Worry No More (feat. Lil Yachty & Trippie Redd)
Diplo
"Worry No More" exists in a particular corner of 2010s genre collision that felt genuinely strange in the best possible way — Diplo's production splits the difference between trap energy and something looser and more psychedelic, anchored by a bass that wobbles and slides rather than thumping with rigid precision. The beat is spacious in odd places, letting sounds drop out unexpectedly before the low end surges back in. Lil Yachty's verses arrive with his characteristic melodic slur, pitched somewhere between singing and rapping in a way that felt divisive but undeniably distinctive — his delivery is relaxed to the point of seeming half-asleep, which paradoxically gives it an unsettling emotional detachment. Trippie Redd brings his rawer, more abrasive register as contrast, voice pitched high with a roughness underneath that suggests urgency just barely held in check. Together they orbit a familiar theme — insulating yourself from anxiety and external chaos through intoxication, intimacy, or simply checking out — rendered in a way that feels more dreamlike than hedonistic. This track belongs to the SoundCloud rap moment, when genre boundaries dissolved almost entirely and teenagers made music that sounded like it was recorded at 2am by people who didn't care much whether critics understood it. Late-night driving music, or something to blur the edges of an overwhelming day.
medium
2010s
hazy, bass-heavy, loose
American SoundCloud rap, trap crossover
Hip-Hop, Electronic. SoundCloud Rap / Trap. dreamy, detached. Drifts through hazy emotional detachment without building toward resolution, suspending the listener in a dreamlike escape from anxiety.. energy 6. medium. danceability 6. valence 5. vocals: melodic slurred rap, half-sung delivery, raw abrasive contrast between two rappers. production: wobbling sliding trap bass, psychedelic synths, unexpected drop-outs, spacious beat architecture. texture: hazy, bass-heavy, loose. acousticness 1. era: 2010s. American SoundCloud rap, trap crossover. Late-night driving or blurring the edges of an overwhelming day when you want to simply check out.