Three 6 Mafia, the legendary Memphis rap group consisting of DJ Paul, Juicy J, Lord Infamous, Crunchy Black, Gangsta Boo, and Koopsta Knicca, fundamentally altered the landscape of Southern Hip-Hop. Their dark, menacing production—laden with horrorcore themes, slow-tempo trap beats, and chopped-and-screwed influences—influenced generations of artists from ASAP Rocky to Travis Scott.
: Cleaner production values with a cinematic, apocalyptic atmosphere. Key Tracks : "Late Nite Tip", "Body Parts". 3. Chapter 2: World Domination (1997)
The soundtrack to their independently produced film. It's a cohesive project that showcases the chemistry between the members and their ability to create thematic, cinematic rap. 9. Da Unbreakables (2003) Three 6 Mafia Discography - 320 -12 Albums--RAP...
Three 6 Mafia: Another crucial act in the development of Phonk, Three 6 Mafia's dark, horrorcore-inspired beats and grim lyrics ha... Tear Da Club Up Gangsta Boo
: This album served as a bridge, landing the group their first gold record. It shifted from horrorcore to what fans often call "fight music," characterized by high-energy, club-ready aggression. www.revolt.tv The Mainstream Breakthrough Three 6 Mafia, the legendary Memphis rap group
Key albums by Three 6 Mafia include 'Mystic Stylez', 'When the Smoke Clears', and 'Most Known Unknown'. Each album showcases their... Mystic Stylez Sippin’ on Some Syrup
Driven by a sped-up, haunting vocal sample from Willie Hutch, the track became a global smash hit and an indelible piece of mid-2000s pop culture. Key Tracks : "Late Nite Tip", "Body Parts"
"Tear Da Club Up '97", "Hit 'Em", "Late Nite Tip (Remix)". The Hypnotize Minds Expansion (2000–2003) When the Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1 (2000)
: This is arguably their most polished work. It contains "Stay Fly" and "Poppin' My Collar"—tracks that sound incredible in high-fidelity audio due to DJ Paul and Juicy J’s masterful layering of soul samples and crisp 808s.
A soundtrack for their direct-to-video film. It leaned into comedic and radio-friendly themes. Highlights: "2-Way Freak," "Baby Mama". Da Unbreakables (2003):