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AV Club: Horrorcore is rap’s monstrous creation that refuses to die

AV Club has released a very well written article about the origins of horrorcore. Seeing as most of the underground music we cover on this website is also horrorcore related, let’s get it posted up.

At the very beginning of the article the author straight up states that “horrorcore is not cool” mostly because of the Insane Clown Posse. Keep that in mind when reading it.

The origins begin with campy horror movie style rap like Fat Boys, DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince, and even the track “Chuckie” by Geto Boys. Eventually the Geto Boys definitely evolved with their horror themes.

The article touches on Esham, Big L, Necro, Three 6 Mafia, Gravediggas, Eminem, Tyler The Creator, DMX, and even RZA and Prince Paul.

One wack part of the article is that it basically states that Horrorcore was cool up until ICP came out. Now when you Google “Horrorcore” all you get are clown painted rappers that aren’t even associated with ICP.

I for one think that ICP took the horrorcore brand, flipped it on it’s head and created the Wicked Shit. Which to most is the same thing as horrorcore but when I imagine them both for some reason I feel like they belong in different categories. ICP is the Wicked Shit.

You can check out the full article over at AVClub.com by CLICKING HERE or you can check that out below.

Props to Clayton Purdom.

Horrorcore is rap’s monstrous creation that refuses to die

Let us begin with the obvious: Horrorcore is not cool. The rap sub-genre’s most widely reputed practitioner is Insane Clown Posse, about whom I do not need to supply a critical opinion. Horrorcore is thought of as a turn-of-the-millennium cultural misstep, directly adjacent to rap metal and tribal tattoos. Many of the genre’s practitioners studiously avoid the term itself, preferring to call it “death rap,” “acid rap,” or in ICP’s inimitable phrasing, “the wicked shit.” In an earlyRolling Stone story, Odd Future was referred to by the fell epithet, leading Tyler, The Creator to end “Sandwitches” by declaring that the group is not, in fact, horrorcore. (It is—more on that later.) But no matter what we want to call it, this weird intersection of rap and horror has remained evergreen, and not just because its scores have provided such fertile ground for sampling. Much of the most lauded hip-hop music of the past year, in fact, has been explicitly born out of trashy goth and death metal, full of paeans to Satan and transgressive violence. Rap and horror are twain ideas, merging and reassembling throughout the years in a way that illuminates both.

The oldest versions of the idea were corny flirtations with the theme: Tracks like Fat Boys’ “Are You Ready For Freddy,” DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince’s “A Nightmare On My Street,” or even Geto Boys’ “Chuckie” were all minor-key riffs on specific movies. These were songs made in the wake of “Thriller,” popcorn-tossing evocations of date night as much as tributes to their filmic inspirations. Elsewhere, the Geto Boys explored better, more transgressive horror-themed raps, like the paranoid hallucinations of “Mind Playing Tricks On Me” or the knife-flashing necrophilia of “Mind Of A Lunatic.”

As hip-hop entered its golden age throughout the early and mid-’90s, horrorcore got better and more specific. Esham transformed crack-ravaged Detroit into a series of influential records, starting with the excellently named Boomin’ Words From Hell, while Big L big-upped Satan on his first single, “Devil’s Son.” Tracks like these helped to crystallize the horrorcore style, with hard drums, minor-key samples, explicit (if stereotypical) references to Satanism, and a lyrical obsession with taboos like rape, torture, and necrophilia.

It’s tempting to contextualize this envelope-pushing violence as something more explicitly political, as if all of these rappers were burying an understandable rage within images of unconscionable cruelty—a sort of Romero-style subversion of exploitation. But the music doesn’t always back that up. This is, more commonly, horror of the slasher or giallo variety, fixated upon the pulse-quickening possibilities of evil, as well as the aesthetic opportunities that violence and the paranormal afford.

Two mid-’90s albums defined these ideological threads better than any other. In 1994, Gravediggaz’ debut 6 Feet Deep found RZA and Prince Paul collaborating at the peak of their powers along with Stetsasonic’s Frukwan, plus, um, a fourth guy. The result was dusty, violent, funny, and endlessly inventive, valorizing bad PCP trips and imagining a suicide hotline that talked you into it. A year later, Memphis’ Three 6 Mafia released its eerie, lo-fi debut Mystic Stylez, a druggy exploration of 35mm, oversaturated haunted-house music. It’s an album of almost ambient violence, its warbling synths a red fog that creeps in from underneath your door and subtly normalizes its lyrical malevolence, like the gradually transforming worlds of Jacob’s Ladder or Silent Hill.

It’s after those high points that the conventional narrative of horrorcore goes off the rails. Insane Clown Posse has been around since the early ’90s, but it became a phenomenon in 1997 with the release of The Great Milenko—an album that crystallized an era and a variety of tastelessness that’s come to define horrorcore. Google the term and you’ll be greeted with endless images of bargain-bin evil-clown rappers who aren’t even affiliated with ICP. It’s worth remembering that all of hip-hop was going through a crisis of jigginess in the late-’90s, and that horrorcore was just one of many affectations trotted out as the golden age crash-landed into the shiny-suit era. DMX appeared in a bathtub full of blood and guested with Marilyn Manson; Eminem spent six minutes murdering his wife on his best-selling albums, and also had Marilyn Manson show up in the video for his most Carpenteresque track. (People were very scared of Marilyn Manson at the time.)

It was an era defined by very few major musical throughways—Clear Channel, MTV, Best Buy—all of which were undermined eventually by the internet. Underground rap, which was flourishing as a response to the artistic paucity of this stuff, provided much better listening, and it also flirted with horrorcore, as on Necro’s over-the-top Gory Days and Cage’s Suspiria-sampling “Weather People.”

The rest of the ’00s were dominated by true believers still working within the proven horrorcore format, chugging away with their clown makeup and brutal revenge fantasies. But something strange happened at the dawn of this decade: Horrorcore resurfaced as a sort of J-horror digital-era echo of its old self, the violence submerged behind obfuscating walls of poorly compressed noise. The “witch house” rush of 2010 was derided at the time as micro-genre overload (R.I.P. seapunk, night bus, glo-fi, etc.), but tracks like Salem’s “Trapdoor” laced blown-out EDM and even druggier DJ Screw effects into the Mystic Stylez tableau.

Seven years later, those same aesthetics—full of digital ephemera, nihilistic violence, glib Satanism, and distorted creepypasta production—are still confounding the rap establishment. Critics have spent much of 2017 grappling with SoundCloud rap like Wifisfuneral and Ski Mask The Slump God, not to mention variants like the goth-emo Ghostemane and the thrashy Ho99o9 Death Kult. SpaceGhostPurrp is the foremost of a whole host of Floridian Laveyan Satanists, who since 2012, have maintained an eerie, spectral presence on the outskirts of the mainstream. And while these artists explored the sonic possibilities of horrorcore, Odd Future also crawled out of the internet at the dawn of this decade to riff on its lyrical possibilities. Little of that early Odd Future stuff is truly worthwhile—at least, depending on who you ask and just how rewarding you find jokes about rape over sub-Neptunes production. But it eventually led to at least one haunted masterpiece in the form of Earl Sweatshirt’s I Don’t Like Shit, I Don’t Go Outside.

Odd Future, of course, later disavowed that style, most of the crew moving on to less violent and more critically well-received music, all of which only reiterates the point: Horrorcore will never be cool. It’s a sort of cringe-worthy phase rappers go through, or something for critics to mistakenly apply to “better” artists. Currently, it’s a pall that hangs over all coverage of SoundCloud rap, which treats it as a sort of juvenilia worth listening to with some level of academic disinterest.

But this is also true of horror filmmaking, often considered a baser genre to be cycled through or dabbled in for fun before directors move on to more serious, sober works. There’s always a temptation to enjoy pulp and genre artwork with air quotes around them, relegated to a single season of the year or even of life—and indeed, even when performed with almost comic exaggeration, horrorcore rap doesn’t really hold up to a sustained listening bender. But it’s worth taking seriously in the context of hip-hop, the same as horror filmmaking is to film, with a ripe vein of artistic malevolence running through its entire life cycle. SoundCloud rap and its murky, violent ilk will inevitably die—maybe soon, probably violently—but the specter of horrorcore will lurk around long afterward. If you’ve watched horror movies, you know the only certainty is that the monster always comes back.

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    Faygoluvers Comments

  1. Cherryfuzz

    Cherryfuzz

    Comment posted on Saturday, October 21st, 2017 12:20 pm GMT -5 at 12:20 pm

    This article is retarded on multiple levels. For one , most of the people who are reading this article probably like ICP but the author immediately shits on them in the first sentence which is gonna turn away a lot of his readers. This dude needs to get his facts right. Esham invented the “Wicked shit” not horror core. You ask him what his style was he’ll tell you the wicked shit (or acid rap). And where the fuck is any mention of Brotha Lynch Hung? Figured you probably do t even know who he is… do some hw punk, idc if you don’t like Icp but by saying that your automatically turning away a strong percentage of your readers

  2. kukluxklown

    kukluxklown

    Comment posted on Saturday, October 21st, 2017 12:48 pm GMT -5 at 12:48 pm

    Anybody that raps about gore or fake ass horror movie gimmicks is stale as fuck.
    ICP fused comedy with occult magic.

    Psychadelic Acid and Occult magic rap music is very dope.

    Wicked ‘shit’ is dead

  3. TheFvckinKreeper

    TheFvckinKreeper

    Comment posted on Saturday, October 21st, 2017 02:57 pm GMT -5 at 2:57 pm

    Horrorcore is not cool, guise.
    It’s, just like, so totally not cool. That can’t be stated enough.
    It’s totally a phase your favorite rappers go through. An *uncool* phase. Totes cringey you guise.

    Bitch, you think we don’t know that? Like a ninja gets into this shit to show off how well adjusted they are, ’cause the first thing fans of the genre are concerned with is what people think of them. You don’t like it stay the fuck out the basement, coolbro. Might not like what you see.

    Every Halloween these articles come around, I swear.

  4. scruffy

    scruffy

    Comment posted on Saturday, October 21st, 2017 03:41 pm GMT -5 at 3:41 pm

    ask this guy what he does for fun, he says ‘i collect souvenir snow globes and listen to philip glass at very low volume.’

  5. Robocop

    Robocop

    Comment posted on Saturday, October 21st, 2017 11:19 pm GMT -5 at 11:19 pm

    If painting my face and rapping about murder to release my inner demons isn’t cool then I don’t know what is….kids these days with their mumble rap.

  6. Rizzle

    Rizzle

    Comment posted on Monday, October 23rd, 2017 08:03 am GMT -5 at 8:03 am

    IDGAF what normies think. They can suck my taint. “Oh we don’t like your music”…. SO??

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