* En anglais uniquement
With a spaced-out, subdued flow that sometimes sits at the edge of mumble rap, Chicago rapper
Lucki sets himself apart from the herd with inventive production choices and exceptionally vulnerable lyrical narratives. The charismatic young talent has addressed troubles with addiction and mental health in his songs, and collaborated with artists like
Danny Brown and
FKA Twigs. He has released multiple innovative mixtapes such as 2015's Freewave along with more fleshed-out projects like 2021's
F1lthy collaboration
Wake Up Lucki.
Lucki was born Lucki Camel in 1996 and grew up on Chicago's West Side. He began rapping in high school and dropped out to pursue a career, first under the moniker Lucki Eck$. His first mixtape, Alternative Trap, was released in 2013 and lived up to its name with uncommonly orchestral beats and outside-the-box production. Still just a teenager,
Lucki began making a name for himself with collaborative tracks with
King Krule,
Danny Brown,
FKA Twigs, and
Chance the Rapper. As he was battling some personal demons, his struggles were reflected in the increasingly dark and druggy sound he presented on mixtapes that arrived once or twice a year. In particular, the freestyle-centered 2015 mixtape Freewave was unnervingly troubled.
For a brief time in 2016,
Lucki stopped working on music completely to get his head together, returning in 2017 with
Watch My Back. His music continued to delve into personal issues, with early 2019 bringing the emotionally upheaving Freewave 3 and the more hopeful
Days B4 III arriving before the year was up. Another album,
Almost There, appeared in 2020, setting
Lucki's typically heavy subjects against a slightly more upbeat backdrop. In 2021, he collaborated with Philadelphia producer
F1lthy on the darkly ethereal
Wake Up Lucki, a 12-song project somewhere between an EP and an album. Throughout the next year,
Lucki released a series of stand-alone tracks, including the trappy "New Drank" and
Nate Husser collaboration "Lil Big." Another song, "Y NOT?," appeared in June 2022. ~ Fred Thomas