eric Rojas; Cassy Athena/Getty Images; Bryce Anderson; Cian Moore; NBC/Noam Galai/NBC via Getty Images; Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Recording Academy; Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty Images; Arturo Holmes/Getty Images
2026 GRAMMYS Nominations: Album Of The Year Nominees
Whoever takes home the golden gramophone will be a first-time Album Of The Year winner — whether Bad Bunny, Justin Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter, Clipse, Lady Gaga, Kendrick Lamar, Leon Thomas, or Tyler, The Creator.
See the full list of winners and nominees from the 2026 Grammys.
Watch highlights and exclusive Grammys content from the 2026 Grammys all year long.
Releasing an album isn’t just about putting a set of songs out into the world.
It’s about sharing a cohesive piece of the artist’s inner world, opening a portal that anyone can enter and discover something completely new. Each LP reveals a depth of creativity and spirit that just doesn’t exist very often in everyday life. For the artist, it’s an act of transformation; for listeners, it’s an invitation into something raw and resonant, the kind of experience that can shift how we feel, how we think, how we live.
The Recording Academy is proud to present the 2026 GRAMMYS nominees for Album Of The Year: Bad Bunny, Justin Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter, Clipse, Pusha T and Malice, Lady Gaga, Kendrick Lamar, Leon Thomas, and Tyler, The Creator. Their eight LPs each brim with unparalleled artistic and technical skill.
This year’s potential winners include several previous Album Of The Year nominees who have yet to take home the award, as well as a few first time nominees. No matter who takes home the golden gramophone, the winner will be a powerful first.
Learn more about the nominees below and read the full 2026 GRAMMYS nominations list ahead of Music's Biggest Night on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026.
Bad Bunny — DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS
From his upcoming performance at the Super Bowl halftime show to yet another in a long string of genre-defining and -defying albums, Bad Bunny remains at the center of the pop conversation. With his DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, the Puerto Rican megastar returns to the Album Of The Year Category for the first time since 2023's Un Verano Sin Ti was nominated.
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS ("I Should Have Taken More Photos") immediately establishes a new, confident chapter in Bunny’s creative journey. Both a creative reset and a homecoming, this deeply Puerto Rican record holds onto its roots with a depth and sincerity that’s both personal and political.
The 17-track project finds Bad Bunny sounding grounded, reflective, and newly centered, embracing maturity without losing his edge. DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS blends traditional Puerto Rican sounds — salsa, bomba, plena, and early reggaeton — into lush, forward-looking blends thanks in part to trusted collaborators such as MAG, Tainy, and La Pacienca.
A polychrome, far-reaching set, the album feels intimate even at its most extreme, weaving through love, loss, and cultural memory. But DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS is more than diaristic expression; it’s a powerful outward statement and reclamation. Recorded entirely in Puerto Rico with local collaborators, it’s a proud assertion of identity and defiance. And while Bad Bunny has always been a proud proponent of Puerto Rico, its musical traditions and its people, the full-throated bravado and expression of strength on DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS will make it a landmark album for the country for years to come. In returning home, Bad Bunny has crafted his most spiritually and sonically rooted work yet.
Justin Bieber — SWAG
Considering he’s been entrenched in the heart of the music industry for decades, it’s tempting to think of Justin Bieber alongside a tier of aging pop stars — and by that virtue, expect him to be trying out some harebrained reinvention scheme. But in reality, he’s only recently entered his 30s, and the radiant SWAG shows that he’s still in his pop prime.
Bieber’s seventh album glides between genre touchstones without losing footing, a 20-track album equal parts confidence and confession. Featuring the likes of Gunna, Sexyy Red, and Lil B (and production assists from Dijon, Daniel Caesar, Mk.gee, and longtime collaborator Eddie Benjamin), SWAG leans into the the titular energy of hip-hop without sacrificing soul.
Throughout the mix, Bieber’s voice remains the anchor, tender when it needs to be, silky when it wants to be, and always unmistakably Biebs. Whether touching on smooth R&B, glossy pop, gospel, or even new jack swing, those vocals keep things distinctly warm and human. Tracks like "Go Baby," "Devotion" and "Yukon" are lived-in love songs that transcend cliche and shimmer with emotional clarity. Elsewhere, he plays with texture and tempo, balancing romantic sincerity with the playful energy that first made him a star.
This is Bieber's third nomination for Album Of The Year, with 2022's Justice (Triple Chucks Deluxe) his most recent run at the award. And where that record buoyed and bopped, SWAG has a smoother confidence, the work of someone at peace with their talent and looking to see where it might go next. To that end, the album represents a truly personal reset: it’s Bieber’s first since parting ways with former manager/guru Scooter Braun and his first as a new father.
About a decade and a half since his GRAMMYS debut, Bieber continues to reinvent what pop stardom looks and sounds like. SWAG proves that sometimes evolution comes down to discovering the confidence to sound exactly like yourself.
Sabrina Carpenter — Man’s Best Friend
After conquering pop with Short n’ Sweet, Sabrina Carpenter is already back for another bite. Less than a year after her GRAMMY-winning breakout, the former child star dropped Man’s Best Friend — a sharp, cheeky and emotionally unguarded follow-up that proves lightning can strike twice.
Some stars may have ridden the pop high of Short ‘n Sweet for years, so when Carpenter announced her followup it came as quite the shock. But considering the whirlwind year that accompanied its predecessor, it’s no surprise that the singer decided she had enough inspiration for new material. And despite being inspired by the hectic energy of celebrity life and a public breakup, Man’s Best Friend features an effortless energy that pulses through every synth shimmer and sly one-liner. "I felt so at ease making Man’s Best Friend," she told fans in an email about the record. "This one felt like riding a bike."
Reuniting with writer/producers Jack Antonoff, Amy Allen and John Ryan, Carpenter leans into her signature blend of flirtation and finesse. Across 12 tracks, she unpacks her emotional core with the wit of someone who’s survived love and loss and then tried again. Whether in disco dreamscape, country-pop catharsis or neon pop glow, Man’s Best Friend carries the authenticity, easy charm, and fluid energy of its creator.
The LP carries the sass and sparkle of Short n’ Sweet but balances it with a deepened vulnerability, Carpenter exploring her soft spots without losing her bite. But even at her most vulnerable, there’s always room for a punchline or jab; Carpenter remains delightfully, defiantly herself. With Man’s Best Friend, Carpenter is cementing her place as one of pop’s sharpest tongues: sassy, self-aware, and entirely unstoppable.
Clipse, Pusha T & Malice — Let God Sort Em Out
A lot has happened in the eighteen years since Clipse’s last album, but not the steely intensity of Pusha T and Malice. The brothers’ new album, Let God Sort Em Out, isn’t a reunion tour, it’s a fiery exclamation point reinforcing their place as rap royalty.
Nearly two decades after Til the Casket Drops, Clipse returned to their throne, supported once again by longtime collaborator Pharrell Williams. The result is an uncompromising masterclass that reasserts Clipse’s dominance while peeling back the mask on fame, faith and grief.
Over Pharrell’s stripped-down, diamond-edged production, Clipse show no sign of rust or reunion cash-grab laziness. The album opens with a gut-punch meditation on the loss of their parents and explodes outward, building from a confessional platform to the coke rap bravado that made them legends.
From there, it’s all fire and precision, Pusha and Malice delivering bars with iron fists while Pharrell balances Hell Hath No Fury minimalism with his trademark cinematic flair. Not to mention, the guest list is absolutely stacked, with spots from John Legend, Kendrick Lamar, Nas, The-Dream, and Tyler, The Creator, among others
Let God Sort Em Out proves no one delivers truths quite like Clipse. An Album Of The Year GRAMMYS nomination further establishes their status as one of rap's most incisive acts.
Lady Gaga — MAYHEM
Seven official studio records in, Lady Gaga is still finding ways to bring massive ideas and expression into the pop sphere. Yet MAYHEM works in a controlled chaos unlike anything else in Gaga's catalog. With four Album Of The Year nominations under her belt, the Little Monsters are hoping that MAYHEM will add to her impressive 14 GRAMMYS wins.
MAYHEM shows Gaga deftly wrangling sonic chaos that would fell a lesser artist: She maintains a strong hold on her pop roots, while incorporating dance-floor and disco experimentation of her previous releases. She added that the record is an "integration of who I am in real life and who I am on stage, and how I really started to celebrate bringing those two things together." Rather than characters, MAYHEM feels like a team of Gagas inhabiting the same space, each true and tied to her heart while retaining the frenetic energy of her performative style. The fashion choices surrounding MAYHEM reflected Gaga's harnessing of her varied parts, with the usually color-blasted pop star donning asymmetrical black.
MAYHEM is also a showcase of Gaga’s collaborative alchemy. Her fiancé, Michael Polansky, is listed as an executive producer, while high-profile board whisperers like D'Mile, Andrew Watt, and Cirkut join in the fun. Add to that features from Bruno Mars and Gesaffelstein and you get an album that unites past, present, and future across an impressive 53-minute run-time. Balancing intimate balladry, playful provocation, and electrifying theatrics, MAYHEM celebrates every Gaga out there, both within herself and her listeners.
Kendrick Lamar — GNX
Few people in history have had as good a time at the GRAMMYS as Kendrick Lamar did just last year, with "Not Like Us" netting five golden gramophones. That brought his career total to 22. And now with GNX, surprise-released as 2024 drew to a close, Kenny may already be on the way to growing that total.
The followup to the superb Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers, GNX takes its name from a car model akin to the one that Lamar's father drove when the rapper was a baby. Equally telling, GNX is the first album released by pgLang, the company Lamar founded, without collaboration from his former label home TDE. All said, GNX moves from the outward-pointing Drake feud energy of "Not Like Us" and back into the soul of its author.
GNX isn't without its nimble daggers, finding all the right words to cut at competitors and boast of his superiority. And with the old-school swagger, iconic bars, and expressive production, that superiority feels earned. Lamar also brings along a crew of features from around his Compton home, most notably SZA, Roddy Ricch, and Lefty Gunplay. Production comes courtesy of Sounwave, Kamasi Washington, and even Jack Antonoff. Whether pushing g-funk-indebted synths or more Mustard-y string section goodness, GNX is a celebration, a victory lap, a next step forward, and a building block for even greater things to come.
Leon Thomas — MUTT
No one could have scripted the route that took Leon Thomas to this an Album Of The Year nomination. But after years of shining in whatever project he happens to be in — whether on Broadway, kids' sitcoms, animation or music — Leon Thomas fully stepped into the spotlight with MUTT. His second solo album, MUTT is a bold declaration of artistic autonomy.
After a childhood career in Broadway and Nickelodeon, Thomas announced his foray into solo musicianship in 2012, releasing a promising mixtape that also featured former co-star Ariana Grande. In the years that followed, he amassed a catalog of writing and production credits with Freddie Gibbs, Post Malone, Rich the Kid, Jack Harlow, SZA, Drake, and many more. But Thomas deftly tackled transitioning from in-demand producer back to headlining artist, with MUTT's title track dominating charts.
An impressively cohesive and confident record, MUTT is a fusion of jazz, neo-soul, and rock, rooted in Thomas’ lifelong influences: a wide range from Art Blakey and Miles Davis, to Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin. Across 14 tracks, Thomas blends lush instrumentation and stacked vocals to forge a sound that’s both expansive and intimate. More broadly, MUTT represents the artist’s journey of embracing creative control, breaking genre rules, and owning the narrative of his career.
While Thomas entered the year with a GRAMMY under his belt for his work on SZA's "Snooze," the 2026 GRAMMYS could fully ensconce Thomas as a star in his own right as an R&B visionary capable of rich, genre-defying statements.
Tyler, the Creator — Chromakopia
After entering the public consciousness with the reputation of a button-pushing outsider, Tyler, the Creator has truly blossomed into one of the most unique voices in rap — including Best Rap Album wins for both 2019's Igor and 2021's Call Me If You Get Lost. His Album Of The Year nomination for the hypercharged Chromakopia further solidifies Tyler's ascendancy as hip-hop royalty.
Chromakopia is propelled by self-scouring lyricism, with Tyler revealing emotional depths that so many others are afraid to face — let alone expose to the world. It takes a special kind of artist to do a self-diss track, after all. Throughout the album, Tyler, the Creator and Tyler Okonma (his government name) seem to be in fluid conversation, with Tyler's mother, Bonita Smith, offering diaristic narration. A blend of jazz and soul stylings lends an added dimensionality to that exploration, Tyler knowing when to push thoughtful calm and when to ramp up the intensity.
While Tyler naturally remains the center of the conversation, he brings together an impressive guest list including GloRilla, Doechii, Lil Wayne, Schoolboy Q, and Sexxy Red. Tyler masterfully brings those big personalities together in his own narrative, turning them into a cohesive chorus in support of his vision.
If Tyler's early days were highlighted by controversial aggression and the second era of his life was headlined by wild-eyed, technicolor emotionality, Chromakopia signifies a more precise, introspective take — though, of course, without losing an ounce of the razor-sharp lyricism. It’s tempting to say this isn’t the same Tyler of Odd Future, but the beauty of Chromakopia comes in showing the many facets of Tyler’s brain, coexisting under the microscope.

















