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LUCKI
Interview with Lucki Eck$
SBG: Tell us about your self and how you got your start into rapping?

Lucki Eck$: I used to play football and shit. Then right before 2011 started, I used to play hella Kanye West and we used to play that song… what’s that song J. Cole remixed?…

SBG: ā€œLast Callā€

LE: Yeah, ā€œLast Callā€ and I kept playing that shit, that’s all I could play. Then one day my dad paused it and was like ā€˜get into production’ and shit. He bought me a laptop and got me FL studios, and that shit was hard as hell. [Laughs] I always used to write raps too. When I was in 7th grade, I was in a group called TF… no, TNT… no, T3!… and that’s when I met this n***a right here Casey. Then I got into dressing quote-on-quote weird [Laughs]. He was looking goofy at the time but that shit was raw as hell to me. Then I saw that this n***a rapped, and he took me under his wing on some corny shit. And I went to this thing at YouMedia, that’s where I met Chance at. First, I saw this dude Black Rafael rap and I was like ā€œDamn, he cool. He cold as hellā€

[Stops] Am I talking to much? Or…

SBG: Nope

LE: Then Chance did a piece with Talent and when I heard Chance rap and was like, ā€œdamn this n***a raw as hellā€. Ever since then I started trying to be a rapper for real, for real.

Sean CK: So you saw Chance doing it and you where like ā€œI need to get on that shitā€?

LE: Yeah and he put me on Vic Mensa. Vic had that song ā€œShoes, Sneakers, etcā€ where he was the shoe. That shit was crazy as hell! Ever since then Vic was my idol, and Chance was like who I got hella influence from.

SBG: Did you start going to YouMedia?

LE: Yeah I started to go to talk to Chance and shit like that.

SBG: YouMedia helped groom so much of young artists here in Chicago

LE: Helllll yeah, it brought hella people together. People were coming from the west suburbs, then you got people from the south side… the west side… I never seen no east side. [Laughter]
SBG: So I feel like at this point, with the people who have really been fucking with your music on the media side of things, it’s been a case of quality over quantity. You’ve been noticed by some major players right away: Fake Shore Drive, The Reader and Pitchfork. How does it feel to get that type of attention early on from people who are so established?

LE: Shit. It’s weird as fuck G. First blog I ever made it was this blog called Kween K, then my homie was one of the Elevator interns and posted me on Elevator. It took a minute for me to make Fake Shore and Ruby. I used to be sad as hell like; ā€œDamn, they don’t fuck with meā€. Then a column with me came out and Andrew (Barber of Fake Shore Drive) tweeted me and he was like ā€œDope track Luckā€ and he tweeted the song. After that, Pedro (Gonzalez of Ruby Hornet) got me on Ruby. When I released ā€œNo Troublesā€ I was nervous because before that I was releasing everything off the Elevator page and I was putting that one up on Soundcloud. And it’s scary when you get a Soundcloud cuz now when you release a song you see if your buzz real.

SBG: Yeah, you actually see how many plays you’re getting

LE: It did good though. I emailed it to Andrew hoping he’d post it and he did. He’s been helping me out a shit load ever since then, like for real for real. And then I made the Chicago Reader and Pitchfork, that shit’s crazy as fuck.

Sean CK: That’s the fastest I’ve ever seen anyone hit pitchfork.

Lucki’s Friend: I didn’t realize how big Pitchfork was until this man [Points to Lucki] called me. This man is in school and he called me like ā€œG I just made Pitchfork!ā€ I thought ā€œOh, that’s just another blogā€ and then I hit the link and was like ā€œWait. Pitchfork, Pitchfork?!ā€ [Laughter]

LE: I’m in my class on my phone and I see ā€œNo Troublesā€ and am like ā€œSomeone jacked my song title and made Pitchfork, fuck!ā€. I go up and see a the dollar sign and was like ā€œWho’s that with the money sign?ā€ because those people are always the most interesting and saw it was me and was like ā€œWHAT!ā€ My teacher was looking at me like I was crazy.

SBG: That brings me to my next question; being like 16 – 17 and seeing that type of career path ahead of you, is it hard to go to class?

LE: My grades were all B’s, then recently I’ve been going to hella meetings and shit. I’ve been getting home at like 12 o’clock and only getting 6 hours of sleep and that’s been fucking me up. Like I just don’t have enough time. I’m thinking of doing home school next year.

SBG: What year are you in school?

LE: Junior, I am about to turn 17 in 5 days now.

SBG: I want to get into your alternative trap sound/genre, is that something you came up with yourself?

LE: No. I mean, my producer would just label beats alternative trap, but I never fucking thought of it before as a genre. Then one day I was in class my 4th period English class, I got my name from my fourth period English class too, and my teacher Mr. K was playing Ritchie Valens and talking about how he got his start and he said, it was like a movie in my head, ā€œTo be a great artist you have to be able to mix one genre with another.ā€ I heard that and it came to me. Then around that time I started to see drug dealing, and not to be corny or anything, but when you think about it alternative trap is a real ass way of living. There’s a lot of motherfuckers who trap, but they just not hood and shit. I wrote ā€œMaster Planā€, and that was like 1 minute and 15 seconds and I took two weeks to write that shit. After that, we made ā€œNever Payā€ and ever since then I’ve been alternative trap. At first, I didn’t know if I wanted to like push it out, but now I’m like that’s fucking genius. I don’t care if I made it or not, I don’t care what nobody else is doing, I don’t care what producers think. It’s alternative trap.
SBG: As far as the upcoming tape, what can you tell us; any features?

LE: I don’t collab. I collabed with Dally because that’s my homie and we had to make something for the west side. There’s a few others too, but I just feel for me it’s not good to collaborate, because if people don’t wanna do what I wanna do… I was an only child [Laughs]… If I want the song to be this way, I want the song to be that way. I don’t care if it a hood ass Lex Luger 2009 ass beat if I want to make it about love, you got to do it. [Laughter]

SBG: How about the producers you’ve been working with… Hippie Dream, Nate Fox on ā€œNo Troublesā€

LE: I got put on to Nate Fox through the homies at Elevator, I don’t think he even knew I got on ā€œNo Troublesā€ until it came out. Hippie Dream is Outsiders, he’s a in house producer, I’m going to be always using his beats.

SBG: Final Words?

LE: Alternative Trap in the month after June… This going to sound corny as hell, look out for everybody because everybody can rap, I don’t know. Stay in School. [Laughter]

Interview by Eric Montanez