Suicideboys Discography -

After a brief hiatus (Scrim’s near-fatal overdose and subsequent sobriety), the duo returned with their official "debut" album.

The $uicideboy$ discography is a monument to survival. It begins with two junkies screaming into a $50 microphone about wanting to die, and it evolves into two sober businessmen sampling their own past trauma for profit. But it never feels fake. Unlike many rap artists who "get happy" once they sign a deal, Ruby and Scrim simply traded the grim reaper for a steady heartbeat.

To listen chronologically is to hear a flatline become a pulse. Grey 59 for life. Suicideboys Discography


Stream the full $uicideboy$ discography on Spotify, Apple Music, or via the G59 Records official store.*

Here’s a feature concept for a Suicideboys Discography Explorer — designed for a fan site, music app, or data visualization project. After a brief hiatus (Scrim’s near-fatal overdose and


(I Want to Die in New Orleans, Stop Staring at the Shadows)

With their debut studio album, I Want to Die in New Orleans (2019), the duo attempted to transition from internet legends to legitimate mainstream artists. Stream the full $uicideboy$ discography on Spotify, Apple

Their most mature work. Released five years after their near-fatal overdose era, this album asks: What do you do when you get everything you wanted? The answer: You’re still depressed, but now you have a budget.

Lead single “Not Even Ghosts Are This Empty” is classic $B—paranoid and violent—but the deep cuts like “The Thin Grey Line” exhibit a wisdom that only comes from surviving 15 years of self-destruction. It debuted at #5 on the Billboard 200.