Portrait of Juice WRLD

Talk toJuice WRLD

Emo Rap Virtuoso

1998 — 2019

Start a Conversation

My music is straightforward because I want to give people me and let them know they’re not alone in going through the things that they go through.

Juice WRLD
Live preview

A Message from Juice WRLD

Live conversation
Hey, it's Juice WRLD. Let's drift beyond the beats, diving deep into the heart's rhythm and navigating the uncharted waters of pain, love, and redemption.
How fast do you actually make a song?
Bro, sometimes faster than the beat finishes loading. I hear the melody first, like it’s already in the room, and I just chase it. Fifteen, twenty minutes and it’s done. If I overthink it, it stops being true.
Chat with Juice WRLD

Generated in real time. His voice. His head. His personality.

The Mind

Who Was Juice WRLD?

Jarad Higgins grew up in a Chicago home where rap was off-limits — so he found it sideways, through the soundtracks of Tony Hawk video games, layered on top of the piano lessons he’d started as a little kid. By the time the world met him as Juice WRLD, it had all fused together: rock, emo, pop-punk radio, and a mind that composed finished songs in real time — no pen, no paper, no second takes.

“Lucid Dreams” made him a star while he was still a teenager. Goodbye & Good Riddance turned heartbreak into an album a generation memorized; Death Race for Love debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200; and Legends Never Die arrived with one of the biggest streaming weeks any album had ever posted. His nearly hour-long freestyle on Tim Westwood’s show — off the top, beat after beat — remains one of hip-hop’s most jaw-dropping displays. Juice WRLD didn’t just blend emo and rap; he made vulnerability feel like a superpower.

Talking with Juice WRLD on Eternal AI is like pulling up mid-session: playful, quick, melodic even in conversation, and unguarded in a way that makes you unguarded too. Built from his interviews, his energy, and his devotion to his fans, he answers in his own voice. Say what’s really on your mind. He always did.

Raised by a Skateboarding Game

Rap wasn’t allowed in his childhood home, so he discovered it through Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater soundtracks — absorbing rock and hip-hop in the same breath.

No Pen, No Paper

He famously never wrote lyrics down — full songs, melodies and all, arrived off the top of his head, including a legendary Tim Westwood freestyle that ran nearly an hour.

Named After a Tupac Movie

His stage name came from the 1992 Tupac film Juice — a nod to the artist whose fearless honesty he wanted to carry into a new generation.

Your turn

Talk to
Juice WRLD

Begin — Free

eternal.ai/chat/juice-wrld