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4[[quoteright:350:[[Music/{{Ludacris}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/money_maker_2_1.png]]]]
5->''"You diss me out of pride\
6But when you're finished talking about money and bitches you're simply out of rhymes."''
7-->-- '''Canibus''', "Levitibus"
8
9Glam Rap isn't so much a genre as it is a label for hip-hop with lyrical content about the rapper [[BoastfulRap bragging about their expensive rich-person lifestyle]], a style which originated [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfHipHop in the '80s]] and became ubiquitously popular in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium 2000s]]. Expect the music videos to feature the following motifs: [[BigFancyHouse sprawling mansions]]; [[CoolBoat long, luxury yachts]]; [[CoolCar exotic, six-figure sports cars and luxury cars]]; {{pimped out car}}s with big DUB rims (which may or may not be [[SpectacularSpinning spinning]]) and/or lowrider hydraulics; tons of {{stripperific}} models [[ThreeMinutesOfWrithing gyrating]] by the large infinity pool with glasses full of champagne; plus lots of big, gaudy jewelry and [[BillionaireWristband expensive watches]].
10
11Despite its reputation for being mindless party music, GlamRap is [[ConsciousHipHop not without social commentary]]. Many glam rappers are praised for writing thoughtful songs that link their wealth to their pride in [[RagsToRiches overcoming oppressive poverty and racism]], or to the rise of HipHop culture overall.
12
13Some rappers are also praised for using the subject matter as raw material for skilled wordplay -- [[Music/EricBAndRakim Rakim]] and Big Daddy Kane are pioneering and innovative rhymers who mostly wrote about getting money, Music/JayZ spent a decades-long career building a drug-dealer-turned-HonestCorporateExecutive persona with nuanced and clever writing, and Cash Money Records alum Music/LilWayne uses a unique, [[{{Improv}} improvised]] HurricaneOfPuns style to write songs about cash and sex. Many female rappers (and pop stars inspired by hip-hop) that emerged in TheNewTens use obsession with shopping and luxury goods to create {{Camp}}y diva personas that appeal to an LGBTFanbase.
14
15From the "Shiny Suit Era" Music/SeanCombs-mentored acts of the 90s, to the [[CondemnedByHistory ringtone rap]] craze of the 2000s, to {{autotune}}d teens in TheNewTens [[TheUnintelligible slurring]] about owning luxury items they obviously don't have, the subgenre attracts a lot of heat. A lot of listeners don't agree that materialism is something to celebrate (or, if they don't have any money, find the songs impossible to relate to), and may feel wealth-bragging has crowded out more socially conscious topics on the radio. While wealth-bragging is still a popular topic, the GlamRap style became less dominant on the radio starting from the middle of TheNewTens, with darker and more emotional topics like relationships and mental health becoming popular (although many artists did both these songs ''and'' glam rap, such as Music/JuiceWRLD).
16
17There is a lot of overlap with GangstaRap, and Gangsta Rap's subgenres GFunk and TrapMusic, as many of these artists have a dark side. In fact, Glam Rap is arguably a KinderAndCleaner version of Gangsta Rap that evolved to get through radio censorship -- skipping over the controversial violence and political/religious/[[{{Horrorcore}} horror]] themes often found in Gangsta Rap leaves only the part of the story where the criminal is [[DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster enjoying the spoils of their crimes]]. However, a lot of Gangsta Rap is unglamorous and concerned with survival, and a lot of Glam Rap is about getting rich from a legitimate music career.
18
19The 2000s version of the genre can be seen as rap's analogue to the unapologetically commercial and hedonistic HairMetal that dominated the [[HeavyMetal metal]] scene (and rock music in general) in TheEighties, and the antithesis to the old-school hip-hop that came out of that era. The names are even similar -- one of the most common alternative names for hair metal (and which happens to be the one in use at Website/TheOtherWiki) is "glam metal".
20
21----
22!!Examples:
23
24[[index]]
25* Music/DrDre
26* Music/FiftyCent
27* Big Daddy Kane
28* Ja Rule [[note]] He was originally a hardcore {{gangsta rap}}per, so this change was very jarring to some people.[[/note]]
29* Music/JayZ:
30** His song "Big Pimpin"
31** ''Watch The Throne'', his album with Music/KanyeWest, was called "luxury rap" by the music press and is mostly about the two men indulging in the billionaire lifestyle.
32* Music/EricBAndRakim
33** ''Music/PaidInFull'' (1987)
34* Music/LilKim
35* Music/TheLonelyIsland's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avaSdC0QOUM&ob=av3e "I'm On a Boat"]] is a parody of this. [[/index]]
36* Mars ILL's "Glam Rap" is the [[/index]] [[TropeNamers trope namer]]. [[index]]
37* Music/{{Nelly}}: He has recorded a number of songs that involving living luxuriously and owning expensive items.
38* P. Diddy, of course.
39* This was Cash Money Records' whole shtick.
40** Music/LilWayne
41** Music/NickiMinaj
42* Music/{{PSY}}, especially with his most popular song "Music/GangnamStyle"
43* Music/RickRoss
44* Music/TheNotoriousBIG -- primarily a GangstaRap artist but has some songs in this genre (due to the encouragement of Music/SeanCombs). "Juicy", his BreakoutHit, is considered a masterpiece of the Glam Rap genre.
45[[/index]]
46
47----
48!!Tropes associated with Glam Rap:
49
50* BillionaireWristband -- Watch brags are common.
51* ConspicuousConsumption -- Basically the entire point of the genre.
52* DeathByMaterialism -- While its serious version is a GangstaRap trope, funnier Glam Rap songs sometimes throw this in for hyperbolic punchlines about the sheer scale of the wealth involved (rappers wearing so much ice they freeze to death, and so on).
53* GoldDigger -- The materialistic girlfriend personas used by many female glam rappers.
54* HardWorkFallacy -- A common way of justifying the consumption is that the rappers worked that much harder than anyone else, because if they hadn't, they wouldn't be richer than everyone else.
55* MealTicket -- Many a Glam Rap MisogynySong has been written about the kind of women who go after rich men. But many female glam rappers play characters who see men this way, [[PlayedForLaughs for laughs]].
56* MockMillionaire -- It's common that young rappers just starting out write songs full of money brags, because that's what they hear on the radio, while still a broke BurgerFool. Bhad Bhabie in particular was mocked for rapping about owning luxury cars while too young to drive.
57* MoneyFetish -- Some songs are about getting money to the exclusion of the things that can be done with the money.
58* MoneySong -- By definition.
59* OnlyInItForTheMoney -- Many Glam Rappers brag about only making music to get paid, but often with tongue in cheek.
60* RagsToRiches -- Even if not specifically mentioned in songs, this is the subtext that makes Glam Rap meaningful.
61* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney -- Songs are often about rappers using their cash to get away with outrageous or criminal things... or, sometimes, to do nice things for other people.
62
63----
64!! Parodies:
65
66[[foldercontrol]]
67
68[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
69* Dr. Evil's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jZiKFLL6MI&t=20s rap]] in the third ''Film/AustinPowers'' film parodies glam rap, which takes place while he's in prison. It's never explained where he and Mini-Me got the costumes, the props or the scantily-clad women for the "video", or where they went after the end of the track.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Music]]
73* Music/{{Eminem}} generally avoids wealth boasting (except as threat), but he's parodied it on occasion.
74** Eminem's [[CreatorBreakdown writer's block phase]] in the mid-to-late 2000s was related to the saturation of this style of music on the radio, which he hated for its lack of craft. He wrote numerous [[{{Satire}} extremely mean-spirited satires]] of this style during this time, including many that were ghostwritten for other artists but rejected, which have been bundled by fans into the ''King Mathers'' bootleg album. One notable example is "Ballin' Uncontrollably", in which Slim Shady sneers about his car:
75---> I got so much candy paint in my rims\
76Paint be flyin' off my car be candy paintin' the neighborhood kids ''[...]''\
7732 inch rims, shit, I ain't even got no wheels\
78Custom-fitted, custom-kitted wood grain\
79Custom everything, what's that on the seat? Custom mustard stain\
80Now let's go hit the mall, y'all know that we finna ball\
81Get out the car, they be like, "Ah, there go them superstars!"\
82Hit every single store, flash a fuckin' wad of cash\
83But [[CardCarryingJerkass I ain't buying shit, bitch, kiss my candy-painted ass]]...
84** "Elevator" is a sardonic wealth-boasting song about him living in an [[AlienGeometries impossibly enormous house]] 'with a fuckin' elevator'... into which Shady invites the fans who hassle him all day, cuts the cable, and goes to the kitchen to make a snack while he waits for them to fall to their death.
85** Eminem began making less ironic wealth brags in his music circa ''Music To Be Murdered By'', though usually in the context of screaming at people who consider him a hasbeen.
86** "Killer":
87--->Now count it, five, ten, yeah, fifteen, twenty\
88Twenty-five, thirty, yeah, get the money\
89Throw it in the furnace, yeah, this shit be funny\
90Earn it just to burn it
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Music Videos]]
94* Music/MonsterMagnet's video for "Space Lord" is a parody of glam rap videos in general and Puff Daddy's in particular. For the sake of humorous contrast, the first minute or so of the video is stark, dimly lit, and artsy, parodying SurrealMusicVideo tropes prevalent in contemporary AlternativeRock videos.
95* Music/AphexTwin's video "Windowlicker" parodies glam rap.
96* Music/HoboJohnson's song and video "Subaru Crosstrek XV" parodies the "flashy cars and money" aspect of Glam Rap. Hobo raps about getting a new car, but he highlights the fact that he can't afford a Bentley and mocks people who get flashy cars for status reasons. The video features a lot of silly dancing next to, but not touching, expensive sports cars, and features glam rap-type car posing in a tamer Subaru, featuring the all-male band instead of some flashy cars.
97[[/folder]]
98
99
100[[folder: Theatre]]
101* Theatre/{{Six}} has a send up in this trope in Ann of Cleves song "Get Down". Ann of Cleves sings about her life of luxury in a similar style to Glam Rap... But with luxuries that were common in the sixteenth century such as, hunting dogs, fast horses, and golden crosses. Ann of Cleves has the happiest song in the show because of the wealth she gained after Henry divorced her, so it doubles as a strange FemaleEmpowermentSong as Ann celebrates not needing Henry or any other man anymore.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Western Animation]]
105* Parodied on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' where it was used as a GainaxEnding to the episode "Pranksta Rap".
106[[/folder]]
107

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