Juice Wrld

Rapper

Birthday December 2, 1998

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2019-12-8, Oak Lawn, Illinois, U.S. (21 years old)

Nationality United States

#1172 Most Popular

1992

His stage name, which he stated represents "taking over the world", was derived from the crime thriller film Juice (1992).

1998

Jarad Anthony Higgins (December 2, 1998 – December 8, 2019), known professionally as Juice Wrld (pronounced "juice world"; stylized as Juice WRLD), was an American rapper, singer, and songwriter.

Jarad Anthony Higgins was born on December 2, 1998, in Chicago, Illinois.

He grew up in the South Suburbs spending his childhood in Calumet Park.

2010

Throughout his career of four years, he was a leading figure in the emo rap and SoundCloud rap genres which garnered mainstream attention during the mid-to-late 2010s.

2013

He began drinking lean in sixth grade and using Percocet and Xanax in 2013.

Higgins additionally smoked cigarettes before quitting in his last year of high school because of health issues.

He learned to play the piano at four years old, having been inspired by his mother, Carmella Wallace, who later began paying for lessons.

He then took up the guitar and drums while also playing the trumpet for band class.

In his sophomore year of high school, he began posting songs to SoundCloud which he recorded on his smartphone.

Around this time, Higgins began to take rapping more seriously.

Higgins developed as an artist in his first year of high school.

2015

Higgins began his career as an independent artist in 2015 under the name JuicetheKidd and signed a recording contract with Grade A Productions and Interscope Records in 2017.

He gained recognition with the diamond-certified single "Lucid Dreams", which peaked at number two on the US Billboard Hot 100.

His first track, "Forever", was released on SoundCloud in 2015 under the name JuicetheKidd.

Higgins recorded most of his first tracks on a cellphone, uploading them to SoundCloud in his sophomore year.

He changed his name from JuicetheKidd, a name inspired by his affection for rapper Tupac Shakur's role in the film Juice, to Juice Wrld because he and his associates believed the change would benefit his career.

In an interview with the Atlanta radio station WHTA, Higgins revealed that the latter part of his stage name initially had no meaning but that he came to think it "represents taking over the world".

2017

He then later moved to Homewood, where he attended Homewood-Flossmoor High School and graduated in 2017.

His parents divorced when he was three years old, and his father left, leaving his mother to raise him and an older brother as a single parent.

"Too Much Cash", Higgins' first track to be produced by frequent collaborator Nick Mira, was released in 2017.

While releasing projects and songs on SoundCloud, Higgins worked in a factory but was dissatisfied with the job; he was fired within two weeks.

After joining the internet collective Internet Money, Higgins released his debut full-length EP, 9 9 9, on June 15, 2017, with the song "Lucid Dreams" breaking out and growing his following.

Higgins also briefly performed under the name Juice in early 2017.

In mid-2017, he received attention from artists such as Waka Flocka Flame and Southside, as well as fellow Chicago artists G Herbo and Lil Bibby.

He subsequently signed with Lil Bibby's co-owned record label, Grade A Productions.

In December 2017, Higgins released the three-song EP Nothings Different.

The project was covered by the hip-hop blog Lyrical Lemonade, with Higgins' track "All Girls Are the Same" gaining popularity through the blog post.

2018

It was included on his triple platinum debut album Goodbye & Good Riddance (2018), alongside the singles "All Girls Are the Same", "Lean wit Me", "Wasted", and "Armed and Dangerous", all of which charted on the Hot 100.

He then collaborated with Future on the mixtape Wrld on Drugs (2018), and released his second album, Death Race for Love, in 2019; it contained the hit single "Robbery" and became Higgins' first number one debut on the US Billboard 200.

An accompanying Cole Bennett-directed music video was released in February 2018.

Following the video's release, Interscope Records signed Higgins for $3 million and a remix featuring Lil Yachty was previewed but never officially released.

"All Girls Are the Same" was critically acclaimed, receiving a Best New Music designation from Pitchfork.

2019

Higgins died of a drug overdose on December 8, 2019.

Higgins' father died in June 2019.

Higgins' mother was very religious and conservative, and did not let him listen to hip hop.

He was allowed to listen to rock and pop music, however, being introduced to artists including Billy Idol, Blink-182, Black Sabbath, Fall Out Boy, Megadeth and Panic! at the Disco through video games such as Tony Hawk's Pro Skater and Guitar Hero.

Higgins was a heavy drug user during his childhood and teens.

2020

His first posthumous album, Legends Never Die (2020), matched chart records for most successful posthumous debut and for most U.S. top-ten entries from one album, while the single "Come & Go" (with Marshmello) became Higgins' second song to reach number two on the Hot 100.

His second posthumous album, Fighting Demons, was released in 2021 alongside the documentary film Juice Wrld: Into the Abyss and contained the US top 20 single "Already Dead".