Latest Release
- 26 JUL 2024
- 1 Song
- mainstream sellout · 2022
- mainstream sellout · 2022
- Beautifully Broken (Pickin’ Up The Pieces) · 2024
- Lonely Road - Single · 2024
- sun to me - Single · 2024
- BMXXing - Single · 2024
- genre : sadboy - EP · 2024
- genre : sadboy - EP · 2024
- genre : sadboy - EP · 2024
- genre : sadboy - EP · 2024
- 2024
- 2024
- 2024
- 2024
- 2024
Artist Playlists
- A Midwest rapper with eclectic taste and outsize swagger.
More To Hear
- Mark talks with Machine Gun Kelly about Downfalls High.
- The band on "Fallin," plus a World First from Purity Ring.
- Travis Scott breaks down "FRANCHISE" and working with M.I.A. and Young Thug.
- The Cleveland rapper drops his new song, "why are you here."
- In-depth discussions on Hotel Diablo and the MC's career so far.
- Featuring Bebe Rexha, Machine Gun Kelly, and Imagine Dragons.
- The British singer helps count down Apple Music's biggest songs.
More To See
About mgk
In an interview with Apple Music about his 2019 album, Hotel Diablo, Machine Gun Kelly described the night he hit bottom. He was in the kitchen, his daughter asleep in the next room. “I just had no serotonin in my body left to give me any type of motivation or happiness,” he said. “I realise that I wanted all this”—his circumstance, his art, his life—“to go away.” He didn’t die that night. But he did write a song about trying to (“Glass House”). It’s not an easy listen—at one point, he passes out with blood dripping on the floor. But the same extremes that can make Kelly’s music unsettling have also made him a beacon for his fans, the kind of artist who shines light in the darkest corners of his mind. Born Richard Colson Baker in 1990, to missionary parents in Houston, Kelly was raised primarily in Cleveland, a city whose atmosphere of crime and post-industrial decay formed a backdrop for his tracks. Drugs, childhood trauma, self-negation: Kelly’s music never offers an easy way out. But as bleak as it can be, there’s a sense of catharsis to it, too, bridging the grit of hip-hop with the melodic quality of pop-punk and nu-metal—the spoonful of sugar that makes Kelly’s bitter pill go down. Is it rap? Is it rock? Nirvana, LINKIN PARK, or Eminem? To Kelly’s generation—including peers like Trippie Redd and the late Juice WRLD—the distinction is antiquated. They’re here for the feeling. Or at least the promise of letting the feeling out.
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap