History of Coca‑Cola
Sustainability
Job Search
Quarterly Earnings
Brand celebrates six decades of the genre’s most impactful songs: on limited-edition cans, across a Genius-powered digital experience, and in a conversation everyone’s invited to join
06-25-2026
Pick up a Sprite this summer, and you might just get transported back to a family cookout, a middle school hallway, or a never-forgotten road trip.
That’s the idea behind the Living Tracklist campaign, Sprite’s most ambitious celebration of hip-hop culture yet. Launching during Black Music Month, the campaign brings some of the genre’s most iconic lyrics to limited-edition packaging, a Genius-powered digital experience, and a cultural conversation that Sprite is inviting everyone to join.
“At its core, this is a curated collection of influential songs spanning six decades of hip-hop music,” says Terika Fasakin, Senior Brand Director, Sprite. “But as we were building this, it really became more than just a list or a playlist.”
Sprite has helped celebrate and shape hip-hop culture since 1986 — through the groundbreaking “Obey Your Thirst” campaign of the ’90s and the “Obey Your Verse” era that brought iconic rap lyrics to cans a decade ago. The Living Tracklist builds on that legacy, but with a deliberate twist: there is no definitive ranking here.
“It honestly would be impossible to create a definitive hip-hop list,” Fasakin says. “If you ask 10 hip-hop fans what their most influential song is, you’ll get 10 different answers. And that happened in the process of us creating this campaign. What we saw is that when you invite the debate, when you invite consumers into the discussion, that’s what makes this rich.”
The insight that hip-hop’s power lies not in consensus but in conversation is what gave the campaign its name.
“We’re calling it a Living Tracklist because it will continue to evolve,” Fasakin says. “We want consumers to be a part of the discussion. We want to encourage debate and dialogue.”
Chris Keyes, Creative Director for Sprite, frames it plainly: “Sprite has never been a brand that just shows up when hip-hop is trending. Sprite has been in the culture, with the culture, since day one. The Living Tracklist is the truest expression of that commitment. It’s a celebration built not in a boardroom, but in collaboration with the real voices who live and breathe this music every day.”
To ensure the Living Tracklist was rooted in genuine cultural authority, Sprite partnered with Genius — formerly known as Rap Genius, the platform built on the art of decoding lyrics — to convene a seven-member Cultural Authority Panel. The group includes some of hip-hop’s most trusted voices: radio legend Angie Martinez, media personality Scottie Beam, Complex host Speedy Morman, DJ and producer Nyla Symone, Genius executive and music journalist Rob Markman, Spotify’s Head of Hip-Hop and R&B Josh Peas, and cultural writer Frazier Tharpe.
Their mandate wasn’t simply to pick favorites.
“We asked our panelists to discuss the most influential songs that had a great impact on music now or on music in the future,” Fasakin explains. “It’s not just about the song itself… it’s also about how the song could have transformed how music was brought, discussed, or talked about moving forward.”
The panel’s deliberations are captured in a full-length social episode airing at campaign launch, giving fans a front-row seat to the same debates that shaped the list.
Fasakin is candid about why this outside perspective was essential. “There are people who live and breathe the nuance—the history, the influence, what was going on in the culture during that time. I think I would have been worried about the authenticity of this campaign if we didn’t lean into a cultural authority panel. They truly brought the expertise and the history of these songs.”
The songs on the panel’s list — 26 tracks spanning the 1970s through the 2020s — don’t just live on a playlist. They live on Sprite bottles and cans.
Each era of hip-hop gets its own visual language. Sprite worked with six illustrators, each selected for their mastery of the graphic styles that defined their decade — from the psychedelic lettering of the ’70s to the bling-era sheen of the 2000s to the eclectic, multiplicitous aesthetics of the 2020s.
“The six different decades all have a different look and feel, and we thought it was important to bring that all the way through to the packaging,” Fasakin says. “We provided the designers the songs for their decade and gave them free reign to create artwork representative of that era.”
The result is 26 collectible designs, available on cans and bottles of both Sprite and Sprite Zero Sugar starting in July. The tracks span hip-hop’s geography as well as its history, from East Coast classics and Southern anthems to West Coast bangers and Midwest heat.
Every can and bottle carries a QR code that unlocks a deeper experience. Scanning it leads to an immersive Genius-hosted microsite, where the tracklist expands to 50 songs, panelist commentary brings each track to life, and fans can enter sweepstakes for Sprite-branded gear.
“Every package will take you into a digital world of music and hip-hop and allow you to experience the influence that these songs have had,” Fasakin says. “It will allow any consumer to become a student of the songs themselves and be exposed to songs they might not have heard.”
A companion Spotify playlist extends the listening experience further, giving fans the full 50-song Living Tracklist to stream.
The launch is anchored by a live event in Los Angeles, timed to the BET Awards, bringing together tastemakers, media, and fans to celebrate with performances representing hip-hop’s four major regions: Northeast, West, South, and Midwest.
Ultimately, the Living Tracklist is about more than nostalgia.
“I hope this campaign reminds consumers of this brand’s broader commitment to champion the artist and the artistry behind hip-hop,” Fasakin says. “Hip-hop is bigger than just music. Hip-hop has shaped language, it’s shaped fashion, it shapes sports, storytelling, and community. The Living Tracklist isn’t going to just be about a period of time in hip-hop. It’s truly inviting everyone to talk about past chapters, but the next chapter as well.”