- R&B Now
UPDATED PLAYLIST
R&B Now
Apple Music R&B
Coco Jones has a question for you on “Is It Mine”. Listen in Spatial Audio. - Summer Walker Essentials
ESSENTIALS PLAYLIST
Summer Walker Essentials
Apple Music R&B
The Atlanta R&B star keeps it moody, sultry and bold in every way.
- Songs We’re Loving
- Recommended Playlist
- Playlist We Like
- Playlist We Like
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music R&B
- Updated Playlist
- Spend It
- Summer Walker
- Burning Blue
- Mariah the Scientist
- TRICK DADDY
- Isaiah Falls
- hope u don't mind
- 4batz
- X n The City
- Jordan Adetunji
- Soar
- Aqyila
- JUNGLE FEVER
- THEHONESTGUY
- me u & pride
- 4batz
- Again
- Jacob Latimore & Woody McClain
- Head in a Jar
- Khamari
- money
- Tiana Major9
- Never Let Us Go
- Otis Kane
- How You Know
- Kayla Rae
- Angel Patience
- Olympia Vitalis
- Take Her Love
- Xavier Omär
- Right On Time
- Leela James
- No Can
- Samaria
- Isaiah Falls
- Coco Jones
- THEHONESTGUY
- Coco Jones
- DESTIN CONRAD
- Again
- Jacob Latimore & Woody McClain
- Head in a Jar
- Khamari
- JUNGLE FEVER
- THEHONESTGUY
- Never Let Us Go
- Otis Kane
- How You Know
- Kayla Rae
- Take Her Love
- Xavier Omär
- No Can
- Samaria
- Just Like Me
- RAAHiiM
- Breathe
- RealestK
- Bon Voyage
- Girlfriend & Tierra Whack
- NO SLEEP
- The Bonfyre
- Too Soon
- Jaz Karis
- Karma
- 2BYG
- 36 Hours
- MIRIAH.
- Sympathy (feat. Domani)
- Aaron Page
- Lovesick
- Lex Aura
- You Deserve It
- Leo Waters
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music
- Apple Music
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music
- Apple Music R&B
- Isaiah Falls
- Roy Woods
- Jessie Reyez
- PARTYNEXTDOOR & Drake
- Ray Lozano
- Apple Music African
- Bryson Tiller
- Destiny's Child
- Frank Ocean
- Isaiah Falls
- THEHONESTGUY
- Coco Jones
- DESTIN CONRAD
- Summer Walker
- Eric Benét & Chanté Moore
- Coco Jones
- Ari Lennox
- XG
- Mariah the Scientist & Summer Walker
- 20 min 33 sec
- Kelly Rowland
- 17 min 8 sec
- 33 min 58 sec
- 28 min 17 sec
- The Grammy winner on her debut LP, Why Not More?
- Isaiah Falls talks about his debut album LVRS PARADISE.
- The R&B stars share mental health tips and tour stories.
- On her halftime performance and new music.
- Kelly Rowland shares lessons learned through motherhood.
- Kali Uchis talks about healthy lifestyle choices as a mother.
Hits by Decade
- Recommended Playlist
- Recommended Playlist
- Apple Music 2010s
- Apple Music Soul/Funk
- Apple Music ’80s
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music Hip-Hop/Rap
- Apple Music Hip-Hop/Rap
Stations
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music Hip-Hop
- Apple Music Soul/Funk
- Apple Music R&B
- Apple Music Soul/Funk
About
R&B is what happened when rhythm and blues got a glossy modern polish with distant echoes of disco and funk. Of course, it’s sometimes hard to hear traces of either funk or disco in modern R&B. And in fact, many 21st-century R&B hits feel closer to dance-pop or hip-hop than classic soul music or vintage rhythm and blues. The story of contemporary R&B really starts in the late ’70s and early ’80s, a time when several strains of African-American music began to mingle in innovative and unexpected ways. That was the era when innovators and future superstars like Prince and Rick James started to combine slickly futuristic synthesizer hooks and smooth disco rhythms with elements of traditional funk and soul, setting the template for the R&B sound of the ’80s and beyond. With the release of Thriller in 1983, Michael Jackson took this hybrid style to mainstream heights, breaking sales records around the world and singlehandedly making R&B one of the key ingredients in pop music for the next several decades. In the late ’80s, singer and producer Teddy Riley coined the name “new jack swing” to describe a funkier, party-ready brand of R&B that was heavy on hip-hop style and attitude. By the ’90s, rappers and R&B singers were constantly collaborating on each other’s songs. As MCs started rhyming over R&B instrumentals and enlisting R&B singers to sing the hooks, it gave hip-hop mainstream appeal. On the flip side, artists like Mary J. Blige led the charge to bring hip-hop beats into R&B, which birthed hip-hop soul and further blurred the lines between the genres. Of course there’s always been room for soulful ballads and slow jams in modern R&B, as anyone who’s swooned to a Mariah Carey or John Legend hit knows well. The late ’90s saw the rise of the movement known as neo-soul, which abandoned the glitzy, synthetic sound of much modern R&B for the kind of classic musicianship that had seemingly been swept away. Of course, the foundations of R&B have always been built on innovation and the unexpected, and it keeps on evolving, whether you’re looking for a club-ready banger from Beyoncé or an adventurous jam from D’Angelo.