Gucci Mane All Mixtapes - Top

The Resurrection After a short hiatus, Gucci returned in 2012 with Trap God, the first of a legendary series. This tape featured a then-unknown Future on "Trap God" and Young Thug on "That’s All On A Bitch." This is the prequel to modern trap. The beats are darker, the flow is slower, and the presence is menacing.

The Holiday Classic The only legitimate trap Christmas mixtape in history. Released Christmas Day 2014, Gucci raps over "Jingle Bells" and "Silent Night" with the same menace as a drug deal. It sounds like a joke, but it’s genuinely one of his most creative projects. "I’m the Grinch who stole your presents and your bitch."


The Origin Story Technically a studio album for some, a mixtape in spirit. This is ground zero. Before the lean, before the legal troubles, there was "Icy." This project defined the Atlanta "Trap" sound for the next two decades. If you want to hear the blueprint for every Migos and 21 Savage record, listen to Trap House. gucci mane all mixtapes top

The Young Thug Launchpad If you want to hear the birth of "Thugga," listen to "Beat It Up" (feat. Young Thug). Trap God 2 is where Gucci embraced the new wave of Atlanta. Features include Chief Keef ("Young Niggas") and Rich Homie Quan. This tape has a youthful energy despite Gucci being a vet.

The Prequel to the Album Often overshadowed by the album of the same name, this mixtape is actually better. It includes "Kush is My Cologne" and "The Truth." It features some of Gucci’s most clever wordplay, proving he is not just a "mumble rapper" (he never was). The Resurrection After a short hiatus, Gucci returned

Essential Track: "The Truth"


If you want to understand the cult of Gucci Mane, you have to listen to Chicken Talk. Released during the height of his beef with Jeezy and the chemist known as DJ Burn One, this tape is lo-fi, muddy, and absolutely hypnotic. The Origin Story Technically a studio album for

The production is steeped in soul samples chopped up with heavy bass. Songs like "Pyrex Pot" and "Bricks" didn't just narrate the drug trade; they made it sound melodic. This tape proved that Gucci didn’t need radio play to be a star; he just needed the streets.