T.I. Set To Produce Trap Music Documentary

Atlanta rap veteran T.I. is turning the camera toward trap music’s origins with a new documentary spotlighting the genre’s early architects and cultural impact.

The Grammy-winning rapper partnered with producer Drumma Boy to create The Birth of Trap Music, a documentary short set to premiere April 25 at the Atlanta Film Festival. The film explores how trap music emerged from Atlanta’s streets and grew into a dominant force in hip-hop.

T.I., real name Clifford Harris Jr., remains one of the genre’s central figures. His early 2000s releases helped define trap’s sound and carried the movement beyond the South. Now the rapper is helping document that history through firsthand voices from the culture’s pioneers.

The project traces how artists turned harsh realities into music that resonated across communities. According to the film’s description, the documentary examines how trap’s creators transformed local stories into a worldwide movement.

Rapper T.I. & Drumma Boy Set To Produce “The Birth Of Trap Music” Documentary

For T.I., the subject hits close to home. “Look, man, before it was just a pop culture buzzword, the trap was our reality,” T.I. told Variety. “It was survival.”

The Atlanta rapper explained how life during the crack era shaped the music’s tone and urgency. Producers built the sound with church organs, sharp snares, fast hi-hats, synthesizers, and heavy 808 drums.

“We took the struggle of life beneath the poverty line in the Crack Era,” T.I. said. “We set it over organs, snares, synths, hi-hats and heavy 808s.”

He believes the genre created space for voices rarely heard in mainstream culture.

“The Birth of Trap Music ain’t just a documentary,” T.I. added. “It’s our history. Period.”

T.I. and Drumma Boy both appear in the film while serving as executive producers. The documentary also features appearances from hip-hop figures Don Cannon, Young Dro and veteran producer DJ Toomp.

Drumma Boy views the project as a historic record of trap music’s roots.

“The Birth of Trap Music is bigger than a documentary series,” he said. “It’s a cultural time capsule.”

“I wanted the architects and innovators together,” Drumma Boy added. “They tell how trap was born and how it changed music forever.”

Director Christopher Scholar leads the film, with several producers contributing to preserve trap music’s lasting legacy.