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Onefour have been labelled Australia's first drill rappers, [1] [9] with a sound heavily derivative of UK drill music, with the group incorporating UK drill's production style. [10] [9] However, they have a unique sound, which represents a Western Sydney subculture where young men are "lads", "earchers" or "eshays".
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Australian hip-hop traces its origins to the early 1980s and was initially largely inspired by hip-hop and other urban musical genres from the United States. [1] [2] [3] As the form matured, Australian hip hop has become a commercially viable style of music that is no longer restricted to the creative underground, with artists such as Onefour, Hilltop Hoods, Kerser and Bliss n Eso and having ...
On 8 April 2021, "Presto" received a nomination in the Hip Hop / Rap category at the 2021 Queensland Music Awards. [6] On 26 November 2021, they performed a cover of the Notorious B.I.G.'s song "Mo Money Mo Problems" for Australian youth broadcaster Triple J's Like a Version segment, in addition to a performance of their song "German". [7]
Drill lyrics typically reflect life on the streets, and tend to be gritty, violent, realistic, and nihilistic. Drill rappers use a grim, deadpan delivery, [33] often filtered through Auto-Tune, influenced by the "stoned, aimless warbling of Soulja Boy (one of the earliest non-local Keef collaborators) and Lil Wayne before him."
Rolling Loud New York is scheduled to take place at Citi Field in Queens, New York this weekend, but three drill rappers initially expected to perform have been axed from the lineup.
This is a category for singers who are known for their appearances in hip-hop songs and singers who are members of hip hop acts otherwise populated by rappers, as well as rappers who sing and vice versa. Australia portal
New York prosecutors accused Sheff G, a prominent Brooklyn drill rapper, of using his music money to promote killings between alleged gang members.