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XXXTentacion

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XXXTentacion
XXXTentacion February 2018.png
Onfroy in 2018
Born
Jahseh Dwayne Ricardo Onfroy

(1998-01-23)January 23, 1998
DiedJune 18, 2018(2018-06-18) (aged 20)
Deerfield Beach, Florida, U.S.
Cause of deathMurder (multiple gunshot wounds to the throat)
Resting placeGardens of Boca Raton Memorial Park
Boca Raton, Florida, U.S.[1]
Other names
  • X
  • XXX
  • Triple X
  • Jah
  • Young Dagger Dick[2]
Occupation
  • Rapper
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • producer
Partner(s)Geneva Ayala (2014–2016)
Jenesis Sanchez (2018)[a]
Children1[3][b]
Musical career
Genres
Years active2013–2018
Labels
Associated acts
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2015–2018
Genre
Subscribers32.7 million[4]
Total views8.3 billion[4]
Creator Awards
YouTube Silver Play Button 2.svg 100,000 subscribers 2017[5]
YouTube Gold Play Button 2.svg 1,000,000 subscribers 2017[5]
YouTube Diamond Play Button.svg 10,000,000 subscribers 2018[5]

Updated: June 17, 2021
Websitexxxtentacion.com
Signature
XXXTentacion signature.svg

Jahseh Dwayne Ricardo Onfroy (January 23, 1998 – June 18, 2018), known professionally as XXXTentacion (often stylized as XXXTENTACION) and commonly referred to as simply X,[c] was an American rapper, singer, and songwriter.[6] Though a controversial figure due to his widely publicized legal troubles, XXXTentacion gained a cult following among his young fanbase during his short career with his depression and alienation-themed music. Critics and fans often credit him for his musical versatility, with his music exploring emo, trap, lo-fi, indie rock, nu metal, hip hop, R&B, and punk rock. He is considered as a leading figure in the emo-rap and SoundCloud rap genres which garnered mainstream attention during the mid-late 2010s.[7]

Born in Plantation, Florida, XXXTentacion spent most of his childhood in Lauderhill. He began writing music after being released from a juvenile detention center and soon started his music career on SoundCloud in 2013, employing styles and techniques that were unconventional in rap music such as distortion and heavy guitar-backed instrumentals, drawing inspiration from third-wave emo and grunge. In 2014, he formed the underground collective Members Only and alongside other members of the collective soon became a popular figure in SoundCloud rap, a trap music scene that takes elements of lo-fi music and harsh 808s.[8]

XXXTentacion gained mainstream attention with the single "Look at Me". His debut album 17 (2017) is certified double-platinum in the US and reached number two on the Billboard 200. His second album ? (2018) debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and is certified triple-platinum in the US. Its lead single, "Sad!", reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100,[9] and had amassed more than a billion views on YouTube and 1.6 billion streams on Spotify by July 2021, as well as being certified Diamond by August 2021.[10][11] He is also the best-selling emo rapper of all time.[12]

On June 18, 2018, XXXTentacion was murdered at the age of 20 when he was fatally shot near a motorcycle dealership in Deerfield Beach, Florida. The attackers fled the scene in an SUV after stealing a Louis Vuitton bag containing $50,000 from him; four suspects were arrested. No trial date has been set for the accused and the motive for the murder remains under investigation.[13]

XXXTentacion has RIAA-certified sales of 61 million units in the US and BPI-certified sales of over 7 million units in the UK, bringing his total to 68 million certified records sold in the two countries. Since his death, he has won an American Music Award and a BET Hip Hop Award and received 11 Billboard Music Award nominations.[14] Two posthumous albums were released, Skins (2018) and Bad Vibes Forever (2019); the former became his second number-one album on the Billboard 200 while the latter entered the top 5.

Early life

Jahseh Dwayne Ricardo Onfroy was born on January 23, 1998, in Plantation, Florida, to Jamaican parents, Dwayne Ricardo Onfroy and Cleopatra Eretha Dreena Bernard.[15][16] His father named him for the Bob Marley song "So Jah Seh" which interpolates Ezekiel 34; both Onfroy's father and grandfather were Rastafarians.[17] XXXTentacion stated he also had Egyptian or Syrian, Indian and possibly Italian ancestry in an interview on The Beat in 2017.[18] He had three siblings with one being half, shared paternally.[citation needed] XXXTentacion was mainly raised by his grandmother Collette Jones[19]—due to his mother's personal problems[20]—in Pompano Beach, Florida, and Lauderhill, Florida. When Onfroy was six years old, he allegedly tried to stab a man attempting to attack his mother[20] and was eventually put into a youth program before living with his grandmother.[16] A source close to the Onfroy family denied that the alleged stabbing incident occurred, and it is not corroborated by police reports.[21] In early 2008, when Onfroy was 10, his father was jailed for nine years in Arizona on RICO charges after the Drug Enforcement Administration organized a sting operation.[22] Onfroy's father was deported to Jamaica in late 2016.[23]

XXXTentacion's interest in music initially started after his aunt persuaded him to begin attending school choir and later church choir. He was soon kicked out of the school choir after attacking another student.[24] XXXTentacion attended Margate Middle School[19] from which he was later expelled after a series of physical altercations. He was subsequently enrolled into Sheridan House Family Ministries by his mother for over six months.[24] XXXTentacion began to listen to nu-metal, hard rock and rap during his time at Sheridan House Family Ministries, which led to him learning how to play the piano and guitar.[20]

XXXTentacion attended Piper High School until he dropped out in the tenth grade.[25] He described himself as a "misfit" during that time, citing how quiet he was despite being popular and regularly involved in physical confrontations.[26] XXXTentacion was not the athletic type and said that he was insecure and depressed during his time in high school.[16]

Career

Career beginnings and "Look at Me" (2013–16)

Onfroy's career as a music artist began in June 2013 after the release of his song "News/Flock".[27] According to interviews, while in juvenile detention for gun possession charges, he met Stokeley Goulbourne, another artist known as Ski Mask the Slump God. Some sources interviewed for a 2020 biography dispute this narrative, and say that the pair met at high school.[28] Onfroy and Goulbourne became good friends and began freestyling.[29] Recalling his time in detention, Onfroy said that he was respectful to the officers and staff and used to protect people from other inmates, including a homosexual cellmate, whom Onfroy later attacked for allegedly staring at him while he was changing clothes.[24][30] Onfroy stated that he was not homophobic.[31]

That same year, following his release from a juvenile detention center, he and Goulbourne met up again under the belief they were going to commit a string of home invasions for monetary gain[32] though Onfroy eventually bought a Blue Snowball microphone and began recording music,[29] which convinced Goulbourne to do the same. After Onfroy adopted the moniker XXXTentacion, he uploaded his first non-deleted song, called "Vice City", on SoundCloud.[33] Speaking on his decision to abandon a life of crime for music, Onfroy said that he felt like music was a better outlet for his feelings and then-girlfriend Geneva Ayala was someone who helped him realize that.[16] He would then continue uploading small snippets of his songs that he would either soon release or keep unreleased. Onfroy eventually joined Ski Mask the Slump God's group Very Rare, before breaking off and starting the Members Only collective, which Ski Mask then also joined.[34] The word "tentación" in his stage name is the Spanish word for "temptation".[35][36]

Onfroy released his first official extended play (EP), called The Fall, on November 21, 2014.[37] In 2015, Onfroy released a collaborative mixtape with Ski Mask the Slump God, Members Only Vol. 1, before releasing Members Only Vol. 2 with several members of the growing Members Only collective. On December 30, 2015, the original version of "Look at Me" was uploaded to the SoundCloud account of the song's co-producer, Rojas.[38]

On April 28, 2016, Onfroy released the EP Willy Wonka Was a Child Murderer,[39] with music heavily inspired by heavy metal and indie music. In 2016, Onfroy quit his job as a call center operator due to his growing music career[25] and moved in with rapper Denzel Curry.[40] In July 2016, Onfroy was arrested and charged with robbery and assault with a deadly weapon.[41][42] After posting $10,000 bail, Onfroy continued to work on his debut independent album, Bad Vibes Forever, which had a slated October 31, 2016, release date.[16] The album missed the release date and was delayed due to Onfroy being arrested in early October on charges of false imprisonment, witness tampering and aggravated battery of his pregnant girlfriend.[43] Whether Onfroy's girlfriend was actually pregnant is disputed.[44]

Release from prison, Revenge, 17, and A Ghetto Christmas Carol (2017)

In 2017 "Look at Me" gained traction, peaked at number 34 on US Billboard Hot 100 and the top 40 of the Canadian Hot 100.[45] The single helped him gain more popularity due to accusations of Canadian rapper Drake using a similar rap flow in his song "KMT".[46][47] XXXTentacion's distinctive half-colored hair, which was inspired by The Hundred and One Dalmatians antagonist Cruella de Vil, also drew public attention.[48] During his jail stint, Onfroy signed a deal to be managed by Soloman Sobande (who would remain his manager until his death) and despite Onfroy being in jail during his initial breakthrough, major-label scouts began offering six-figure contracts and Onfroy eventually signed for Empire Distribution for lower royalty rate, full creative control and a smaller upfront payment.[49][50]

After his release from prison on April 18, 2017, he released three more songs on SoundCloud.[51] In an interview with WMIB, Onfroy announced that he was working on the studio albums Bad Vibes and 17; as well as a mixtape, I Need Jesus.[52][53] In an interview three days after his release from prison, Onfroy said to XXL, "I got this really, really, really good album called 17. That's more of an alternative, R&B sound—then I've got this mixtape called I Need Jesus, which is mainly rap and the underground sound I did."[54]

Onfroy announced his first nationwide tour on April 28, 2017. The tour, titled "The Revenge Tour", had 26 tour dates overall and generated much media coverage, included that of a rapper being assaulted,[55] Onfroy being knocked out after an altercation on stage,[56] an audience member being stabbed,[57] Onfroy being thrown into a barricade by security,[58] and Onfroy punching a fan.[59] He announced the cancellation of the rest of the tour dates due to his cousin being shot on June 24, 2017,[60] though the final tour date in Broward County, Florida, still went ahead[61] and was later streamed on the watchthemusic (WAV) app.[62]

Onfroy was named as the tenth pick on XXL's "2017 Freshman Class".[63]

Onfroy released his debut solo mixtape, Revenge, on May 16, 2017. The mixtape consists of eight previously released songs.[64] The collaborative mixtape, Members Only, Vol. 3, with Members Only, was released on June 26, 2017.

Onfroy's first opener for a major act happened when DRAM brought Onfroy out at a concert on April 9, 2017 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles during Kendrick Lamar's DAMN. Tour.[65]

Onfroy released his debut album, 17, on August 25, 2017.[66] The album debuted at number 2 on the US Billboard 200, selling 86,000 album-equivalent units first week.[67] The album received a mixed response from critics, some of whom lauded the album for its personal narratives and diverse musical style.[68] On September 3, 2017, Onfroy announced that Bad Vibes Forever, his second album, was still in production.[69] 17 gave Onfroy's seven songs—"Jocelyn Flores", "Revenge", "Fuck Love", "Everybody Dies in Their Nightmares", "Depression & Obsession", "Save Me" and "Carry On"—that debuted in the Billboard Hot 100 at number 31, 77, 41, 54, 91, 94 and 95, respectively. Jocelyn Flores became Onfroy's highest-charting song since "Look at Me", which peaked it at 34.[70] Onfroy then had his ninth song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, in turn with his being featured on Kodak Black's song "Roll in Peace", taken from Project Baby 2. The song debuted at 52 and peaked at 31, matching "Jocelyn Flores".[71]

On September 12, 2017, Onfroy released his first official music video for his 2015 song "Look at Me", as well as sharing a music video with his 2015 song "Riot".[72] Onfroy's label, Bad Vibes Forever, signed a distribution deal with Capitol Music Group subsidiary, Caroline, on October 19, 2017. The deal, reportedly worth $6 million, was for one album only.[73] Shortly afterwards on October 25, 2017, Onfroy announced he was terminating his contract with Caroline[74] despite a representative confirming he was still signed.[75] Two days later, he announced that he was retiring due to negativity and backlash[76] though some publications noted that Onfroy made similar statements before and not followed through.[77] On October 30, 2017, Onfroy announced that he would make music again if fellow Broward rapper and "former best friend," Ski Mask the Slump God, was his friend again.[78] Later, Onfroy answered a fan's question on Instagram Live about his retirement, saying, "Am I quitting? Yes, I'm quitting—I don't know for how long, but I'm just not going to make music right now."[79]

On September 21, 2017, Noah Cyrus released her single titled "Again", featuring Onfroy's vocals.[80]

Onfroy previewed new music on November 2, 2017, signaling a return to making music.[81] Onfroy announced Bad Vibes Forever again on November 17, 2017,[82] speaking on the album, Onfroy said "It will be a mix of genres you have seen me dabble with, if you are not a fan of me this is not an album for you, it is for core fans only".[83] The album title shares its name with his label.[84] On December 11, 2017, Onfroy released A Ghetto Christmas Carol on SoundCloud.[85] A day before his hearing for witness tampering charges, Onfroy announced that he was preparing three albums to be ready for 2018,[86] and after being released on house arrest, he announced the titles of all three albums, Skins, Bad Vibes Forever and ?.[87]

YouTube channel and ? album (2018)

Onfroy at an event for the Miami Children's Initiative in February 2018

On June 22, 2015, Onfroy began to use his long-time YouTube channel "xxxtentacion" (now stylized in all caps), previously used to upload music, to upload gaming videos and vlogs.[6] The channel has 32.6 million subscribers and 8.3 billion total views as of June 2021.[88][89] On January 22, 2018, Onfroy announced on Instagram that he and New York rapper Joey Badass had been creating a project together,[90] and the two released a freestyle to the song "King's Dead" on SoundCloud on March 9, 2018, in preparation for the collaboration.[91] The "xxxtentacion" YouTube channel uploaded the video "#THEHELPINGHANDCHALLENGE" on the same day. The video included Onfroy donating musical instruments, video game consoles, and other gifts to a foster home.[92] Shortly afterwards, Onfroy declared his album had finished and he was preparing to release it but would only do so after the hashtag #HELPINGHANDCHALLENGE reached one million mentions on Instagram.[93]

Onfroy released his first single of 2018 on February 2, titled "Shining Like the Northstar".[94] He was also featured on long-time collaborator and producer Ronny J's track "Banded Up".[95] Onfroy released the song "Hope" on his SoundCloud account on February 21, 2018, dedicated to the victims of the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, which had occurred in Parkland, several miles north of Onfroy's native Plantation.[96] Onfroy announced that he was releasing two songs at midnight on March 2, 2018, both the first singles for his second album ?.[97] The lead single for ?, "Sad!", was released several hours later[98] alongside "Changes", which features fellow 2017 XXL "Freshman" PnB Rock.[99] "Sad!" debuted at number 17, becoming his highest-charting song in the United States, and eventually peaked at number 1 after Onfroy's death before releasing its official music video on June 28.[100] "Moonlight" and "Hope" also charted after his death, peaking at number 13 and 70, respectively.

Onfroy announced the release date for his second studio album, ?, on March 12, 2018.[101] He shared the 18-track track listing with features from Joey Bada$$, Travis Barker and PnB Rock.[102] ? was released on March 16, 2018.[103] ? debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, becoming Onfroy's first number one in the country, losing out with his debut album 17 due to Lil Uzi Vert's Luv Is Rage 2.[104] Shortly following the release of ?, Onfroy signed a new album deal with Empire Distribution for his third solo album worth ten million dollars.[49]

Posthumous releases

On June 21, 2018, the first posthumous song featuring Onfroy was released, "Ghost Busters", with Trippie Redd featuring Quavo and Ski Mask the Slump God, and was uploaded on Trippie Redd's SoundCloud.[105] XXL released a series of freestyles that Onfroy performed as a part of his "2017 Freshman Cypher".[106] Ugly God released a song titled "Tear Drop" on June 22, 2018, which featured Onfroy's aforementioned unreleased cypher verses, as a tribute to Onfroy.[107] A few months later, he won the Best New Hip Hop Artist at the BET Hip Hop Awards and won the Favorite Album-Soul/R&B for 17 at the American Music Awards.[108][109]

On August 31, 2018, Houston rapper Sauce Walka released his Drip God mixtape which featured a collaboration with Onfroy titled "Voss" produced by Carnage.[110]

On August 17, 2018, iLoveMakonnen announced a collaboration between Lil Peep and Onfroy titled "Falling Down". A reworking of "Sunlight on Your Skin" made by Makonnen and Peep, the new version features verses by Onfroy that he recorded after Peep's death to pay tribute to Peep.[111] The single was officially released on September 19, 2018.[112]

On September 27, 2018, Kanye West announced Onfroy would've be a featured artist on his cancelled ninth studio album, Yandhi.[113] The same day, it was reported that Onfroy will also be a featured artist on Lil Wayne's twelfth album, Tha Carter V, which was released the next day. Onfroy was featured on the song, "Don't Cry". A music video was later released on what would've been Onfroy's 21st birthday.[114]

On October 22, 2018, Onfroy's manager Soloman Sobande stated in an interview with Billboard that Onfroy's third album would come "very soon" and that he had more than two album's worth of material.[50] On October 25, 2018, EDM DJ-producer Skrillex released the song "Arms Around You", which is a collaboration he made with Onfroy, Lil Pump, Maluma and Swae Lee.[115] The track was originally recorded in 2017 with Rio Santana, who appeared on Onfroy's ? album, but was later changed to add bigger star co-features.[116] Specifically, Lil Pump contacted Onfroy's mother to ask to use Onfroy's vocals on the track as a tribute.[117] Following the release of "Arms Around You", the song's producer, Mally Mall was interviewed by Power 106's The Cruz Show where he confirmed that nine Onfroy songs were going to be released soon with one having a Rihanna feature and another having a Weeknd feature.[118]

On November 8, 2018, the release date for Onfroy's first posthumous album and his third studio album, Skins, was announced as being given a December 7, 2018.[119] The first single from Skins, titled "Bad!", was released on November 9, 2018.[120] Onfroy was Lil Wayne's surprise feature on his and Ty Dolla Sign's track "Scared of the Dark" from the soundtrack album Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.[121]

On January 23, 2019, the Members Only collective and Onfroy's estate released the album Members Only, Vol. 4.[122]

On June 12, 2019, Craig Xen released the song Run It Back! which featured Onfroy on the track.[123]

A month after on July 21, 2019, another posthumous song was released, titled "Royalty", which featured one of Bob Marley's children, Ky-Mani Marley, Stefflon Don, & Vybz Kartel. The dance-hall inspired[124] track was the first song released from the album, Bad Vibes Forever, which released in December 2019.[125] On October 21, 2019, the song "Hearteater" was officially released by Onfroy's estate as the second single for the album.[126] On November 22, 2019, the title track of the album Bad Vibes Forever was released. The fourth and final studio album was released on December 6, 2019.[127][128] In January 2020, Lil Wayne remixed X's song "The Boy with the Black Eyes" for his Funeral album, on the track "Get Outta My Head".[129] On June 1, 2020, his song "Riot" was re-released onto streaming services to spread awareness to the protests following the murder of George Floyd.

He became the first artist to posthumously release music as NFTs with five scrapped SoundCloud songs on May 10, 2021, in which News/Flock was slightly re-worked on.[130]

Musical style

XXXTentacion's music explored a wide variety of genres, including emo,[131] trap, lo-fi, indie rock,[132] punk rock,[131] nu metal[131] and hip hop.[132] His influences included Kurt Cobain, whom he cited as his biggest inspiration,[133] Cage the Elephant, Chingy, Coldplay, Eminem, the Fray, Gorillaz, Hoobastank, Lana Del Rey,[134] the Notorious B.I.G., Papa Roach, Tech N9ne, Tupac Shakur, Three Days Grace, the Weeknd, and Kanye West.[135][136][137] When speaking on his influencers, XXXTentacion said, "I'm really into multi-genre things that aren't just based around rapping itself. I'm more inspired by artists in other genres besides rap."[138] XXXTentacion as an artist has been defined as versatile[139] and his music has been described as having a "lo-fi" aesthetic,[140] being diverse[141] and experimental, drawing influence from heavy metal.[142] His music also has the tendency to contain distorted bass[143] and an "intentional lack of polish".[8] Speaking about this, XXXTentacion said that the intentionally bad mixing on his tracks make it "genuine".[144] Some fans have also noted that his music has inspired many up-and-coming artists, such as Juice Wrld and Trippie Redd, into channeling similar aesthetics into their music, with the former dedicating the song "Legends" to XXXTentacion following his death.[141][145]

XXXTentacion generally changed his vocal style depending on the type of song he was performing on. His vocal style has been described as displaying "emotional vulnerability" on much more depressing tracks[146] and as replicating screaming on much more aggressive tracks.[147] His songwriting has been described as outlandish and shocking, often referring to "violence, sex, and drugs,"[148] though on some projects such as The Fall and 17, Onfroy's songwriting was more emotional in comparison to his previous work, often referring to loneliness, depression, isolation, and anxiety.[149] He was known for his "depressing, and at times devastating" music that brought attention to mental health.[150]

Public image and feuds

Onfroy was generally considered a controversial figure within the hip-hop industry due to public feuds with other artists,[151] legal issues, and general social media scandals.[152][153][154][155] Spin labeled Onfroy "rap's most controversial man"[156] and XXL labeled him as their most "controversial freshman ever".[157]

On August 24, 2017, a day before the release of his debut album, 17, Onfroy uploaded a video to the social media platform Instagram of him depicting the act of suicide by hanging.[158] He later uploaded a video onto Instagram showcasing the video being shot in part of a music video.[159]

Onfroy uploaded a music video to YouTube for his song "Riot" after sharing a music video for his on September 12, 2017. The controversial scene portrays him placing a noose around the neck of a caucasian child then hanging him (representing lynching). The child's mother originally was anxious about the scene but said she was fine with the message being portrayed, which XXXTentacion explained as, "No matter how you look at it, the four murders I showed in the beginning were murders that were done by supremacists that were real. That white boy is still alive. So the people that died in the video are real. Everyone is so bothered by the child being lynched, but whether you realize it or not, the murders in the beginning are all real. Heather Heyer, Emmett Till, Philando Castile, these are real murders. This Caucasian child is still alive. It's art portrayal... It's me basically putting the shoe on the other foot, showing another perspective."[160][161] Talking on Instagram Live, he told his followers that the video was not just supporting Black Lives Matter, but was also supporting All Lives Matter.[162]

Onfroy announced he was retiring from producing music on October 27, 2017.[163] Onfroy then stated using the Instagram story feature that he would make music again if South Floridian rapper, frequent collaborator and best friend Ski Mask the Slump God would become his friend again, telling his fans to post "Be friends with X again" on Ski Mask's social media accounts.[78] The post led to a social media exchange between the two, with Onfroy explaining his side using the Instagram Live feature on Instagram:

It was a lack of appreciation on his end, not because of me, I guess just from a business perspective. But he put a business perspective before a personal relationship, and I've been with him as a friend and as a brother for a very long time. I mean, it's just on some other shit to be honest. It's not on anything I've done wrong. I can't even say I've done anything to him, and I wouldn't go on the Internet and express that if I didn't care about the relationship, but you already know how it goes. They use you to where they wanna go and then part ways. And I've been used a lot if you haven't noticed.[79]

Ski Mask replied shortly afterward, using Instagram's story feature, "[I'll] always love that alien-looking nigga named XXX, but I have to distance myself because it's like nobody would see me as an individual rapper if I don't, on top of that, that nigga crazy as hell", Ski Mask then went on to post a much more intense version of the story, claiming that Onfroy threatened his family.[164] On December 8, 2017, Onfroy wrote on Instagram, "don't care about what you said about me, you know who got your back, love you, forever", referring to Ski Mask the Slump God. Later, during Rolling Loud in Miami in 2018, they reunited, ending the feud.[165]

Following a rumor that Onfroy was arrested in Las Vegas, Houston rapper Ugly God tweeted "Free X" which prompted a strong response from Onfroy which featured Onfroy insulting Ugly God. Ugly God later clarified there was no feud between them.[166]

Canadian rapper Drake previewed a new track, titled "KMT", on January 28, 2017.[167] The song, following its preview, was compared by users on social media to Onfroy's breakout song "Look at Me" due to the use of a similar triplet-heavy flow.[168] Before the release of KMT, HotNewHipHop revealed that Drake followed Onfroy's account on Twitter.[169] In an interview with XXL, Onfroy was questioned about the Drake comparisons, responding "If Drake is gonna take the flow, and I don't know if he legitimately did, but if that is the situation, at least reach out to a nigga, help a nigga out in this situation."[170]

Drake released the mixtape More Life on March 18, 2017, which included "KMT".[171] Onfroy was released from jail on probation two weeks later and was subsequently interviewed by WMIB, where he called Drake a "bitch" and said that he respected Drake's influence but felt like "KMT" was disrespecting him.[172] The following day on Twitter, Onfroy posted a picture of Drake's mother saying "she could get it".[173] He then posted a picture of Drake's mother and a child version of Drake with Onfroy's face photoshopped over that of Drake's father, Dennis Graham.[174] Later, in an interview with DJ Semtex, Drake denied those accusations that he stole Onfroy's "flow". Drake also denied knowing him and said that he only heard about him regarding rumors circulated following the "KMT" snippet.[175][176] Onfroy replied on his Twitter page requesting that Drake "come to Florida", after Onfroy saying that he won't "twitter rap with niggas".[177]

Rapper Offset from the hip-hop group Migos used Instagram's livestream feature to verbally attack Onfroy, further escalating the feud.[178] Chicago rapper 600Breezy then claimed that Drake gave him permission to enter into the feud and attack Onfroy.[179] 600Breezy told Onfroy that he has "got a couple niggas that will knock you off in your own city".[180] 600Breezy later went to Florida to attempt to search for him, though it was fruitless.[181]

On November 14, Onfroy posted on his Instagram story accusing rap group Migos of attacking him and pointing a firearm at him due to his former issues with Drake.[182]

The music streaming service Spotify announced on May 10, 2018, that it was going to stop promoting or recommending music by Onfroy, incarcerated rapper Tay-K and R&B artist R. Kelly. Spotify stated, "We don't censor content because of an artist's or creator's behavior, but we want our editorial decisions—what we choose to program—to reflect our values".[183] The decision to remove Onfroy's music from curated playlists was later reversed after Top Dawg Entertainment CEO Anthony Tiffith threatened to remove his label's music from the service.[184][185] Although Tiffith did the action, Onfroy thanked Kendrick Lamar and Top Dawg as a whole.

Incidents at concerts

On March 26, 2017, following Onfroy's release from jail, he set up a surprise concert that was arranged for April 7 in Miami. The show had an admission price of $5 until it was apparently filled up. However, before he arrived, a riot broke out. Police eventually escorted Onfroy out and closed the show down.[186]

Rapper and member of Onfroy's Members Only collective Wifisfuneral was assaulted at the first show in the Revenge Tour in Houston on May 31, 2017.[187] Wifisfuneral stage-dived into the audience where several audience members proceeded to kick him and then leave the venue.[188]

During a concert in San Diego in June 2017, a physical altercation occurred, which led to Onfroy being knocked unconscious[189][190][191] and an audience member being stabbed,[192] though the injury was non-life-threatening.[193] The assailant was reported to be an associate of rapper Rob Stone, then involved in a feud involving Onfroy and Ski Mask. The feud had already led to Ski Mask the Slump God being assaulted during rapper Desiigner's Outlet tour.[194] Stone released a diss track following the attack, titled "Xxxtracredit", in which he mentions the attack in San Diego and then proceeds to tell Onfroy to "not come back to California".[195] Later in an interview, Stone denied knowing who that assailant is.[196][197] In October 2017, Stone confirmed that he and Onfroy had talked and resolved their feud.[198]

Onfroy punched an audience member during a concert at the Complex in Salt Lake City, Utah on June 16, 2017. He claimed this was in self-defense, as he had requested that no one in the audience touch him, warning that he would punch them if they did.[199]

Onfroy was scheduled to perform at the Concord Music Hall in Chicago, Illinois on June 20, 2017. The concert was canceled at the last minute, which led to hundreds of fans flooding the streets and nearly starting a riot.[200] He said that the reason for the performance being canceled was the venue management's decision.[200] Three days later, his cousin was shot and he canceled his tour.[201]

Following the release of Onfroy's 17 album, a free concert was announced to take place at the Orpheum in Tampa, Florida, on September 2, 2017.[202] The venue only had the capacity to support 750 concertgoers, but over 3,000 people appeared to attend the concert and the venue had to cancel the concert before a safety hazard was created.[203] This led to many fans of the artist nearly rioting in the street and the police needing to break up the crowd.[204] Some fans later claimed online that they were teargassed by police officers following the riot.[205]

Onfroy was involved in another brawl with a fan during California's Rolling Loud Festival on October 23, 2017. Onfroy announced on Instagram that the fight was purely self-defense before any video of the altercation was uploaded.[206]

Legal issues

Juvenile charges

In late 2012, Onfroy was arrested for possession of 21 grams of marijuana, a felony in Florida law. He was sentenced to one month of juvenile detention and six months at a behavioral correction facility.[207] Shortly after his release, he was arrested again for breaking into a house to steal a laptop in order to create music.[208]

In 2014, Onfroy was sent to a youth detention center for a year on gun possession charges.[34][24] According to Onfroy, during his time in detention, the district attorney was attempting to try him as an adult for gun possession, which would have had a sentence of 5–10 years in prison.[24] Onfroy's narrative of this time in youth detention has been disputed by sources interviewed for a 2020 biography; he may have served one month's detention as part of a wider sentence of less than one year, and his charges cannot be corroborated by public files as he was a juvenile.[209]

Stabbing of Dylan Turner

Dylan Turner, a New Jersey native studying at Full Sail University, managed XXXTentacion and his best friend Ski Mask the Slump God in 2016.[210] Due to Onfroy's inexperience in music and Turner's inexperience in management, they agreed that Turner would be paid only in the proceeds from the song "Look at Me!".[211] One night, Ski Mask and Turner got into an argument while at Turner's apartment which led to Ski Mask storming out. Ski Mask later called Onfroy while drunk and lied that Turner had taken thousands from Onfroy. Days later, an angry Onfroy broke into Turner's apartment, and shouted, "What if I stab you? What if I fucking stab you?" while poking a knife towards Turner's stomach, stopping just a few inches short and then pulling back. Turner said that he doesn't know if Onfroy meant to stab him, because Onfroy said in shock, "Oh fuck," after Turner exclaimed to Onfroy that he had stabbed him. However, the blade sank into his abdomen.[212] Turner required emergency surgery and suffered life-changing injuries.[213] He pledged to drop charges against Onfroy if his computer could be returned, saying that he "didn't want one bad choice to define who [Onfroy] was." Turner stuck to his word despite all its files being deleted. Onfroy payed for the entirety of Turner's hospital bills, and later apologized to Turner and thanked him for dropping the charges.[214]

Mugshots of Onfroy in 2016

Robbery, assault with a deadly weapon and home invasion charges

On July 14, 2016, days after being bailed for stabbing Dylan Turner, Onfroy was arrested and charged with robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, and home invasion committed in November 2015.[23][41][42] According to the arrest report, Onfroy entered the home of Che Thomas with three other people, armed with a firearm. After pistol-whipping Thomas three times, Onfroy escaped the home with an iPad, an iPhone, a Sony PlayStation Portable, and $20.[215]

Onfroy was arrested in Orlando originally until he was transferred to Orange County.[16] His constant relocations were due to an eventually successful plan by prosecutors to find a jurisdiction that would charge him as an adult for a crime committed as a juvenile.[22] He was paroled in September 2016.[23]

False imprisonment, witness tampering, and domestic violence charges

After posting the bail of $10,000[216] in early October of the same year, while awaiting trial, Onfroy was arrested again later that month on charges of false imprisonment, witness tampering, and aggravated battery of a pregnant victim.[43][217] On March 26, 2017, Onfroy was released from jail on bail[54][218] while facing charges of robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. His trial for aggravated battery of a pregnant victim was originally going to take place in May 2017 and was pushed back several times, and was set to take place on October 5, 2017.[219] On September 8, 2017, Pitchfork leaked the testimony of the victim in Onfroy's aggravated battery case.[220] The trial was then delayed again[221] with a date of December 11, 2017, announced.[222] Controversy arose once again following Onfroy's choice to donate $100,000 to domestic violence prevention programs,[223] and then further when Onfroy announced an event to support rape victims though it was later canceled due to vandalism.[224]

Onfroy's mugshot in December 2017

Onfroy's trial was delayed again after an affidavit was filed by Onfroy's ex-girlfriend Geneva Ayala, the alleged victim in the case, asking for the charges to be "completely dropped".[225] She also declined to testify in court. In reaction, the prosecution moved to split the case into two, with witness tampering charges filed against Onfroy and a new trial date announced for December 15, 2017.[226] On December 10, 2017, Onfroy posted a message to Instagram, writing "Court date is on the 15th 9:00 am here is my court information, if I am taken into custody, I want to tell everyone I've let down I apologize, I tried my best, I really did ...";[227] he then released the information of the court hearing.[228]

Onfroy pleaded not guilty on December 14, 2017, and was taken into pretrial custody after a motion was filed by the prosecution on the grounds of Onfroy having violated his bond.[229] He was held without bail.[230] It was confirmed on December 20, 2017, that Onfroy was being released on house arrest.[231] Onfroy was released from house arrest on March 21, 2018.[232]

In 2019, documents and audio of phone calls that Onfroy made to his mother from jail were released, in which Onfroy suggested that his ex-girlfriend may have never been pregnant in the first place.[44]

Controversy over Snapchat video

Shortly after being released from house arrest, a Snapchat video surfaced of Onfroy hitting a woman in 2013 when he was 15.[233] Onfroy's attorneys claimed the video, which features a caption written by the woman that sardonically reads "I hate this nigga" along with Onfroy dancing to some music before striking the girl, was "obviously . . . in jest".[234] Onfroy claimed afterwards that he was afraid he was going to be financially extorted by the woman and that members of her family had already called him requesting money.[235] The woman shown with Onfroy in the video came forward several days later saying she was "terrified for her life";[236] however, according to TMZ, Onfroy intended to sue the woman for fraud and defamation after her family allegedly demanded a large sum of money in exchange for her silence.[237] The woman later released a statement saying that the version of events described by Onfroy was correct, and that she "hope[d] that people see the video in the playful context in which it was recorded and nothing more".[238] His domestic violence charges, which he was awaiting trial for, were dropped following his death.[239]

Leaked audio regarding domestic violence and a stabbing incident

On October 23, 2018, Pitchfork released secretly recorded audio of 18-year old Onfroy talking with acquaintances around the time of his October 8, 2016, arrest. Pitchfork claimed that in the recording, he had allegedly confessed to domestic violence, and had described an incident in which he stabbed eight people.[240] The tape was considered a confession by the prosecution and defense.[240][241] Some criticized Pitchfork's interpretation of the stabbing incident that Onfroy described, arguing that he and his friend were about to be jumped and that he acted in self-defense. An extended version of the audio later released included moments after when Onfroy clarified in regards to his ex-girlfriend, "I didn't touch her. I forgave her."[242] One especially fraught conversation about Onfroy's ex-girlfriend took place on the afternoon of October 26, 2016 when he told a woman, "I already got what I wanted, I already bashed her face—her face on the internet, bruh, I done made her look bad on the internet, bruh." Later that day, an audio clip from the call was posted on Instagram of Onfroy saying he "bashed her face" without the hurried clarification.[243]

Personal life

Onfroy had two half siblings – an older sister named Ariana and a younger brother named Aiden.[244][245] Onfroy lived in Florida and lived with rapper Denzel Curry and producer Ronny J in the past.[40][19][231] Before his death, Onfroy was moving into a 6,000-square-foot (560 m2) mansion in Parkland, Florida, which he bought, in November 2017, for US$1.4 million.[246] In February 2018, Onfroy posted on Instagram that he was preparing to return to school[247] and went on to announce in March 2018 that he was going to a community college to get his GED.[248] Onfroy was public about his struggle with depression.[249][250][251]

Onfroy's ex-girlfriend Geneva Ayala had accused Onfroy of domestic abuse. According to Ayala's statement, Onfroy beat her at times, choked her, broke clothes hangers on her legs, threatened to chop off her hair or cut out her tongue, pressed knives or scissors to her face, and held her head underwater in their bathroom while promising to drown her.[252] "His favorite thing was to just backhand my mouth," Ayala says. "That always left welts inside my lips."[253] The first incident of domestic violence allegedly occurred when Onfroy slapped Ayala and broke her iPhone 6S, because she had complimented a male friend on his new jewelry. Onfroy later repaired the phone.[254] In one incident recounted to a prosecutor, Ayala said Onfroy asked her which object she wanted him to force into her vagina: a long-handled barbecue fork, or a wire barbecue brush, she chose the fork and Onfroy told her to undress. She claimed Onfroy was lightly dragging the tool against her inner thigh when she passed out; he did not penetrate her with it. Onfroy maintained his innocence until his death.[255][254] Ayala said that Onfroy would often guilt her with near-attempts at suicide. Ayala said he used to fill a bathtub with water then fetch the microwave and dangle it over, threatening to let go. Another time he reportedly dangled himself from a 12th-story balcony by his legs and threatened suicide again.[256] After Onfroy's death, Ayala said in regards to those discussing her accusations against Onfroy, "It's disgusting that people are speaking for me."[257] Some psychologists have speculated that Onfroy may have suffered from an attachment disorder, which could have made him prone to uncontrollable violent outbursts.[258]

Around January 2018, Onfroy entered a relationship with Jenesis Sanchez.[259] Three days after his death, Onfroy's mother announced on Instagram that Sanchez was pregnant with his child.[260] In an interview, Sanchez said Onfroy was notified three weeks before he passed. The baby, Gekyume,[261] was confirmed to be a boy on August 22, 2018,[262][263][264][265] and was born on January 26, 2019, three days after what would have been his father's 21st birthday.[266] A couple of weeks after Sanchez requested Onfroy's DNA samples to prove the paternity of her son Gekyume, Onfroy's mother filed to block the test. Onfroy's mother sealed her court filings in opposition, so it's unclear why she objects to a paternity test. Some fans suspect it has something to do with her financial stake in Onfroy's estate. On May 15, 2019, Sanchez won the legal battle and a Florida judge granted access to a DNA sample from Onfroy.[267][268][269][270]

Political views

Onfroy was public about his political and personal beliefs throughout his career. In 2016, Onfroy opposed the presidential candidacy of Donald Trump and had instead signaled support for Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders.[271][272] He also took to Twitter in saying, "As much as I hate that piece of shit Donald Trump, y'all know this motherfucker's gonna win right?"[273] His song "Hate Will Never Win" contains anti-Trump lyrics.[274]

Onfroy said he believed that, "If weed was legal everywhere, the world would be a better place."[275] He had also expressed his support for the legalization of gay marriage, and he had worked closely with transgender musician Fifty Grand, who described Onfroy's beliefs as "incredibly progressive" and that Onfroy was one of the only people to reach out to him and show support for him coming out as transgender. Likewise, transgender artist N.Gantz said that after revealing to Onfroy that he was struggling with his gender identity, Onfroy told him not to "blame myself for the way I was born... but to be myself because I only have one life."[31][276][277]

During the Revenge concert tour, Onfroy had publicly declared his support for civil rights and gay rights, and denounced racist and homophobic rhetoric from hate groups such as the KKK, saying, "I don't give a fuck if you're black, white, yellow, purple—I don't give a fuck if you're gay, I don't give a fuck if you're straight, I give a fuck if you're a person... I stand for equality for all people."[278]

Death

Memorial of Onfroy outside the motorcycle dealership where he died in Deerfield Beach

At 3:56 p.m EDT on June 18, 2018, Onfroy, upon leaving Riva Motorsports Motorcycle & Marine Superstore in Deerfield Beach, Florida, was blocked from exiting the parking lot by a black Dodge Journey SUV. Two armed men exited the SUV and approached the rapper while he was sitting in the driver's seat. A brief struggle occurred, and the armed men reached inside Onfroy's vehicle, stole a small Louis Vuitton bag containing $50,000, and shot Onfroy multiple times. The shooters fled the scene in their SUV. Onfroy was later transported by paramedics to the nearby Broward Health North hospital in Deerfield Beach, where he was pronounced dead.[15][279] Onfroy's death was announced by the Broward County Sheriff's Office at exactly 5:30 p.m.[280][281] Suspect Dedrick Devonshay Williams of Pompano Beach was arrested two days after the shooting, shortly before 7 p.m. Held in the Broward County jail, he is charged with first degree murder without premeditation.[282] In the weeks following the event, three different people were arrested for their actions involved with the event, including trigger man Michael Boatwright.[283]

In his will, Onfroy named his mother Cleopatra and brother Aiden as the sole beneficiaries of his estate. Onfroy's future child, with whom his girlfriend at the time of his death was pregnant, was not named in the will as it was written before the pregnancy.[284]

At 4:22 PM EDT in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 26 minutes after the shooting of Onfroy, fellow rapper Jimmy Wopo was gunned down in a drive-by shooting.[285][286][287]

Funeral

An open casket service for Onfroy took place at the BB&T Center in Sunrise, Florida, on June 27, 2018 where fans were allowed to pay their respects.[288][289] His private funeral took place on June 28, 2018 where rappers Lil Uzi Vert and Lil Yachty and singer Erykah Badu were among the attendees.[290] He was entombed in a mausoleum at Gardens of Boca Raton Memorial Park, Boca Raton, Florida.[1][291]

Legacy

Mausoleum of XXXTentacion
Onfroy's tombstone at Gardens of Boca Raton Memorial Park in Boca Raton, Florida

XXXTentacion's music was driven on themes revolving around depression and alienation,[292] becoming known for his "depressing, and at times devastating"[249] music that brought attention to mental health.[293] He employed styles and techniques that were unconventional in hip hop during his career, such as distortion[294] and heavy guitar-backed instrumentals drawing inspiration from third-wave emo.[295]

Christopher Weingarten of Rolling Stone opined that XXXTentacion's success as "a zeitgeist-grabbing, industry-defying, boundary-destroying phenomenon" is "overshadowed" by his alleged violence towards his ex-girlfriend, but contended that despite media attempts to suppress him, XXXTentacion's "impact on music will be felt for years to come" and his recordings have "helped signal a new era of post-streaming, post-genre teenagers".[296] XXXTentacion left behind what Rolling Stone called "a huge musical footprint" due to his impact on his young fanbase and his popularity during his career.[296] Given his immense influence only to die young, the article compared his cultural impact with that of Ritchie Valens and Darby Crash.[296]

Highlighting his ambivalent public reception during his short career, Billboard wrote:

"The provocative and polarizing artist seemed to thrive on controversy as much as art, often blurring the lines between shocking reality and button-pushing creativity. XXX's short career was characterized by both in equal measure-making the Florida rapper a martyr to a legion of fans and a cautionary tale to so many others."[297]

On June 18, 2019, exactly one year on from XXXTentacion's death, an official documentary on his life was announced; it will feature footage of Onfroy from around April 2017 telling biographical details. XXXTentacion has RIAA-certified sales of 38 million units in the US and BPI-certified sales of over 7 million units in the UK.[298][299] He is also one of the Top-20 all-time best selling artists in terms of digital singles, with a total of 49 million RIAA-certified digital sales[300] as of October 2020. In August 2021, XXXTentacion's most famous single, "Sad!", was certified Diamond in the US.

XXXTentacion has been cited as an influence by a number of artists, including Billie Eilish,[301] Juice Wrld,[302] The Kid Laroi,[303] Kendrick Lamar,[304] Trippie Redd,[305] and Kanye West.[306]

As of July 2021, XXXTentacion's last Instagram post before his death holds the record of the 3rd most-liked Instagram post of all-time with 25.5 million likes.

According to YouGov polling as of July 2021, a slight plurality of Americans view XXXTentacion positively, with 16% holding a positive opinion and 15% holding a negative opinion. 42% of respondents said they have heard of XXXTentacion.[307]

Controversy

XXXTentacion's personal life and history are also noted as prominent parts of his legacy.[249][296][308][309] An article in The Guardian described his legacy in more critical terms, stating that "He will be remembered mostly for the unusually cruel violence he committed on vulnerable people, particularly his ex-girlfriend, crimes for which he never expressed remorse."[249] According to the article, his music "reflected a life lived with disregard for humanity, both other people's and his own"; and rarely attempted to engage in bravado or bragging, instead focusing on "mental illness, suicide, extreme misogyny, and a prevailing feeling of numbness," though acknowledging that XXXTentacion "made some attempts to rehabilitate his image."[249]

An article in The Atlantic expressed similar criticisms, though it also noted that XXXTentacion "reminded young fans in particular that their hurt was valid but that it did not form the sum total of their lives" and that he "gave voice to their insecurities."[308] Contrasting these elements of his legacy, the article acknowledged that though he spent his career encouraging young fans to recognize their greater worth, XXXTentacion's legacy is nonetheless characterized by the trauma he both experienced and caused.[308] In The Washington Post, Chris Richards commented on XXXTentacion's complicated legacy, contrasting how he "encouraged his fans to find hope in the fog of their despair, but bragged enthusiastically about the joy he felt in brutalizing others."[309] According to Richards, XXXTentacion's music "brought solace to the depressed" while validating the sort of violence he practiced, and legitimized the pain of his fans while erasing the suffering of domestic violence victims.[309] XXXTentacion's music serves as an example for Richards of how "a hateful song" might normalize such feelings in "hateful people", which contributes to the profound paranoia in society about the hatred that might be in the minds of others.[309]

Onfroy's ex-girlfriend, Geneva Ayala, who had accused him of domestic abuse in 2016, has said of the controversy surrounding her and Onfroy's past, "It's disgusting that people are speaking for me. I don't care if no one cared about me however many months ago, I didn't lose my life. He did. It's permanent. I'm still here. Like, how do you think that makes me feel? Everyone expecting me to be relieved or happy? No, I'm broken."[257]

Discography

Concert tours

  • The Revenge Tour (2017)[311]
  • A Helping Hand (2018)[312]

Awards and nominations

American Music Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
2018 XXXTentacion New Artist of the Year Nominated
17 Favorite Album – Soul/R&B Won

BET Hip-Hop Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
2018 XXXTentacion Best New Hip Hop Artist Won

Billboard Music Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
2018 17 Top R&B Album Nominated

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Until Onfroy's death
  2. ^ Onfroy's only child was born seven months after his death
  3. ^ Alternatively stylized as xxxtentacion and XXXTENTACION throughout his career, often referred to colloquially as X or Triple X.

References

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  2. ^ 1035 TheBeat (March 29, 2017). "XXXTentacion Calls Out Drake In His First Interview After Jail!". Archived from the original on March 21, 2019. Retrieved August 5, 2018 – via YouTube.
  3. ^ "XXXTentacion's Son Gekyume Onfroy Is Born". Archived from the original on January 27, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "About XXXTentacion". YouTube.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c "UCM9r1xn6s30OnlJWb-jc3Sw Monthly YouTube Statistics - Socialblade.com". socialblade.com. Archived from the original on May 24, 2019. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "Here's the First Look at XXXTentacion's New Gaming Channel – XXL". XXL Mag. Archived from the original on January 26, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  7. ^ "Juice WRLD, Lil Peep and XXXTentacion are symbols of a scene that trades off tragedy". December 13, 2019.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Turner, David (June 1, 2017). "Look At Me!: The Noisy, Blown-Out SoundCloud Revolution Redefining Rap". Music (Features). Rolling Stone. ISSN 0035-791X. Archived from the original on June 21, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  9. ^ "XXXTentacion's 'Sad!' Vaults From No. 52 to No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 Following Rapper/Singer's Death". Billboard. Archived from the original on June 26, 2018. Retrieved February 5, 2020.
  10. ^ "XXXTENTACION - SAD! - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  11. ^ "SAD! - Spotify".
  12. ^ "Gold & Platinum". RIAA. Archived from the original on February 20, 2019. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  13. ^ "XXXTentacion Murder Suspect Seeks Bond to Get Out of Jail". Digital Music News. September 19, 2019. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  14. ^ Fitzgerald, Trent. "XXXTentacion Nominated for 10 2019 Billboard Music Awards - XXL". XXL Mag. Archived from the original on April 9, 2020. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b "XXXTentacion death certificate" (PDF). TMZ. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 26, 2019. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
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  17. ^ Reiss 2020, pp. 19-20.
  18. ^ Sobat, Peter. "XXXTENTACION CALLS OUT DRAKE IN HIS FIRST INTERVIEW AFTER JAIL". blurredculture. Archived from the original on March 9, 2019. Retrieved March 26, 2019.
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  20. ^ Jump up to: a b c Burford, Corinna (June 19, 2018). "The Complete History of XXXTentacions Controversial Career". Timelines. Vulture. New York Media. Archived from the original on June 22, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  21. ^ Reiss 2020, p. 5.
  22. ^ Jump up to: a b Reiss 2020, pp. 7-9.
  23. ^ Jump up to: a b c Reiss 2020, p. 111.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "No Jumper – The Xxxtentacion Interview". YouTube. April 27, 2016. Archived from the original on November 1, 2017. Retrieved October 13, 2017.
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b Foxx, K (March 30, 2017). "Fresh Out Of Jail, XXXTentacion Calls Out Drake!!". 103.5 The Beat. iHeartMedia. Archived from the original on June 22, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  26. ^ Weinstein, Max (June 30, 2017). "Watch XXXTentacion's 2017 XXL Freshman Freestyle and Interview". 2017 XXL Freshman. XXL. Townsquare Media. Archived from the original on June 22, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  27. ^ Welk, Brian (June 18, 2018). "5 Things to Know About Rapper XXXTentacion, From Feuds With Drake to Legal Trouble". TheWrap. The Wrap News. Archived from the original on June 21, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018. XXXTentacion released his first track 'News/Flock' onto the music streaming service SoundCloud in 2013.
  28. ^ Reiss 2020, p. 92.
  29. ^ Jump up to: a b "Ski Mask The Slump God Talks Meeting xxxTENTACION in Jail + Wanting to Die at 27?". YouTube. August 15, 2017. Archived from the original on August 28, 2017. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
  30. ^ "The Internet Is Outraged Over New Interview Exposing This Rapper's Horrific History Of Abuse". Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  31. ^ Jump up to: a b "The Xxxtentacion Interview".
  32. ^ "Ski Mask The Slump God