rap rock

{{Short description|Music genre combining hip hop and rock}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2019}}

{{Use American English|date=September 2018}}

{{Infobox music genre

| name = Rap rock

| other_names =

| image = Urban Dance Squad.jpg

| caption = Urban Dance Squad performing in 2006

| stylistic_origins = {{hlist|Hip hop|rock}}

| cultural_origins = Early to mid-1980s, United States

| instruments =

| derivatives =

| subgenres =

| fusiongenres =

| regional_scenes =

| local_scenes =

| other_topics = {{hlist|Alternative hip-hop|country rap|crunk|emo rap|nu metal|punk rap|rap metal}}

}}

Rap rock is a music genre that developed from the early to mid-1980s, when hip hop DJs incorporated rock records into their routines and rappers began incorporating original and sampled rock instrumentation into hip hop music. Rap rock is considered to be rock music in which lyrics are rapped, rather than sung. The genre achieved its greatest success in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Characteristics

AllMusic characterized rap rock songs as rock songs in which the vocals were rapped rather than sung. AllMusic also states that the rhythms of rap rock are rooted in those of hip hop, with more funk influences than normal hard rock.{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=style|id=rap-rock-ma0000011992|pure_url=yes}} |title=Genre: Rap-Rock |access-date=January 1, 2009 |website=AllMusic}} Session player Eddie Martinez, who created the guitar parts for hip hop group Run-DMC's rap rock song "Rock Box", recognized that "a rap-rock song needn't feature a new change in the chorus; rather, it's a spot where the guitarist can just solo over the same riff that drives the verses."

Rap rock is often conflated with rap metal. While the two styles may appear to have minute differences, AllMusic says that rap rock has "organic, integrated" hip hop elements, while rap metal features "big, lurching beats and heavy, heavy riffs"; the latter also has a tendency to sound "as if the riffs were merely overdubbed over scratching and beat box beats." AllMusic says that old school rap rock had more in common with "hardcore punk or artsy post-punk with breakbeats" than with metal.{{cite web |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/broadcast-to-the-world-mw0000443417 |title=Broadcast to the World Review |last=Anderson|first=Rick |work=AllMusic |access-date=2023-05-10 |quote=there was such a thing as rock-rap fusion -- but it sounded very different from the rap-inflected nu metal of the late '90s. It was more like hardcore punk or artsy post-punk with breakbeats}}

History

=Old school rap rock (1980s to mid-1990s)=

File:Beastie-boys.jpg said that Beastie Boys' album Licensed to Ill "essentially invented rap-rock".]]

Early hip hop DJs utilized breaks from rock records, such as Billy Squier's "the Big Beat", the Monkees' "Mary, Mary" and Steve Miller Band's "Take the Money and Run", in order to "flaunt their vinyl guile". Impressed by post-punk band Public Image Ltd.'s incorporation of dub elements into their music, hip hop artist Afrika Bambaataa collaborated with the band's singer John Lydon on the single "World Destruction". The post-punk and new wave scenes also saw the early rap rock recordings "The Magnificent Seven" and "This Is Radio Clash" by the Clash, influenced by Grandmaster Flash and the Sugarhill Gang, and the new-wave rap song "Rapture" by Blondie.{{cite web|url=http://www.spin.com/2014/02/rap-rock-mook-nation-charles-aaron-september-2005/|title=Rap-Rock: From 'Punk Rock Rap' to Mook Nation|last=Aaron|first=Charles|date=11 February 2014|website=Spin|access-date=19 January 2019}} Although the Cold Crush Brothers' "Punk Rock Rap" did not see much success and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five would wind up being jeered opening for the Clash, Run-DMC saw a crossover audience with their rap rock sound, helping gain rock fans' acceptance of hip hop. Subsequently, Public Enemy would further unite hip hop and punk rock audiences, "with their rough, hard-hitting boom-bap sound resonating with both black kids in the inner cities and white kids in the suburbs".{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20191015-how-todays-rappers-are-resurrecting-the-spirit-of-punk |title=How today's rappers are resurrecting the spirit of punk |last=Hobbs |first=Thomas |date=October 16, 2019 |work=BBC News |access-date=2023-05-10}} Public Enemy brought a punk rock attitude to hip hop; frontman Chuck D cited punk band the Clash's triple album Sandinista! as a release that made him take notice of hip hop.{{cite web |url=https://www.openculture.com/2021/04/how-the-clash-embraced-new-yorks-hip-hop-scene.html |title=How the Clash Embraced New York's Hip Hop Scene and Released the Dance Track, "The Magnificent Dance" (1981) |author=Staff |date=April 29, 2021 |work=OpenCulture |access-date=2023-05-10 }} Another link between hip hop and punk rock was producer Rick Rubin, who split his time between working with hip hop artists Run-DMC and Beastie Boys, and punk-influenced bands like Slayer and the Cult.

Although hip hop music would gain popularity in the 1980s, many dismissed it as either bring a fad, or as a marginal art form which appealed only to urban African Americans.{{cite web |url=https://www.liveabout.com/rap-rock-defined-2898294 |title=What Is Rap-Rock: A Brief History of Rap-Rock |access-date=2023-05-03 |last=Grierson |first=Tim |publisher=liveaboutdotcom}} However, a rap rock collaboration between Run-DMC and the rock band Aerosmith helped diminish such biases. The 1986 single "Walk This Way", a remake of Aerosmith's 1975 rock song, helped bring hip hop into popularity with a mainstream white audience.{{cite news |first=Kelefa |last=Sanneh |title=Rappers Who Definitely Know How to Rock |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE2DB143DF930A35751C1A9669C8B63 |newspaper=The New York Times |date=December 3, 2000 |access-date=December 31, 2008}} It was the first Billboard top ten rap rock success played on radio.{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/13/books/review/walk-this-way-geoff-edgers.html|title=Run-DMC, Aerosmith and the Song That Changed Everything|last=Dreisinger|first=Baz|date=February 13, 2019|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=October 31, 2019|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}} The music video signaled "both a literal and metaphoric merging of hard rock and rap"; the recording revitalized Aerosmith's career. The same year that Run-DMC released "Walk This Way", Beastie Boys released their debut album, Licensed to Ill, "a head-banging party album that enjoyed multi-platinum sales". According to CNN, the album "essentially invented rap-rock",{{cite web | url=https://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/05/showbiz/music/adam-yauch-beastie-legacy-ew/ | title=Beastie Boys' Adam Yauch's musical legacy: Changing all games, all the time | publisher=CNN | date=May 7, 2012 | access-date=June 14, 2016 | last=Anderson |first=Kyle | archive-date=August 9, 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160809120402/http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/05/showbiz/music/adam-yauch-beastie-legacy-ew/ | url-status=live }} as demonstrated by songs like "Rhymin' and Stealin'", which was built around samples from Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, "(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)" and "No Sleep till Brooklyn", which featured guitar playing by Slayer's Kerry King. Also that year, rap rock band Urban Dance Squad formed, and according to AllMusic writer Heather Phares, the band's "mix of rock, rap, funk, ska, folk, hip-hop, and soul signaled the trend toward genre-bending that prevailed in '90s music."{{cite web|url= http://www.allmusic.com/artist/urban-dance-squad-mn0000300752/biography |first= Heather |last= Phares |title= Urban Dance Squad – Artist Biography |publisher= AllMusic. All Media Network |access-date= 25 April 2015}} Public Enemy's 1988 album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back contained a song which sampled Slayer, and in 1991, the hip hop group would re-record their song "Bring the Noise" with the metal band Anthrax, a collaboration Spin deemed to be a weak retread of the "Walk This Way" collaboration.

File:Kid Rock 091211-F-5214S-004.jpg was cited as a bridge between hip hop and rap rock.]]

The 1990s saw rap rock achieving mainstream success. Faith No More reached a large audience with their 1990 hit "Epic", in which the band's singer, Mike Patton, mixed singing and rapping. Rage Against the Machine also saw success with rap rock music influenced by political hip-hop. According to the BBC, 1990s hip hop artists like Ice Cube, DMX and Onyx displayed the punk rock sensibilities of hip hop. This period also saw Beastie Boys reinventing themselves by distancing themselves from the frat boy image they portrayed on their Licensed to Ill album; harkening back to the group's roots in hardcore punk, Beastie Boys began playing live instruments again on their 1992 album Check Your Head, a "groundbreaking record that captured suburban skateboard culture with a goofy melding of rap, rock, funk, and thrash" and this album, along with their follow-up, Ill Communication, demonstrated that rock, hip hop and jazz could coexist on a single album. However, the genre had developed a bad aesthetic reputation, owing to "a series of ill-advised, record-company driven projects" which included the soundtrack album to the film Judgment Night (1993), which featured rock artists collaborating with rappers on every track, the results of which Slate described as being "lumpy and uneven" in its fusion of rap with grunge and metal; Slate wrote, "the subsequent corporate rap rock of the '90s followed the blander, more conservative examples of fusion to be found on Judgment Night." In the book Is Hip Hop Dead? The Past, Present, and Future of America's Most Wanted Music, author Mickey Hess identifies Kid Rock as connecting hip hop music to rap rock, due to the musician having started out as a hip hop artist, before shifting his style from sample-based hip hop to guitar-driven alternative rock that fused hip hop beats, boasting and fashion with hard rock guitar and Southern rock attitude, influenced by classic rock and country music.{{cite book |last=Hess |first=Mickey |title=Hip Hop Dead? The Past, Present, and Future of America's Most Wanted Music |year=2007 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-275-99461-7 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/ishiphopdeadpast00hess_0/page/122 122–123] |chapter=White Rappers |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/ishiphopdeadpast00hess_0/page/122 }} After releasing "two albums of pure Beastie Boys worship", including his first rap rock album, The Polyfuze Method (1993),{{cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/500525/kid-rock-raps-with-the-devil/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180127202414/http://www.mtv.com/news/500525/kid-rock-raps-with-the-devil/|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 27, 2018|title=Kid Rock Raps With The Devil|website=Mtv.com|access-date=9 July 2018}} Kid Rock began to explore his Southern rock influences on Early Mornin' Stoned Pimp (1996), and Devil Without a Cause (1998), the latter of which "extended the lineage of rap-rock" with an album that sold over 14 million copies,{{cite web|url=https://www.biography.com/people/kid-rock-251986|title=Kid Rock|work=Biography |date=December 5, 2019 |access-date=2023-05-10}} and helped to "ignite the rap-rock genre".{{cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/bands/m/metal_meltdown/news_feature_030124/index3.jhtml |title=Nu Metal Meltdown |publisher=MTV |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030201100950/http://www.mtv.com/bands/m/metal_meltdown/news_feature_030124/index3.jhtml |archive-date=2003-02-01 |access-date=2023-04-26}}

=Golden age rap rock (late 1990s)=

{{see also|Nu metal|rap metal}}

The late 1990s has been cited as rap rock's "golden age". Separate from rap rock, but developing popularity around the same time in the late 1990s, was nu metal. Nu metal would ultimately be conflated with rap rock, although the two genres did not have much in common.{{cite web |url=https://www.avclub.com/in-1998-rap-rock-and-nu-metal-really-did-seem-like-the-1828367971 |title=In 1998, rap-rock and nü-metal really did seem like the future |last=Anthony |first=David |date=August 22, 2018 |publisher=The A.V. Club |access-date=2023-05-04}} However, the Woodstock '99 festival and the band Limp Bizkit would wind up linking, as well as shifting critical opinion of both genres from the acclaim they'd initially received to near-universal disdain. The band's frontman, Fred Durst, grew up with hip hop music, and Limp Bizkit would have a stronger connection to rap rock than any previous artist in nu metal, including having former House of Pain turntablist DJ Lethal as part of their line-up. The release of Limp Bizkit's 1999 album Significant Other was pinpointed as a breakthrough for rap rock. Selling more than more than 7 million copies, and featuring the hit single "Nookie" as well as a guest appearance by Wu-Tang Clan rapper Method Man, Significant Other demonstrated the commercial viability of rap rock by "drawing from Rage's metallic aggression and the Beastie Boys' skateboard-slacker attitude". However, Limp Bizkit's performance at Woodstock '99 was linked to festival violence. The festival featured performances by multiple rap rock artists, including Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock, Insane Clown Posse and Rage Against the Machine, all of which were considered the "breakout stars" of the festival.{{cite web |url=https://apnews.com/article/02ef18a69b0fc72cb15063f21900b369 |title=Woodstock Confirms Rap, Rock Wedding |last=Bauder |first=David |date=August 11, 1999 |publisher=Associated Press |access-date=2023-05-04}} However, despite these performances being well received, Limp Bizkit's performance was subject to national controversy as violence and vandalism occurred during and after the band's performance; this included fans tearing plywood from the walls during a performance of their song "Break Stuff".{{cite web |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/19-worst-things-about-woodstock-99-176052/|title=19 Worst Thing About Woodstock '99 |last=Kreps |first=Daniel |date=July 23, 2021 |publisher=Rolling Stone |access-date=2023-05-04}}{{cite book |last1=Devenish |first1=Colin |title=Limp Bizkit |year=2000 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York City|isbn=0-312-26349-X |pages=[https://archive.org/details/limpbizkit0000deve/page/127 127–153] |url=https://archive.org/details/limpbizkit0000deve/page/127 }}{{cite news |first=Alona|last=Wartofsky|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/july99/woodstock29.htm |title=Police Investigate Reports of Rapes at Woodstock |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=July 29, 1999 |access-date=July 21, 2011}}{{cite news |url=http://www.salon.com/1999/07/27/woodstock/ |title=What A Riot |first=Jeff|last=Stark |date=July 27, 1999 |work=Salon |access-date=October 7, 2007}}{{cite news |first=Bill|last=Wyman|url=http://www.salon.com/1999/07/29/rape_4/ |title=Woodstock 99: Three days of peace, love and rape |work=Salon |date=July 29, 1999|access-date=July 28, 2017}} Durst stated during the concert, "Don't let anybody get hurt. But I don't think you should mellow out. That's what Alanis Morissette had you motherfuckers do. If someone falls, pick 'em up." Durst said during a performance of the band's hit song "Nookie", "We already let all the negative energy out. Its time to reach down and bring that positive energy to this motherfucker. Its time to let yourself go right now, 'cause there are no motherfuckin' rules out there."{{Cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR64uNeFuIk&t=44m5s | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150415002611/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR64uNeFuIk&gl=US&hl=en| archive-date=2015-04-15 | url-status=dead|title=Limp Bizkit - Full Concert - 07/24/99 - Woodstock 99 East Stage (OFFICIAL) |publisher=YouTube |access-date=November 9, 2016}} Eyewitnesses also reported a crowd-surfing woman being pulled down into the crowd and assaulted in the mosh pit during Limp Bizkit's set.{{cite news |url=http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/Music/9907/29/woodstock.rape/ |title=Police investigate alleged rapes at Woodstock '99 |date=July 29, 1999 |publisher=CNN |access-date=September 5, 2007}} Widely blamed for inciting the crowd to violence, Durst later stated in an interview, "I didn't see anybody getting hurt. You don't see that. When you're looking out on a sea of people and the stage is {{convert|20|ft|m|spell=in|disp=sqbr|sigfig=1}} in the air and you're performing, and you're feeling your music, how do they expect us to see something bad going on?" Former Limp Bizkit manager Peter Katsis defended Durst in an interview for Netflix's 2022 documentary on the festival, claiming that "pointing the finger at Fred is about the last thing anybody should do. There really isn't a way to control 300,000 people. The best thing he could do is put on the best show possible, and that's what he did.".{{cite AV media | people=Crawford, Jamie (director) | date=August 3, 2022 | title=Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 | type=Motion picture| publisher=Netflix}} Their third album, Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, debuted at number one on the Billboard 200,{{cite magazine |url=http://www.billboard.com/artist/307371/limp-bizkit/chart?f=305 |title=Limp Bizkit - Chart history (Billboard 200) |magazine=Billboard |access-date=January 24, 2017}} selling 1,054,511 copies in its first week of being released,{{cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2000-oct-26-ca-42017-story.html |title=Limp Bizkit Joins an Elite Group as First-Week Album Sales Top 1 Million |work=Los Angeles Times |last=Hilburn |first=Robert |access-date=January 24, 2017 |date=October 26, 2000}}{{cite magazine |url=http://ew.com/article/2000/10/26/limp-bizkit-tops-billboard-album-chart/|title= Limp Bizkit tops the Billboard Album chart |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |last=Seymour |first=Craig |date=October 26, 2000 |access-date=January 24, 2017}} with 400,000 of those copies being sold in the album's first day of release {{cite magazine |url=http://ew.com/article/2000/10/24/limp-bizkit-scores-biggest-sales-debut-ever-rock-band/ |title=Bizkit in Gravy |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |last=Reese |first=Lori |date=October 24, 2000 |access-date=January 24, 2017}} making it the largest first-week sales debut for a rock album in the United States.

Crazy Town was met with more ire from metal purists than any other rap rock band due to looking more like a hip hop crew than a metal band.{{cite book|first=Tommy|last=Udo|title=Brave Nu World|year=2002|publisher=Sanctuary Publishing|isbn=1-86074-415-X|pages=[https://archive.org/details/bravenuworld00tomm/page/187 187–88]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/bravenuworld00tomm/page/187}} Crazy Town's music and image reflected the band members' background in the underground hip hop scene in Los Angeles, anticipating nu metal.{{cite web|url=http://www.laweekly.com/music/everything-you-need-to-know-about-crazy-town-getting-back-together-4643941|title=Everything You Need to Know About Crazy Town Getting Back Together|first=Chaz |last=Kangas|work=L.A. Weekly|date=May 13, 2014|archive-url=https://archive.today/20150812031809/http://www.laweekly.com/music/everything-you-need-to-know-about-crazy-town-getting-back-together-4643941 |archive-date=August 12, 2015}} Their lyrics reflected "one of the most dynamic and volatile sociocultural environments on the planet [...] where the urban squalor of the South Central district exists just minutes away from the glitz of Beverly Hills."{{cite web|last=Nimmervoll|first=Ed|title=Crazy Town - Biography|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/crazy-town-p383978/biography|website=AllMusic|access-date=May 28, 2014}} Rapper KRS-One recorded a guest appearance for the band's debut album The Gift of Game. Although Crazy Town were best known for having a rap metal sound, their biggest hit, "Butterfly", was "decidedly hip-hop".{{cite web |url=http://www.complex.com/music/2013/04/every-no-1-rap-song-in-hot-100-history/butterfly |title=Every #1 rap song in Hot 100 history: "Butterfly" (2001) |last= |first= |date=April 1, 2013 |website= |publisher=Complex |access-date=2023-05-04}} "Butterfly" would be the only Hot 100 hit by a rap rock act.{{cite web |url=https://www.stereogum.com/2199223/the-number-ones-crazy-towns-butterfly/columns/the-number-ones/ |title=The Number Ones: Crazy Town's "Butterfly" |last=Breihan |first=Tom |date=September 14, 2022 |publisher=Stereogum |access-date=2023-05-04}} According to Vulture, the 1990s were capped off by the short-lived late-90s sitcom Shasta McNasty, which encapsulated numerous 1990s trends in its depiction of a fictional rap rock band, brought the genre to primetime.{{cite web |url=https://www.vulture.com/2013/11/how-shasta-mcnasty-brought-rap-rock-to-primetime-and-killed-the-90s.html |title=How 'Shasta McNasty' Brought Rap Rock to Primetime and Killed the 90s|last=Schimkowitz |first=Matt|date=November 18, 2013 |work=Vulture |access-date=2023-05-16}}

=Further developments (2000s to 2020s)=

{{see also|Crunk|crunkcore|emo rap}}

File:Death grips 2014.jpg received acclaim for their 2011 rap rock mixtape Exmilitary.]]

The style of crunk developed by Lil Jon was categorized as a "southern rap take on punk, which prioritised uncomfortably loud horns and repetitive screams." Linkin Park debuted in 2000 with their album Hybrid Theory and would continue to be the most visible rap rock group of the 21st century, going as far as to collaborate with rapper Jay-Z on the 2004 release Collision Course. Subsequently, Kid Rock and Linkin Park's styles changed, with Kid Rock having shifted to a country rock sound.{{cite web|url=http://crypticrock.com/kid-rock-sweet-southern-sugar-album-review/|title=Kid Rock – Sweet Southern Sugar (Album Review) – Cryptic Rock|website=Crypticrock.com|date=November 3, 2017|access-date=February 1, 2018|archive-date=January 27, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180127203327/http://crypticrock.com/kid-rock-sweet-southern-sugar-album-review/|url-status=live}} Hollywood Undead was seen as a revival of the rap rock sound, although they considered themselves a rock band with hip hop influences, rather than a rap rock band. HotNewHipHop said that Kid Cudi blurred the lines between genres with his album Man on the Moon II (2010), which contained collaborations with indie rock artists St. Vincent and HAIM, and would deliver further into rock on his albums WZRD (2012) and Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven (2015).{{cite web |url=https://www.hotnewhiphop.com/119311-kings-of-rock-a-brief-history-of-rap-rock-news |title=Kings Of Rock: A Brief History Of Rap-Rock|last=Fisher|first=Gus |date=August 7, 2018 |work=HotNewHipHop |access-date=2023-05-16 |quote=}} The publication suggested that the negative reception to the latter two albums, as well as Lil Wayne's Rebirth (2010), were "glaring examples of the music media immediately shutting down Black artists for stepping outside of the confines of what is deemed as 'Black music.'" The publication also said that Lil Wayne's use of autotune on the album and its "raw rock attitude" would prove "to be highly influential on the next generation of rap rockstars." By 2011, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that rap rock "seemed [...] dead".{{cite web |url=https://archive.jsonline.com/entertainment/musicandnightlife/125276893.html |title=Hollywood Undead resurrects rap-rock |last=Levy |first=Piet Levy |date=July 10, 2011 |publisher=Milwaukee Journal Sentinel |access-date=2023-05-04 }} However, that year saw the release of several acclaimed rap rock projects, including Wugazi, a mashup mixtape in which raps by Wu-Tang Clan were paired with instrumentals by the band Fugazi,{{cite web |url=https://slate.com/culture/2011/09/in-defense-of-rap-rock-seriously-this-is-a-defense-of-rap-rock.html |title=In Defense of Rap Rock: The only thing from the '90s no one has nostalgia for. |last=Coulter Walls |first=Seth |date=September 9, 2011 |work=Slate|access-date=2023-05-10}} and the rap rock mixtape Exmilitary by the band Death Grips, which "[coupled] contemporary avant-rock techniques with underground rap sonics"; while some of the mixtape's samples and influences were more mainstream, such as a sample of a David Bowie song, most of the mixtape's samples came from American underground bands like Black Flag and Minutemen. Twenty One Pilots composed the rap rock songs "Stressed Out" and "Heathens", which both peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2016.{{cite web|url=https://www.cleveland.com/life-and-culture/g66l-2019/07/12598c2f641421/all-65-twenty-one-pilots-songs-ranked-from-worst-to-best.html|title=All 65 Twenty One Pilots songs ranked from worst to best|publisher=Cleveland.com|last1=Nickoloff|first1=Anne|last2=Smith|first2=Troy|date=July 5, 2019|accessdate=June 4, 2021}}{{cite web | url =http://www.musicnotes.com/sheetmusic/mtd.asp?ppn=MN0164830 | title = Heathens sheet music | website = Musicnotes | date=March 4, 2019}}{{Cite web|last=Corner|first=Lewis|date=2016-08-04|title=Suicide Squad: Villains do a mean soundtrack|url=http://www.digitalspy.com/music/album-reviews/a803394/suicide-squad-album-soundtrack-review/|access-date=2020-11-03|website=Digital Spy|language=en-GB}}{{Cite web|last=McIntyre|first=Hugh|title=Twenty One Pilots' 'Heathens' Is Now The Longest-Running No. 1 Rock Song Of All Time|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/hughmcintyre/2017/02/23/twenty-one-pilots-heathens-is-now-the-longest-running-no-1-rock-song-of-all-time/|date=February 23, 2017|access-date=2020-11-03|website=Forbes}}{{Cite web|last=Lambert|first=Molly|title=And Let Us Now Praise Twenty One Pilots|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/2937771/twenty-one-pilots-are-here-to-stay/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160930165722/http://www.mtv.com/news/2937771/twenty-one-pilots-are-here-to-stay/|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 30, 2016|date=September 29, 2016|access-date=2020-11-03|website=MTV News}}

In 2017, Pitchfork wrote, "if, at some point, you made a name for yourself through combining rap and rock, chances are you either distance yourself vigorously from such efforts now or have learned to adjust to life as a walking joke."{{cite web|url=https://pitchfork.com/features/overtones/the-unlikely-resurgence-of-rap-rock/|title=The Unlikely Resurgence of Rap Rock - Pitchfork|website=pitchfork.com|date=November 13, 2017 |access-date=January 18, 2018}} In 2018, conversely, The A.V. Club wrote that "rap-rock as we once knew it as dead", while HotNewHipHop said that the genre showed "no signs of stopping". The late 2010s saw the emergence of female rap rock artists such as Princess Nokia, Rico Nasty and Bali Baby, diverging from the typically male-dominated rap rock acts of the past.

In 2020, NME writer Kyann-Sian Williams reported a resurgence in rap rock, which fans dubbed "glock rock" due to the unfavorable reputation of rap rock.{{cite web |url=https://www.nme.com/blogs/trippie-redd-lil-uzi-vert-post-malone-machine-gun-kelly-rap-glock-rock-2708429 |title=From Trippie Redd to Lil Uzi Vert, rap-rock is back. And this time, it doesn't suck |last=Williams |first=Kyann-Sian |date=July 15, 2020 |publisher=NME |access-date=2023-04-03 }} Williams cited as representatives of glock rock, Lil Uzi Vert, a punk rock-influenced rapper who identified as a "rockstar" and cited Marilyn Manson as their all-time favorite musical artist, Machine Gun Kelly, a rapper influenced by emo and pop punk, City Morgue, a group that "mixed thrash metal with pulsating 808s", as well as Trippie Redd, Post Malone, Clever and The Kid LAROI. Also emerging in this period was Oxymorrons, a rap rock group described as being "too rock for hip-hop [and] too hip-hop for rock";{{cite web |url=https://www.revolvermag.com/music/rising-rap-rock-crew-oxymorrons-break-down-new-ep-track-track |title=RISING RAP-ROCK CREW OXYMORRONS BREAK DOWN NEW EP TRACK BY TRACK |last=Chichester |first=Sammi |date=September 28, 202 |work=Revolver |access-date=2023-05-10 }} Kerrang! writer Sophie K. described them as "a talented rock band who are able to properly rap with authenticity as well, seamlessly switching between clean vocals, electronics, fuzzy guitars and angsty rap vocals".{{cite web |url=https://www.kerrang.com/now-hear-this-sophie-k-on-rap-metal-and-blue-collar-scottish-punk |title=Now Hear This: Sophie K On The Best New Rap-Metal, Canadian Rock'N'Roll Cool And Blue-Collar Scottish Punk |last=K|first=Sophie|date=September 18, 2020|work=Kerrang! |access-date=2023-05-10}} Rappers dominated the rock charts throughout 2020.{{cite web |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/hughmcintyre/2020/09/07/2020-is-the-year-rap-artists-rule-the-rock-charts/ |title=2020 Is The Year Rap Artists Rule The Rock Charts |last=McIntyre |first=Hugh |date=September 7, 2020 |work=Forbes |access-date=2023-05-04}}

See also

References