Brooklyn drill is a regional
subgenre of
drill music, which is a subgenre of
rap music. It centered in
Brooklyn,
New York, that began as derivative of the drill music scene in
Chicago and later became derivative of
UK drill with its 808 percussion and sliding notes by producers from the UK drill scene.[1][2][3] Brooklyn drill emerged around 2014 with the single "
Hot Nigga" from the rapper
Bobby Shmurda.[4][5] Other early contributors were
Rowdy Rebel, Bam Bino, Money Millz, Dah Dah and Curly Savv.[6]
In 2019, the subgenre was repopularized in the mainstream by rap artist,
Pop Smoke.[7][8][9] With the success of his mixtapes, particularly the songs "
Dior" and "
Welcome to the Party", Pop Smoke introduced Brooklyn drill into the mainstream music industry.[10][11][12]
History
Brooklyn drill music first gained attention with the 2014 single "
Hot Nigga" from the rapper
Bobby Shmurda.[4][5] Other early pioneers were rappers Bam Bino, Dah Dah and Curly Savv.[6] The genre is agreed to have been driven by
22Gz and
Sheff G, largely scaling the potential of the movement.[13] The music became more popular and associated with
UK drill production (from producers such as
808Melo, AXL Beats, and Ghosty) with the releases of 22Gz's "Suburban" in 2016 and Sheff G's "No Suburban" in 2017. Both songs went viral and were credited for the rise of Brooklyn drill.[14][15]
Over time, Brooklyn drill has evolved into a broader drill scene.[29] One example is
Staten Island rapper
CJ, whose hit song "
Whoopty" is reminiscent of the Brooklyn drill sound.[30] Bronx rapper
Ice Spice went viral in 2022 with the song "
Munch (Feelin' U)" before reaching the Hot 100 in 2023 with the tracks "
Gangsta Boo" (with
Lil Tjay) and "
In Ha Mood" from her debut EP
Like..?. "
Princess Diana" from the same EP reached the top 5 from
Nicki Minaj's remix, peaking at #4, and outselling the rest of the Hot 100's top 25 in its first week.[31][32] The duo would go on to have another top 10 that year with "
Barbie World" (with Aqua) from the soundtrack to the 2023 film
Barbie reaching #7.[33] She also reached the top 3 twice that year with her remixes of
Taylor Swift's 2023 single "
Karma" and
PinkPantheress' 2022 single "
Boy's a Liar" reaching #2 and #3, respectively.[34][35]
Characteristics
The Brooklyn drill sound is a combination of
trap,
Chicago drill and
UK drill (the latter of which brings production influences from
grime and
UK garage).[36] Characteristic features of Brooklyn drill production include 808 percussion with manipulated vocal samples.[37][38] The lyrical content of Brooklyn drill music tends to be dark, violent, and aggressive, often discussing gang-related topics.
Criticism
In 2022, some drew connections between the glorification of gun violence in the genre to real-world
gun violence on the streets of New York that had resulted in the deaths of a number of young drill artists, mostly those with origins of Brooklyn and the Bronx.[39][40][41][42][43]
The same year, several prominent New York DJs said they would stop playing
gang/
diss records in response to the deaths of a growing number of young people involved in the drill scene. [44][45][46]
In February 2022, NYC mayor
Eric Adams directed some venue promoters not to allow drill music to be performed at festivals in the city following the killing of 18-year-old rapper C-HII Wvttz.[47] Adams met with musicians for a conversation on how to approach concerns about drill culture's connections, if any, to gun violence. Artists at the meeting included
Maino,
Fivio Foreign,
B-Lovee, CEO Slow, Bucksy Luciano and Bleezy.[48]
Bronx drill[49] is a subgenre of Brooklyn drill music, which uses
uncleared samples of older records instead of
synthesizers like in Brooklyn drill.[50]
Bronx drill originated during the early 2020s in New York (most prominently, in The Bronx), where producers such as Cash Cobain, EPondabeat,[49] WAR,[49] EvilGiane,[49] and others, started re-using older
funk and
soul, and
pop music songs to create modern yet nostalgic sound. A number of rappers subsequently joined the scene, most prominently,
Kay Flock,
B-Lovee,
Ron Suno, DThang Gz, Jay5ive and others.[50]
The easily recognizable samples in Bronx drill are also said to increase its viral potential. Songs, such as B-Lovee's "My Everything" (sampling "Everything" by
Mary J. Blige)[49] gained over 400,000 uses on
TikTok and produced two remixes, featuring
A Boogie wit da Hoodie and
G Herbo. Another early
TikTok viral Bronx drill hit was "Deep End Freestyle" (sampling Fousheé's "Deep End") by Brooklyn native
Sleepy Hallow. Despite playing a huge role in genre's spread, Cash Cobain refused to acknowledge that Bronx drill musicians mostly do songs for TikTok.[50] EPondabeat, another producer involved in the scene, claimed that sampling in used for marketing purpose to invoke listener's relatability.[49]
Bronx drill rappers employ a variety of lyrical delivery styles, with those in the Bronx drill scene using a particularly aggressive style. "These little kids from the Bronx are wild. They on demon time. They're angrier with their shit," one producer said.[50]
Samples for Bronx drill come from a variety of sources and these sources may differ depending on producer. Bronx-based Cash Cobain mainly uses round-the-century
contemporary R&B and
hip hop music sources;[49][51] meanwhile, EPondabeat, EvilGiane prefer to use
soul music and
funk recordings for sampling; other producers, such as WAR, do not limit themselves among sampling sources.[49]
Most Bronx drill songs are not granted clearance to sample other works until they've already gained popularity, with some artists saying they don't care to clear their samples at all.[50][51]