7 Best Young Thug songs of all time

Samsung Galaxy + Billboard - 2022 SXSW Conference and Festivals - Source: Getty
Samsung Galaxy + Billboard - 2022 SXSW Conference and Festivals - Source: Getty

Few artists in modern hip-hop have left a mark as strange and explosive as Young Thug—an undeniably intriguing musician. Young Thug's voice twists and weaves around a beat—he sings and raps in ways few can truly grasp, always keeping listeners off guard.

Young Thug experiments and mixes trap, melody, and sometimes just total confusion, creating music that demands repeated listening. The legendary Atlanta rapper became a face everybody knows in fashion and music, and he even moved rap in new directions that other folks didn't even see coming.

It’s difficult to recap everything Young Thug has done—no single playlist can contain his range—but here are some songs where his music truly broke the mold, and why he's standing alone from the crowd.

Young Thug, or Jeffery Lamar Williams, has turned the tables for creative expression. His music reflects the confidence and precision of a seasoned professional—even when his style feels chaotic. His biggest hits came about more due to his evocative delivery rather than lyrics. He would integrate any given style with his music and make it sound good.

Young Thug blended underappreciated gospel elements with today’s most popular genres. Young Thug aims to embody the futuristic pop culture emerging from Atlanta. His rise in music has showcased that not every artist has to restrict themselves to a certain style in any way.

Young Thug's music has gone in places that nobody else could go, unlike the way hip-hop had been seen before. And songs like Best Friend and Check were the ones putting him on top in 2016. People are still dropping them over and over for those wild tunes and hooks, and almost everybody knows these tracks by now.

Young Thug's got this groove and lets his fans feel the rough, kind of loose energy that made him stand out so fast. People are shocked sometimes by how he can show different sides, and it was obvious on tracks such as Hot with Gunna and also The London, where J. Cole and Travis Scott are on it. He made his name and somehow hasn't lost his wild touch.

Young Thug's signature style is still there, and mainstream listeners started to pay attention, but they were kept on their toes. There's Power, which, when tried, sounds a bit unorganized but is always exciting, and you can feel lost in it. His own way of doing things has made these songs not just about being popular; rap keeps being stretched and switched up by Young Thug.

Disclaimer: This article contains the writer's opinion. The reader's discretion is advised!


Here are the top 7 songs of Young Thug

Here are the 7 best songs of Young Thug, which are one of many ways to frame or represent an artist who seems to go out of his way to defy categorization. These songs are a particularly illuminating cross-section: each represents another chapter in his evolution, from his ad-lib-heavy, world-building early chaos to latter-day emphasis on melody and increasing profile.

No matter the skewed vocal runs, the beat-back anchor hesitance, the emotional resonance buried beneath snaps of lyric releases so instantaneous and wild, what these songs help us understand is that Young Thug is not just a rapper but a sort of movement, something broader than music.

1) Halftime

On Barter 6, one of Young Thug's most cohesive and strangely beautiful works, Halftime stands out as a masterclass in controlled chaos. Produced by Kip Hilson, the track tosses out traditional structure and embraces pure vocal movement, no hook, no repetition, just Thugger in free-fall, twisting through bars like a contortionist mid-performance.

Young Thug's delivery doesn't follow a predictable rhythm; instead, it ricochets from one phrase to the next, like someone sprinting across a tightrope with a grin.

Samsung Galaxy + Billboard - 2022 SXSW Conference and Festivals - Source: Getty
Samsung Galaxy + Billboard - 2022 SXSW Conference and Festivals - Source: Getty

There's an almost animated feel to the way he toys with language; it's not rapping in the usual sense, it's more like verbal improv spun through a lens of surreal energy. The vocoder breakdown washes over like a wave of synesthesia, bending his voice into what sounds like it's being dissolved in real time.

Then he clobbers you over the head with that slurred scream: "Havin' the time of my muhf*ckin' liiiiiiiife!" and it lands not as a lyric, but as a full sensory moment.

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2) Givenchy ft. Birdman

Then at the one-minute mark comes Givenchy (Rich Gang: Tha Tour Part 1) where all the glitz and glamour-melodrama are thrown away for something much grittier. Young Thug, trapped between record deals and real-life complications, sounds like he's waking up from a deep slumber. It starts with some hazy moans that are insinuating and gradually grow into an uncontrollable riptide of energy with his vocal cruising and sliding over the beat in an unreal way.

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From faint grunts and murmurs, it rapidly ascends into a frantically free-form expression of energy: his voice twisted and swerved about the beat with glitchy instances, as if it had hallucinated. Young Thug swears loyalty; he mangles brand names- can he rap with any intention, or is it just instinctive as if he's chasing something that he alone can see?

And when you presume he has fixed on a groove, that is when he sets off again-popping into another flow, snatching syllables, snapping them into parcels with sharp corners so jagged and so fast that you feel they could almost be percussive. The song doesn’t build to a climax—it clusters into disorderly lines, like bricks in a tower that shouldn't stand, yet somehow does.


3) The Blanguage

In 2014, The Blanguage was a standalone single that felt like the beginning of something seismic. This was like a map in the wide-open, uncharted land of early Young Thug leaks being drawn suddenly into sharp focus. There were glimmers of genius in his old stuff, the strange flows, odd rhymes, and vocal choices that made you sit up straighter immediately after hitting rewind, but The Blanguage felt changed.

Controlled chaos, jumping from lovely mess to complex song. A great deal of the power in Young Thug's voice is due to Metro Boomin, and when everything drops out but a piano for that now-legendary section before the beat gets reborn. It floored us like an abrupt scene transition in some dream.

2021 Revolt Summit - Source: Getty
2021 Revolt Summit - Source: Getty

And then there are the slime sounds of Young Thug, who is not just rapping but spinning melody and language around in his hands like Play-Doh, molding strange sentences into unfamiliarly heartbreaking pictures.

The longer you sit with that parade banter where he goes on about dancers spinning around the pole, it hits differently—more than just clever, it redefines what 'wise' can even mean in rap. It worked because you could even see in the way The Blanguage looked that it didn't respect structure or formula. The first bout was not about understanding; it was about witnessing a narrative unravel.

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4) Danny Glover

It wasn't just a new song; it reset how rap could sound, as seen in Danny Glover, which was part of the 2013 Lobby Runners album. Young Thug, whose voice has always seemed to defy normal physics with the way it stretches and bends its signature chaotic canter all over a beat.

Gunna Presents New Album "DS4EVER" - Source: Getty
Gunna Presents New Album "DS4EVER" - Source: Getty

His flow builds up on the 2nd verse and feels like this cacophony of voices inhibiting one another, letting off all types of rhythm patterns, yet it still fits. A loose, distorted production sounds as though it was meant to bounce around the walls of an abandoned building. The reason Danny Glover resonates so deeply is that he refuses to stop.

It still sounds bombastic, regardless of whether it's coming through your headphones or blown-out speakers. The weird non-sequiturs and showy references aren't there just to take up space, but they contribute towards constructing a world where murder is inevitable yet always in vogue. And more than a decade later, it still smacks completely out of nowhere.


5) Best Friend

Playful and somewhat wild on the onset, Young Thug's Best Friend really honors the true friendships beneath its bouncing drum beats and eccentric presentation. It lets Thug free to be himself with off-kilter flows, unexpected melodies, and moments of humor.

Dinner Celebrating Young Thug's Album "Punk" - Source: Getty
Dinner Celebrating Young Thug's Album "Punk" - Source: Getty

What makes it special is how he puts all of that energy behind a message of loyalty. It rejects the stereotype of friendship just being a harmless bunch of laughs, instead leaning towards a nod to shared history, trust, or that warm feeling of knowing someone has stood beside you through tough times. Repeatedly claiming "that's my best friend," Young Thug states that phrase like a chant or a kind of badge of honor.

It feels personal, but at the same time, universal-witnessing somebody who has been by your side through thick and thin. A snappy rhythm and playful synths back the production, bestowing a cool take-with-the-wind vibe on the track, but looking beyond that, a deeper message emerges. This seemingly defiant gratitude toward real ones, vocalized in a package begging to be shaken to, could hardly be ignored.


6) Pick Up The Phone

Pick Up the Phone isn't just some club anthem playing again. It's more like a loud buzzing, telling us what it really means to be true to yourself. The flow that people get used to and the kind of delivery that he doesn't filter show one big message that pushes through all the other stuff: you gotta believe in what's in front of you.

BET Hip Hop Awards 2021 - Red Carpet - Source: Getty
BET Hip Hop Awards 2021 - Red Carpet - Source: Getty

There's a bass-heavy sound here, catchy as it gets, but underneath it all, it's a straight statement about what it is to have ambition, and success ain't nowhere it's supposed to be. No brags, just real lines like "no joking around," or making you remember not to just go with whatever or copy others.

The restless hunger is matched by the song's wild energy. For anybody who can listen to it, the song quickly turns into music for climbing up from the bottom and doing it step by step.


7) Check

This track feels like it comes alive with crazy energy, and it almost makes you forget this is music and not some wild moment caught on tape. The way it comes in, it hits you, messy and loud, and all of that noise is exactly what made that era what it was to a lot of people.

The pace never slows—everything feels like it’s been thrown into motion at once, and sometimes his voice jumps or bends in weird ways, sounding like something only he would even try, and somehow it works.

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You can feel how Young Thug connects everything with his energy and his style and makes it all fit in these short, wild moments. There is an authenticity to this song; when it plays, it still feels sharp, it ain't worn out at all, hitting hard today just like back then. Trends are always changing, but it hasn't taken away from how this track punches.


Young Thug's discography really shows how far people can push creativity in hip-hop if they want. He pushes boundaries with his style, voice, and vision, but it doesn't stop there. He constantly experimented with new sounds, and many times he led a new group of artists, which made his impact pretty obvious. His catalog is consistently ahead of its time and wildly unpredictable. From mixtapes to chart-topping hits, his tracks defy easy categorization.


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Edited by Sezal Srivastava