What makes slab culture—the act of “holdin’ slab”— so unique to Houston lies within the city's landscape. Houston, more so than any other city in America, is a commuter city. An enormous metropolis connected by wide, fast-moving freeways and tangled webs of overpasses. It’s the long drives on these roads that slab enthusiasts would listen to the sounds of regional rappers on their trunk rattling sound systems. As artists like DJ Michael Watts of Swishhouse and DJ Screw and members of the iconic Screwed Up Click (S.U.C) shaped the landscape of Houston rap, cars became essential to the material culture of hip-hop. Once symbols of criminality, those modified, large-bodied boats on wheels became the physical evidence of a rapper’s success.
Since then artists like Chamillionaire, Fat Pat, Mike Jones, Slim Thug and Paul Wall have continued to endorse the scene. Mike Jones ‘Still Tippin’ saw him rap about fo’ 4’s wrapped in fo’ vogues, while Bun B described the details on ‘That Candy Paint,’ saying “its that candy paint, 84s, belts and buckles, chrome and grills.” Today, younger artists like Travis Scott and Don Toliver have taken slab culture worldwide by featuring the cars on their album artwork and in music videos.
Though it started with that 1986 Town Car, the scene has openly embraced newer models like the full-size, C-body Cadillacs, with particular respect paid to the 1990–92 Brougham model and its flush-mounted, corner-wrapped headlamps. It's not unusual to see other outdated American luxury cars like Buicks, Lincolns, W-body Impalas, LaCrosses, and Grand Prixs as slabs. And younger generations are focusing on late-model versions of the Chrysler 300 and the Dodge Charger and you can even spot luxury vehicles like a Jaguar or Bentley kitted out with chrome wire wheels too.