The Screwed Up Click (S.U.C.) was a hip hop collective formed in Houston, Texas, during the early 1990s by DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr.), centered on the Southside rap scene and the pioneering "chopped and screwed" production technique, which slows track tempos to 60-70 beats per minute while incorporating skips, scratches, and stop-time effects to emphasize lyrics and create a languid, atmospheric vibe.[1][2]Key members included DJ Screw as the central figure, alongside rappers such as Fat Pat, Big Hawk, Big Moe, Lil' Keke, Big Pokey, E.S.G., Lil' Flip, and Z-Ro, who supplied freestyles and verses for Screw's mixtapes, fostering a collaborative network that operated independently of major labels amid the East-West Coast rap rivalries.[2][3] The group established Screwed Up Records and Tapes in 1996 as a hub for distribution, producing landmark releases like 3 'n the Mornin' (1994) and an iconic 35-minute freestyle session on June 27, 1996, that captured the raw energy of Houston's underground.[1][3]The collective's output exceeded 350 "screw tapes" sold in thousands daily at peak, propelling Southern hip-hop's national visibility and influencing subsequent artists through its self-sustaining model and regional sound, though it was marked by profound losses, including DJ Screw's death from codeine overdose in 2000 and murders of members like Fat Pat (1998) and Big Hawk (2006), reflecting the era's intertwined cultural and causal risks in Houston's street rap ecosystem.[1][2][3]
Origins and Formation
Early Roots in Houston Hip-Hop
The Houston hip-hop scene of the late 1980s laid the groundwork for the Screwed Up Click through the rise of independent labels and raw, street-level acts that emphasized Southern drawls, horrorcore themes, and local slang over mainstream gangsta rap formulas. Rap-A-Lot Records, founded in 1986 by J. Prince, became a pivotal force by signing and promoting groups like the Geto Boys, whose 1991 single "Mind Playing Tricks on Me" from the album We Can't Be Stopped achieved national chart success and highlighted psychological struggles in urban poverty, marking Houston's entry into broader hip-hop consciousness.[4] Earlier influences included visceral performers like Ganksta N-I-P, whose late-1980s work on Rap-A-Lot foreshadowed the unpolished aggression that would permeate Southside crews.[4]DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr., born July 20, 1971, in Smithville, Texas) bridged these elements after moving to Houston's Southside in the late 1980s to live with his father amid family financial strains. Enrolling at Sterling High School in the South Park neighborhood, he connected with local hustlers like Albert Driver and began distributing custom tapes while experimenting with turntables.[5] Screw's initial forays into slowing records dated to the mid-1980s in Smithville, using his mother's blues LPs to create a hypnotic drag, but he refined the technique for hip-hop around 1990 in a Quail Meadows apartment, drawing partial inspiration from DJ Darryl Scott's pitch manipulations in late-1970s South Park sets.[5] This "screwing" method—reducing tempo by up to 60-70% via variable-speed turntables—emerged organically from Houston's sweltering climate, codeine-sipping car cruises in customized "slabs," and a desire to prolong bass-heavy enjoyment during late-night drives.[5][6]These innovations crystallized into the Screwed Up Click's proto-formation through mid-1990s house parties and freestyle cyphers in South Park and adjacent areas like Golfcrest, where Screw hosted rappers from neighborhood cliques for off-the-cuff verses over his altered beats.[5] Early participants, including brothers Fat Pat and Big Hawk from the Dead End Alliance, contributed bars reflecting Third Ward and South Acres realities—poverty, rivalries, and syrup-fueled escapism—building a loose affiliation unbound by contracts but unified by shared tapes and regional loyalty.[7] This underground ecosystem contrasted with Rap-A-Lot's polished outputs, prioritizing communal recording over commercial viability and embedding the collective in Houston's DIY mixtape tradition before formalization at Screw's Screwed Up Records store on February 2, 1998.[5]
Formation Under DJ Screw's Leadership
The Screwed Up Click emerged in the early 1990s as an informal collective of Houston rappers centered around DJ Screw's home on the city's Southside, where he hosted freestyle sessions over his pioneering slowed-down tracks.[8] DJ Screw, born Robert Earl Davis Jr. in 1971, began inviting local emcees to rhyme acapella during these recordings, transforming casual hangouts into collaborative mixtape productions that defined the group's early dynamic.[5] This process crystallized the S.U.C. as a hub for Southside talent, with Screw's leadership providing the technical innovation and distribution via custom "Screwtapes" that circulated underground.[9]Screw's apartment functioned as an open-door studio, drawing friends and neighborhood artists who contributed verses, beats, and hype, thereby coalescing a core roster through organic participation rather than a formal charter.[10] Sessions emphasized live freestyling over pre-written lyrics, fostering a raw, communal style that reflected Houston's street culture and Screw's vision of remixing mainstream hip-hop into a localized, syrup-slowed aesthetic.[5] By mid-decade, these gatherings had solidified affiliations with figures like his brother Al-D and early regulars such as Fat Pat and Big Hawk, who appeared on foundational tapes and helped propagate the sound via personal copies and car audio shares.[11]
Musical Style and Innovation
Development of Chopped and Screwed Technique
The chopped and screwed technique emerged in Houston, Texas, around 1990, when DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr.) began experimenting with slowing the playback speed of hip-hop records using a four-track recorder to produce a syrupy, bass-emphasized sound.[5] This initial "screwing" process involved dubbing tracks at reduced tempos, drawing partial influence from earlier slowed mixes by local DJs such as Darryl Scott in the late 1970s and Michael Price's custom tapes.[5] Some accounts attribute the spark to 1989, when Screw accidentally lowered the pitch on a turntable while under the influence of codeine-laced lean, prompting requests from friends for similar custom dubs played at lower RPMs, such as 45s at 33⅓.[12]By 1991, Screw had integrated the "chopping" element, manually editing tapes to stutter, skip, and repeat key phrases or beats—achieved by crossfading between two identical vinyl copies, scratching, and tape pauses—creating a hypnotic, fragmented rhythm that complemented the slowed base.[5] These sessions, often recorded live in his Southside apartment with local rappers freestyling over altered instrumentals, were captured on 100-minute Maxell cassettes using pitch controls for precise tempo reduction to around 60-70 beats per minute.[5][12] The method evolved iteratively through trial-and-error with basic equipment like boomboxes and multiple recorders, prioritizing a laid-back, immersive quality suited to Houston's slab car culture and lean consumption, which amplified the sound's disorienting depth in vehicles.[13][14]Screw's custom "screw tapes," sold informally at spots like Rice Market for $10 each, proliferated the technique locally by the early 1990s, with weekly sales reaching 1,000 units by the mid-decade as demand grew for personalized slowed remixes of tracks by artists like UGK and 2Pac.[12] Formal releases, such as 3 'n the Mornin' (Part One) in 1995 on Bigtyme Recordz, codified the style commercially, blending screwed originals with chopped freestyles and establishing it as a cornerstone of Houstonhip-hop innovation.[5][14] This homegrown refinement, independent of mainstream studio resources, prioritized sonic experimentation over polished production, yielding over 300 unique tapes that disseminated the technique through underground networks before wider adoption.[5]
Mixtape Production and Distribution Methods
DJ Screw produced Screwtapes, the primary mixtapes associated with the Screwed Up Click, in his Southside Houston apartment studio using analog equipment including two turntables, a mixer, and cassette recorders.[15] He achieved the chopped and screwed effect by simultaneously playing duplicate vinyl records on the turntables, slowing their pitch and tempo to approximately 60-70% of the original speed—a technique he developed to enhance bass resonance in car audio systems—and manually chopping segments by skipping the needle forward to repeat hooks, verses, or beats.[15][5] Sessions often involved live freestyles from Screwed Up Click members such as Fat Pat, Lil' Keke, and Big Moe, who would rhyme over Screw's manipulated instrumentals in informal gatherings, with the entire performance captured directly onto master cassettes without digital editing.[16] This process yielded over 300 unique volumes between the early 1990s and 2000, each customized with personalized dedications, timestamps, and local Houston references to foster communal listening experiences.[11]Distribution occurred through grassroots, underground channels centered in Houston's hip-hop scene, bypassing major labels due to the bootleg nature of the content, which frequently remixed copyrighted tracks without clearance.[17] Screw initially sold cassettes hand-dubbed from masters directly from his home studio for $10 each, with demand peaking at approximately $15,000 in daily sales during the late 1990s, driven by word-of-mouth among local car enthusiasts and club patrons.[11][18] Copies proliferated via informal networks, including trunk sales from vehicles, swaps at Southside record shops like Big Tyme Records, and dubbing services at audio stores catering to slab culture—customized cars with oversized wheels where the slowed tempos amplified subwoofers.[19][20] Regional spread to the Gulf Coast relied on traveling DJs and fans trading duplicates, establishing the Screwed Up Click's sound as a staple of Houston's independent rap ecosystem before digital reissues.[21]
Core Membership and Contributions
Original and Central Members
The Screwed Up Click (S.U.C.) was established in the mid-1990s by DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr., 1971–2000), a Houston DJ who invited local rappers to his Southside home for collaborative freestyles over his slowed-down tracks, forming the collective's core around frequent participants from neighborhoods like South Park and Hiram Clarke.[2][22] Original members centered on DJ Screw and a tight-knit group including his brother Al-D (Ralph Edward Davis), who contributed as a rapper, as well as key figures like Fat Pat, Big Hawk, Lil' Keke, and Big Moe, who shaped the group's early sound through appearances on Screw's "Screwtapes."[10][22]A pivotal subgroup, the Dead End Alliance (D.E.A.), comprised DJ Screw, Fat Pat (Patrick Lamont Hawkins, 1970–1998), Big Hawk (John Edward Hawkins, 1974–2006), and Kay-K (Kerry McKinney), releasing the album Screwed for Life and performing at events like the 1997 Juneteenth Rap Explosion.[7]Fat Pat, known for his energetic flow, featured on early S.U.C. mixtapes and co-founded Southside Playaz with Mike D (Michael Dixon) and Mr. 3-2, but was murdered on February 3, 1998, at age 27 during a robbery.[10][7]Big Hawk, Fat Pat's brother, co-founded elements of S.U.C. and delivered street-oriented verses on Screw's tapes like Chapter 001, continuing post-Screw with solo work such as Under Hawk's Wings (2000) until his own murder on May 1, 2006.[10][2]Lil' Keke (Marcus Lakee Thompson, b. 1976) emerged as a central voice with his 1995 freestyle "Pimp tha Pen" on DJ Screw's Chapter 001, leading to his debut album Don't Mess wit Texas (1997) and establishing S.U.C.'s lyrical focus on Houston's lean-fueled street life.[10] Big Moe (Kenneth Doniell Moore, 1971–2007), a founding rapper, innovated a melodic "rapsinging" style suited to screwed tempos, highlighted on tracks like those from his album City of Syrup (2000), though he died of a heart attack on October 14, 2007.[10][2] Mike D, also foundational, produced beats for Fat Pat and Southside Playaz releases like You Gottus Fuxxed Up (1998), bridging S.U.C.'s rap and production elements.[10] Kay-K, the last surviving D.E.A. member, contributed freestyles amid personal legal challenges, later issuing Sun Hit Da Fade Pt. II (2013).[7] These members' collaborations on over 200 of Screw's numbered mixtapes from 1994 onward defined S.U.C.'s organic, neighborhood-driven ethos before expansions.[22]
Affiliated Members and Expansions
The Screwed Up Click maintained a loose affiliation structure, incorporating Houston-based rappers and groups that collaborated on DJ Screw's mixtapes or shared stylistic and cultural ties, distinct from the core inner circle of frequent house session participants. Notable affiliated entities included the Botany Boyz (comprising B.G. Duke, C-Note, D-Red, and Will-Lean), whose 1995 EP Smokin N' Lean'n aligned with the collective's lean-infused aesthetic, and the Southside Playaz (initially featuring Mr. 3-2, Mike D, and Fat Pat, later with Clay-Doe replacing Fat Pat after 1998).[7] Individual affiliates such as Z-Ro, Al-D, Enjoli (dubbed the "Queen of S.U.C." for her appearances on tracks like Eyes on the Prize), and Lil' O contributed freestyles and verses to screwtapes, extending the collective's roster beyond its foundational rappers.[7][10]Related subgroups like the Dead End Alliance—formed by DJ Screw, Fat Pat, Big Hawk, and Kay-K—further blurred lines between core and affiliated status, with Kay-K as the sole surviving member by the 2010s and releasing tracks like "Sun Hit Da Fade Pt II" in 2013 alongside Z-Ro and Lil' Keke.[7] E.S.G., while core-adjacent, bridged affiliations through 1999 collaborations with Swisha House's Slim Thug, illustrating interconnections with rival Houston crews.[7] These ties emphasized the S.U.C.'s role as a broader ecosystem rather than a rigidly defined group, with affiliates often gaining visibility via Screw's production.[10]After DJ Screw's death on November 16, 2000, the Screwed Up Click did not formally restructure but expanded through surviving members' independent projects and delayed compilations, sustaining its legacy amid losses like Big Hawk in 2005 and Big Moe in 2007.[23] The 2014 digital release of The Take Over—recorded in the early 2000s—incorporated affiliates such as Botany Boyz, Mr. 3-2, Z-Ro, Trae tha Truth, Lil' Flip, and Bun B alongside core figures like Big Hawk, Mike D, E.S.G., and Lil' Keke, marking a posthumous broadening of participants.[23] Parallel solo outputs, including Big Hawk's 2000s mixtapes Straight Wreckin’ Vols. 1 & 2 and album Under Hawk’s Wings, Lil' Keke's ongoing releases, and Z-Ro's Rap-A-Lot catalog, effectively extended the collective's influence without centralized expansion.[10]Mike D pursued mixtapes and E.S.G. prepared LPs into the mid-2010s, reflecting decentralized continuity tied to Houston's rap infrastructure.[23]
Discography and Key Releases
DJ Screw's Screwtapes
DJ Screw's Screwtapes formed the backbone of his discographic output, comprising a vast series of custom mixtapes that exemplified the chopped and screwed technique through slowed tempos, skipping beats, and layered ad-libs. These tapes, numbering in the thousands produced between the early 1990s and Screw's death in 2000, were primarily underground releases distributed via local Houston networks such as car trunks, house parties, and independent record shops like Screwed Up Records.[24][5] Often cataloged by chapter numbers—ranging from Chapter 001 to over 300—they featured freestyles from Screwed Up Click affiliates, screwed remixes of contemporary rap tracks from artists like UGK and Geto Boys, and original verses emphasizing Houston's street life and lean culture.[25]Production of Screwtapes typically involved clients providing song lists and sometimes live freestylers, with Screw recording sessions in his home studio using cassette decks for the signature pitch-shifted effect, which mimicked the disorienting haze of codeine syrup consumption. Many tapes remained personal or limited-run "grey tapes," evading formal commercial channels until posthumous compilations like the 2007 Diary of the Originator box set, which collected 22 volumes of select chapters on CD.[26][27] Release dates for individual chapters vary due to informal dating, but early examples include Chapter 003: Duck Sick (circa 1995) and Chapter 010: June 27th (1996), the latter recorded on Screw's birthday and featuring pivotal freestyles by Fat Pat and Hawk that captured the collective's raw energy.[25][24]Notable Screwtapes highlighted the evolution of Screw's style and SUC collaborations:
Chapter 001: Done Deal (1997): An foundational entry blending screwed hits with early group verses, establishing the chapter format.[25]
Chapter 002: Tales From tha 4 (1996-1997): Focused on Fourth Ward narratives, incorporating local slang and UGK influences.[25]
Chapter 010: June 27th (1996): Widely regarded as a cornerstone for its marathon freestyle session, later influencing tributes after member deaths.[24][26]
Chapter 148: All Frequencies (late 1990s): Explored thematic radio scans with dense layering, showcasing Screw's technical refinement.[24]
These tapes' scarcity and oral transmission fostered a cult following, with bootlegs and digital rips sustaining availability post-Screw's era, though original cassettes command high collector value due to degradation risks.[5]
Group and Solo Albums
The Screwed Up Click's output as a collective emphasized mixtapes and compilations over traditional studio albums, with releases often aggregating freestyles and tracks from multiple members in chopped and screwed format. Key group projects include Straight Wreckin, Vol. 1 (2007), a mixtape featuring contributions from core affiliates like Z-Ro and Trae tha Truth, and The Take Over (2014), which compiled collaborative cuts emphasizing Houston's underground sound.[28][29] Earlier efforts, such as Making History (2005), captured the group's raw, tape-recorded ethos post-DJ Screw's death.[29]Solo albums by Screwed Up Click members frequently incorporated the slowed-down, bass-heavy production techniques central to the collective, allowing individual artists to expand on DJ Screw's innovations while pursuing commercial deals. Big Moe's debut City of Syrup (2000, Wreckshop Records) exemplified this with its laid-back, codeine-tinged crooning over syrupy beats, peaking at number 10 on the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[3] Fat Pat's posthumous Ghetto Dreams (1998, Rap-A-Lot Records), released after his 1998 murder, featured high-energy tracks celebrating Houston street life and car culture.[3] Lil' Keke's Don't Mess Wit Texas (1997, Rap-A-Lot Records) blended gritty narratives with melodic hooks, solidifying his status as a freestyle pioneer within the group.[3]Other prominent solo releases include Lil' Flip's Undaground Legend (2002, Columbia Records), a major-label breakthrough with viral freestyles that propelled him to national attention, and Z-Ro's introspective The Life of Joseph W. McVey (2015, eOne Music), produced by Mike Dean and delving into personal struggles with raw lyricism.[3] E.S.G.'s Sailin' Da South (1995, Wreckshop Records) predated much of the collective's fame but influenced its G-funk-infused Southern style, including tributes to fallen peers.[3] These projects, often distributed via independent labels like Wreckshop and Rap-A-Lot, numbered in the dozens across members, though many remained regionally focused due to limited mainstream promotion.[3]
Cultural Impact and Reception
Influence on Southern Hip-Hop
The Screwed Up Click (SUC), centered around DJ Screw's chopped and screwed technique developed in the early 1990s, fundamentally shaped Houston's hip-hop sound by slowing tempos to approximately 60-70 beats per minute and incorporating skips or repetitions of key musical phrases, creating a hazy, introspective aesthetic tied to local car culture and codeine use. This innovation distinguished Southern rap from the faster-paced East and West Coast styles dominant in the early 1990s, fostering a regional identity that emphasized low-end bass and elongated vocals suited to slab (slow-low-and-banged) vehicles. By 1996, Screw's "June 27th" mixtape, featuring freestyles from SUC members over slowed instrumentals, became a cultural touchstone, annualizing the date as a Houston hip-hop milestone and amplifying the collective's underground reach through custom cassette sales exceeding 1,000 units weekly at $10 each.[30][12]SUC's influence extended across the South by popularizing mixtape-driven distribution, which bypassed traditional labels and empowered independent artists in cities like Memphis and Port Arthur; for instance, Three 6 Mafia adopted similar slowed production on tracks like "Sippin' on Some Syrup" (2000), blending it with their crunk horrorcore style, while UGK's Pimp C incorporated screwed elements into production, crediting Houston's scene for regional cross-pollination. In Houston itself, SUC members such as Big Moe and Lil' Keke propelled the genre's evolution, with Moe's syrupy delivery on albums like City of Syrup (2000) solidifying the sound's association with lean culture and influencing subsequent acts like Slim Thug and Mike Jones, whose careers gained traction via screwed remixes in the mid-2000s. This technique boosted physical sales of Southern rap albums by an estimated 10% in Texas and Louisiana markets during the early 2000s, as screwtapes served as promotional tools extending track playtime and replay value in car systems.[31][12][32]The legacy persisted into the 2010s and beyond, with chopped and screwed informing trap's atmospheric production through echoed 808 bass and vocal manipulation, as seen in Travis Scott's sampling of Screw on Astroworld (2018) tracks like "Stargazing," which evoked the original's disorienting slowdowns and helped mainstream Southern rap's experimental edge. SUC's model of collective freestyling and tape trading also laid groundwork for Atlanta's trapmixtape explosion, where producers like Lex Luger drew indirect inspiration from Houston's bass-heavy, slowed foundations, though adapted to higher tempos. Despite Screw's death in 2000, SUC-affiliated labels like Screwed Up Records continued archiving and reissuing material, ensuring the technique's causal role in Southern hip-hop's shift toward mood-driven, regional authenticity over coastal mimicry.[31][33][30]
Mainstream Adoption and Critical Views
The chopped and screwed technique pioneered by DJ Screw and embodied in Screwed Up Click recordings exerted a regional influence on Southern hip-hop during the 1990s but saw broader mainstream adoption in the early 2000s through commercialized extensions of the style.[34] Labels like Swishahouse, founded in 1997 by DJ 5000 Watts and OG Ron C, began producing chopped and screwed versions of full-length albums, which helped propel Houston artists such as Mike Jones and Paul Wall to national chart success on tracks emphasizing slow tempos and bass-heavy production.[34] By the 2010s, elements of the style permeated mainstream rap via remixes and references; for instance, Drake incorporated Screw-inspired slowed-down aesthetics in songs like "November 18th" (2009) and sampled Bun B on "N2Deep," while OG Ron C extended the technique to albums by artists including Megan Thee Stallion and Thundercat.[34]The Screwed Up Click collective itself achieved minimal commercial breakthroughs as a unit, with member Lil' Flip's solo hit "Game Over" (2004) reaching No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 but few group efforts crossing over nationally due to their focus on localized mixtape freestyles and underground distribution. Posthumous releases and streaming revivals, such as high plays on screwed versions of tracks like E.S.G.'s "Sailin' Da South" (over 7 million on Spotify as of 2023), have sustained cult interest without translating to widespread hits.[35] Recent platforms like TikTok have amplified the style's "slowed + reverb" variant, often attributing origins to Screw and indirectly elevating SUC's foundational role in viral edits of contemporary rap.[34]Critical reception of Screwed Up Click work emphasizes its authentic depiction of Houston's street life and innovative DJ manipulation, with reviewers lauding albums like Fat Pat's Ghetto Dreams (1998) as a "triumphant debut" showcasing swagger, melodic hooks, and ties to slab car culture.[3] Publications such as Paste Magazine highlight the collective's enduring legacy in Southern rap through releases like UGK's Ridin' Dirty (1996) for its gritty, cinematic storytelling and soul-infused beats, positioning SUC as a cornerstone of regional innovation over polished mainstream appeal.[3] However, some critiques point to technical shortcomings in mixtape-style outputs, including vague tracklistings, mislabeled freestyles, and diluted lyrical edge lacking competitive battle-rap intensity, as seen in reviews of posthumous compilations like Playaz Nite (2005), rated 7.5/10 for preserving Screw's hypnotic slowing but faulted for organizational opacity.[36]Analysts note the style's hypnotic, bass-forward sound as a deliberate resistance to faster-paced East Coast and West Coast norms, fostering a communal listening ritual in Houston but limiting crossover due to its niche pacing and slang-heavy content.[36] Aggregate critic scores for select SUC-affiliated albums hover around middling marks, such as 50/100 for group efforts, reflecting praise for raw energy alongside reservations about accessibility and production refinement compared to contemporaries.[37] Retrospective views from hip-hop outlets affirm SUC's influence on trap and auto-tune evolutions but underscore how its underground ethos—prioritizing tape trading over radio formatting—relegated it to revered subcultural status rather than pop dominance.[3]
Association with Drug Culture
Codeine Syrup and Lifestyle Promotion
The Screwed Up Click (SUC), led by DJ Screw, integrated codeine syrup—mixed with promethazine, soda, and candy into what became known as lean or purple drank—into their musical output and social practices starting in the mid-1990s, portraying it as a core element of Houston's underground hip-hop lifestyle. Syrup consumption featured in recording sessions for Screw's prolific Screwtapes mixtapes, where participants freestyled over slowed tracks amid extended periods of drinking the mixture, smoking, and isolation to foster immersion.[5] These sessions, often documented on over 1,000 tapes produced from 1990 onward, captured casual endorsements of syrup as a enhancer for creativity and vibe, with SUC members like Shorty Mac recounting its routine use during production.[5][38]SUC's chopped and screwed technique, which drastically reduced track tempos using turntable pitch controls, mimicked the woozy, sedative haze of codeine intoxication, implicitly linking auditory enjoyment to substance use and encouraging listeners to sip syrup for optimal effect.[38] Lyrics across freestyles and tracks explicitly glorified sipping, with SUC positioned as pioneers in rapping about the practice, predating its wider Southern rap adoption.[39]Big Moe, a central SUC affiliate, amplified this through songs like "Sippin' Codeine" (featured on 2010 compilations of 1990s material with Screw) and his 2000 debut album City of Syrup, which centered themes of drank consumption with guest appearances from SUC peers such as Z-Ro and Tyte Eyez.[40][41]This promotion extended culturally, as some Houston listeners viewed syrup as prerequisite for appreciating Screw's tapes, fostering a feedback loop where the music's hypnotic quality reinforced drug experimentation.[42] By embedding syrup references in accessible, bootleg-distributed mixtapes sold for around $10 each, SUC normalized its recreational appeal within the local scene, intertwining it with the aspirational imagery of slow-rolling cars, nightlife, and camaraderie despite the substance's origins as a prescription cough suppressant.[38][5]
Health Consequences and Empirical Risks
Codeine-promethazine syrup, when abused as "lean," poses acute risks of opioid overdose, including respiratory depression, hypoxia, and fatal cardiopulmonary arrest due to codeine's action on mu-opioid receptors in the brainstem.[43] Chronic misuse exacerbates these dangers through dependence, tolerance requiring escalating doses, and sedative effects that impair judgment, often compounded by mixing with alcohol or other depressants.[44] Empirical pharmacovigilance data from U.S. Food and Drug Administration reports spanning 1969 to 2015 identified 64 cases of severe respiratory depression and related deaths, predominantly in vulnerable populations, underscoring codeine's narrow therapeutic index and potential for lethality even at prescribed levels in genetically susceptible individuals.[45]In the context of the Screwed Up Click's promotion of lean within Houston's hip-hop scene, member health outcomes reflect these pharmacological hazards. DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis) died on November 16, 2000, at age 29 from codeine overdose with mixed drug intoxication, including elevated codeine levels alongside Valium, morphine, and alcohol (blood alcohol concentration of 0.30%), as determined by Harris County autopsy findings.[46] This case illustrates acute overdose causality, though underlying cardiomegaly noted in the examination may have been worsened by habitual use. Similarly, Big Moe (Kenneth Moore) succumbed to cardiac arrest in October 2007 at age 33 following a week-long coma, with chronic codeine consumption cited as a contributing factor to his cardiovascular deterioration, mirroring patterns observed in opioid abusers.[47]Broader empirical associations link lean to non-fatal morbidity, such as neurocognitive impairment and dental erosion from prolonged syrup exposure, though peer-reviewed quantification specific to adult recreational cohorts remains limited.[48] National surveys indicate lean's cultural entrenchment correlates with self-reported coping for stress but elevates polydrug interaction risks, with opioid-related overdoses claiming over 81,000 U.S. lives in 2022 alone, including prescription variants like codeine.[49] Genetic polymorphisms in CYP2D6 enzyme activity further amplify unpredictability, converting codeine to morphine variably and heightening overdose incidence in ultra-rapid metabolizers by up to 50-fold in some studies.[43] These risks persist despite regulatory curbs, as illicit diversion sustains abuse patterns observed in groups like the Screwed Up Click.
Tragedies and Losses
Key Member Deaths
Fat Pat (Patrick Lamark Hawkins), an original member known for his affiliation with Dead End Alliance within the collective, was fatally shot on February 3, 1998, at the Meadows Southwest Apartment Complex in Houston while reportedly collecting payment for a performance; the case remains unsolved.[50][51]DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr.), the collective's founder and central figure who pioneered the chopped and screwed technique, died on November 16, 2000, at age 29 from a codeine overdose combined with mixed drug intoxication and alcohol, as determined by the Harris County coroner's office.[52][46]Big Hawk (John Edward Hawkins), Fat Pat's brother and a prominent rapper in the group dubbed the "Five Star General," was shot and killed on May 1, 2006, outside a residence on Redfern Drive in Houston; investigators reported multiple gunshot wounds, but no arrests have been made and the motive remains unclear.[53][54]Big Moe (Kenneth Doniell Moore), recognized for popularizing the "sanging" style in screwed tracks, suffered a heart attack on October 7, 2007, leading to a coma from which he did not recover, dying on October 14, 2007, at age 33.[55][56]Big Pokey (Marlon J. Singleton), an original member contributing to early mixtapes, collapsed onstage during a Juneteenth performance on June 18, 2023, in Silsbee, Texas, and was pronounced dead at a hospital at age 45; autopsy results confirmed the cause as hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, with no illicit drugs detected.[57][58]
The Screwed Up Click has experienced a notable series of premature deaths among its core members, with at least five key figures perishing before age 50, often tied to either interpersonal violence or health complications associated with chronic substance use. These losses, spanning from 1998 to 2023, underscore a pattern of early mortality that contrasts sharply with typical life expectancies, reflecting the high-risk environment of Houston's underground rap scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[51][59][60]
Gunshot homicides accounted for two of these deaths: Fat Pat was fatally shot on February 3, 1998, at an apartment complex in Houston amid circumstances linked to local rivalries, while his brother Big Hawk suffered a similar fate on May 1, 2006, in a drive-by shooting despite his reputation for avoiding conflict.[51][61] The remaining cases involved cardiovascular failure, with DJ Screw's death directly resulting from acute codeine toxicity as confirmed by autopsy on November 16, 2000. Big Moe's heart attack on October 7, 2007, which led to a coma and death a week later, occurred in the context of documented heavy codeine consumption, a factor known to elevate risks of myocardial damage through respiratory suppression and metabolic strain over time. Similarly, Big Pokey's onstage collapse and subsequent heart attack death on June 18, 2023, as verified by autopsy, followed years of immersion in the same syrup-centric lifestyle.[59][62][60]This clustering of fatalities reveals two intertwined causal pathways: acute violence stemming from the competitive, street-influenced dynamics of early Houston rap collectives, and chronic health erosion from codeinepromethazine syrup abuse, which the group's music and ethos frequently glorified as a ritualistic accompaniment to "chopped and screwed" production. Empirical evidence from toxicology reports and medical histories indicates that repeated exposure to codeine—a depressantopioid—predisposes users to fatal respiratory arrest or secondary organ failure, even absent a single massive overdose, as tolerance builds but cumulative toxicity persists. While not every death was ruled an overdose, the shared cultural normalization of lean within the Screwed Up Click amplified these risks, contributing to a mortality rate far exceeding national averages for young adult males in similar demographics.[38][63]
Controversies and Internal Dynamics
Beefs and Rivalries
The Screwed Up Click, centered on Houston's Southside, emerged within a broader intra-city rivalry between Southside and Northside rap factions that persisted through the 1990s and into the 2000s, often fueled by territorial loyalties, stylistic differences, and competition for local dominance. Southside artists, including SUC members like Lil Keke and Fat Pat, emphasized laid-back, syrup-influenced aesthetics tied to neighborhoods such as Third Ward and Missouri City, contrasting with the Northside's grittier, more aggressive tones represented by figures like DJ DMD and E.S.G.[64][65] This divide occasionally surfaced in lyrics, with SUC tracks subtly dissing Northside elements while prioritizing Southside pride, though overt violence or diss tracks were rare compared to other regional scenes.[65]DJ Screw actively worked to suppress beefs, both internal to the SUC and those spilling over from the citywide tensions, by enforcing resolutions during his legendary house sessions and mixtape recordings. Z-RO recounted that Screw would not tolerate unresolved conflicts in his presence, compelling disputants to reconcile on the spot to maintain focus on music and camaraderie, which helped preserve the collective's unity amid Houston's competitive underground.[66][4] This philosophy extended to bridging some South-North gaps, as Screw collaborated with Northside affiliates like E.S.G. on screwed mixes, though underlying frictions persisted, with Lil Keke later noting that Screw's tapes sometimes amplified sectional pride and stirred rival sentiments.[67]Post-Screw's death in 2000, isolated internal strains emerged within surviving SUC ranks, such as disputes between Lil Keke and Yungstar over Screwfest event logistics and performer slots on June 27—anniversary dates honoring DJ Screw—which escalated publicly in 2025 interviews before being addressed and de-escalated.[68][69] Unlike high-profile national feuds, SUC rivalries remained contained, lacking escalation to violence or widespread media coverage, attributable to the group's foundational emphasis on collaboration over confrontation.[23]
Exploitation and Business Disputes
DJ Screw established Screwed Up Records and Tapes in January 1998 to facilitate the legitimate sale of his chopped and screwed mixtapes, transitioning from home-based distribution amid growing demand in Houston's underground scene.[52] The store served as a hub for the Screwed Up Click collective, stocking tapes featuring freestyles from members like Big Hawk, Lil' Keke, and Fat Pat, though the operation remained informal without major label backing or cleared samples from commercial tracks.[52]Following Screw's death on November 16, 2000, the store continued under management by his estate and associates, including caretaker Big Bub, but encountered persistent financial and operational strains, including competition from bootleggers replicating Screw's style.[70] These bootlegs, which Screw himself had tolerated as part of the culture, undermined official sales, contributing to revenue shortfalls in an already precarious independent model.[52]A prominent business dispute arose in 2011 when landlord Dr. Pondexter initiated eviction proceedings against the store to repurpose the Cullen Boulevard property for expansion of his dental practice, an issue reportedly simmering since shortly after Screw's passing.[70] Pondexter rejected a $100,000 purchase offer from the store's representatives, leading to court battles where an initial ruling favored the landlord; the estate appealed, with further hearings pending as of June 2011.[70] This conflict highlighted vulnerabilities in the post-Screw era, where the store's cultural significance clashed with commercial real estate pressures, though no resolution details emerged publicly beyond the appeal.[70]The Screwed Up Click's reliance on unauthorized remixes of mainstream tracks for mixtapes created ongoing exposure to copyright claims, as rising popularity drew scrutiny from major labels seeking royalties for uncleared usage—a risk that intensified after Screw's death but rarely escalated to formal lawsuits against the collective.[71] Members benefited from the tapes' promotional value, launching careers without traditional contracts, yet this informal system often left artists without structured revenue shares, fostering perceptions of undercompensation relative to the style's influence.[71] No verified instances of internal exploitation by Screw or core members surfaced, with accounts emphasizing his non-greedy approach to collaborations.[72]
Legacy and Recent Developments
Post-2000 Continuation
Following the death of DJ Screw on November 16, 2000, from a codeine overdose, the Screwed Up Click persisted as a loose collective through the individual output of surviving members, who sustained the chopped and screwed production style in solo releases and collaborations.[52] The group faced further attrition with the losses of Big Hawk in 2005 and Big Moe in 2007, weakening its cohesion but not halting musical activity tied to its core sound and membership.[23]Lil' Flip, a key affiliate, achieved mainstream exposure with his 2002 major-label debut Undaground Legend, which integrated Screwed Up Click influences like slowed tempos amid the era's ringtone rap trends.[3] Z-Ro advanced his career with introspective projects such as The Life of Joseph W. McVey, his eighth solo album emphasizing raw lyricism over production by Mike Dean.[3] Collaborations like the ABN duo's It Is What It Is (Z-Ro and Trae tha Truth) further exemplified the collective's enduring stylistic imprint through soul-sampled tracks and street narratives.[3]A 2010 reunion tour brought together active members Big Pokey, Lil Keke, Lil O, and Z-Ro for live performances honoring the group's origins.[73] In 2014, the delayed compilation The Take Over—originally slated for 2005—finally surfaced, compiling tracks from DJ Screw, Big Hawk, Big Moe, Lil Keke, Fat Pat, E.S.G., Z-Ro, Trae tha Truth, Mr. 3-2, Botany Boyz, Lil Flip, and Bun B, with some contributions appearing posthumously.[23] Surviving artists including Mike D, Dat Boi T, E.S.G., and Lil Keke pursued mixtapes and albums into the mid-2010s, underscoring individualized continuity amid the collective's fragmented state.[23] Releases under the Screwed Up imprint, such as 7717 Cullen Blvd. - Volume 1 in 2012, also preserved archival freestyles and group sessions.[74]
Tributes and Influence into the 2020s
In 2020, the visual tribute filmAll Screwed Up was released, produced by IYO Visuals in association with DJ Screw's family to commemorate his life and the origins of the chopped and screwed technique central to the Screwed Up Click.[75] The project blends biopic-style reenactments, animation, and archival footage to depict Screw's early years and innovative remixing methods, aiming to clarify his foundational role amid evolving narratives around Houston's hip-hop scene.[76] Its official version premiered on YouTube on November 18, 2020, garnering significant viewership and serving as a family-endorsed effort to preserve the collective's authentic history.[77]Subsequent tributes included the 2020 documentary Welcome to Screwston: The Story of DJ Screw and Houston Hip Hop, which chronicles the Screwed Up Click's emergence and cultural impact through interviews with participants.[78] In September 2025, the Drink Champs podcast featured Lil' Flip, a surviving S.U.C. member, discussing Screw's non-exploitative leadership in building the collective and its enduring Houston legacy.[72] A pilot for a potential DJ Screw biopic, titled All Screwed Up - DJ Screw (The Movie), surfaced in August 2024, indicating ongoing cinematic interest in the group's story.[79]The Screwed Up Click's chopped and screwed style has profoundly shaped 2020s hip-hop, influencing subgenres like cloud rap and phonk through slowed tempos and reverb effects popularized on platforms such as TikTok.[80] Artists including Travis Scott have sampled S.U.C. members—such as Fat Pat, Big Hawk, Big Moe, and Lil' Keke—on albums like ASTROWORLD (2018), with echoes persisting in tracks like the 2024 song "Black&Blue," which directly samples DJ Screw's "Pimp Tha Pen."[81][82] References by Drake and integrations by producers like T-Pain demonstrate the technique's migration into mainstream production, where slowed-down vocals and beats evoke the original S.U.C. aesthetic without always explicit attribution.[3][83] Surviving affiliates, including Lil' Flip, continue releasing music that nods to the collective's sound, sustaining its regional dominance in Houston's trap and melodic rap scenes.[84]