ALBUMCrazyndalazdayzTear Da Club Up Thugs & Three 6 Mafia
ALBUMChapter 2: World DominationThree 6 Mafia
ALBUMThe EndThree 6 Mafia
Three 6 Mafia's Popular Music Videos
Stay Fly
Three 6 Mafia
Sippin On Some Syrup (feat. UGK & Project Pat)
Three 6 Mafia
Lolli Lolli (Pop That Body) [feat. Project Pat, Young D & Superpower]
Project Pat, SuperPower, Three 6 Mafia & Young D
Doe Boy Fresh (feat. Chamillionaire) [Official Video]
Three 6 Mafia
Ballers (feat. Juvenile, The Big Tymers, Hot Boyz & Three 6 Mafia)
Project Pat
Who Gives A F**K Where You From
DJ Kay Slay, Frayser Boy, Lil Wyte & Three 6 Mafia
Baby Mama (feat. La Chat )
Three 6 Mafia
Poppin' My Collar (feat. Project Pat)
Three 6 Mafia
Side 2 Side
Three 6 Mafia
Poppin' My Collar (feat. Project Pat) [Edited Version]
Three 6 Mafia
Artist Playlists
Three 6 Mafia Essentials
Choice cuts from the unbreakable down-south trail blazers.
Inspired by Three 6 Mafia
Rumbling synths with extra Southern swash.
Three 6 Mafia: Deep Cuts
They counted a diverse list of rappers among their ranks.
Artist Biography
It’s hard to imagine what music would sound like today without Three 6 Mafia. Their blood-curdling, progressive proto-trap and machine-gun flows have soaked into and defined the contemporary consciousness of hip-hop and pop. Their story as a collective traces back to 1991, when Memphis-based brothers DJ Paul and Lord Infamous formed the Backyard Posse with Juicy J. But like supervillains, each of the six Mafia members has an origin story worth its own book. The throughline among them? A dedication to the art and science of rap music. Even before the Backyard Posse linked up with Koopsta Knicca, Gangsta Boo, and Crunchy Black, they all were already dynamic MCs, producers, and DJs with a deep catalog of locally distributed cassettes. As the group entered the new millennium, the murky, horror-inspired sound that began with their 1995 underground classic, Mystic Stylez, would reach a global audience. They became progenitors of hip-hop’s blinged-out crunk phase, defined by the trunk-rattling When the Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1. A string of party-starting, genre-defining singles would follow, as well as arguably their biggest legacy: the rise of trap music, which would spread from the Deep South across the country. “Hard Out Here For a Pimp” earned them an Academy Award (!!!) for Best Original Song in 2006, as the world woke up to their impact.