Latest Release
- 3 JAN 2025
- 1 Song
- Calm Down - Slow Rap & R'n'B · 2014
- Furious 7 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Deluxe Version] · 2015
- Suicide Squad: The Album · 2016
- Rolling Papers · 2010
- Multiverse · 2020
- Location (feat. Ty Dolla $ign) - Single · 2025
- Overexposed · 2012
- Rolling Papers (Deluxe 10 Year Anniversary Edition) · 2010
- Blacc Hollywood (Deluxe Version) · 2014
- That Funk (feat. Wiz Khalifa) - Single · 2024
Essential Albums
- Wiz Khalifa’s breakthrough wafted so casually to the top of hip-hop’s 2011 heap it’s easy to miss how accomplished it actually was. It’s a party-rap album that happily parlays party-rap traditions into modern pop songwriting and production, in ways that helped crack open the conversation for what pop and hip-hop hybrids could be. And at a time when the luxurious melancholy of Drake was starting to cast its long, warm shadow over the culture, Wiz—like Snoop Dogg before him—presented himself as nothing more than a laidback dude looking for a good time. “They say all I rap about is bitches and champagne,” he shrugs on the album-opening “When I’m Gone”. “You would too if every night you seen the same thing.” The difference with Wiz is that you can tell he’s enjoying it. Lyrically, he’s a charm offensive: He’ll be there when you call (“Roll Up”), he loves his camo shorts (“Taylor Gang”) and he wields his endless supply of joints like magic wands that, with a wave, can make the stress of daily life disappear (pretty much every song). But the sheer catchiness of the music—its sing-along choruses (“Black and Yellow”), its synthesiser sparkle (the benny blanco-produced “No Sleep”)—turn even his modest goals into the kind of anthems that elevate partying to a spiritual pursuit. “Know some who say life’s a bitch,” he raps on “The Race”. “Well, I’ma keep flirting.”
- 2023
- 2023
- 2022
Artist Playlists
- His smoke-swirled rhymes pack some surprising emotion.
- Spaced-out imagery and intoxicating visuals.
Compilations
- 2014
- 2013
- Premo Rice & Harry Fraud
- Mr. Green & De Luxe All Stars
More To Hear
- This tribute to Paul Walker is also a tribute to Charlie Puth’s friend.
- An exclusive look inside the Grammy nominee's life and career.
- Fighting talk on the boxer's Chaos Theory album.
- Wiz's "Gin & Drugs" is the Beats 1 Banger, plus 88rising's NIKI.
- The Bronx rapper guests. “Hopeless Romantic" from Wiz Khalifa.
- Wiz on Cam'ron's Come Home With Me.
- Elton John plays some of his favorite duets.
More To See
About Wiz Khalifa
Some rappers want to take over the world; Wiz Khalifa just wants to meet girls, get money and smoke as much weed as his constitution will allow. From the beginning, there was something low-key and effortless about him, a joie de vivre that made his music feel like a party. A military kid, Khalifa (born Cameron Thomaz in 1987) spent most of his childhood bouncing around before settling in Pittsburgh. He started releasing mixtapes around 2005, racking up an increasingly high-profile set of features before breaking through with the back-to-back hit of 2010’s Kush & Orange Juice and 2011’s Rolling Papers. Khalifa has often seemed indifferent to genre, mixing hip-hop with hints of club music and the anthemic quality of great pop. That flexibility made him as likely to show up on a Maroon 5 track as a Chief Keef one. After reaching a pop peak with his 2015 Charlie Puth collaboration “See You Again”—a huge hit from the Furious 7 soundtrack—he has returned to many of his pet themes on subsequent mixtapes and albums, as well as collaborative outings with the likes of Curren$y, Cardo Got Wings, Sledgren, Juicy J, Big K.R.I.T. and Girl Talk. He has also dabbled in acting in both movies and TV, especially with voice work. After all, Khalifa knows that releasing music is only one part of establishing oneself as a successful brand these days. “You can’t just be focused on one thing,” he told Apple Music in 2020. “You have to be a personality.”
- FROM
- US
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap