Body High - Lucki Eck$ (2014)
In late 2014, after I graduated high school, I decided to uproot my life a bit and move to West Virginia, where my family is originally from. I didn't really have any plan, I just thought it might be kinda cool after growing up in Texas my whole life. I moved in with my aunt, got a job working in fast food and basically didn't do shit else for the duration of my time living up there. I'd hang out with my cousins, spend all my money on weed, play some sports, watch TV and freestyle to pass time. In retrospect, I find many parts of that move regrettable. But, that's how she goes sometimes.
In 2015, as I was living in West Virginia, I started using DatPiff to get a lot of my music. DatPiff used to be a really popular source for free songs and mixtapes (which are meant to be free for what it's worth). For me, at that time, the concept of having a Spotify or Apple Music subscription was not something that had even really crossed my mind. Bear in mind that up to this point, I was still in a phase of mostly just downloading mp3s directly to my phone to listen to. Anyways, once I got into using DatPiff to source a lot of my music, I discovered many new artists. I'm sure a lot of the artists whose songs I downloaded on DatPiff never got their careers off the ground at all, because I was diving pretty deep into the crates for some shit. Some of the artists I discovered during this time would go on to be huge stars, such as Travis Scott and Kodak Black. One of the artists that I discovered at this time was Lucki Eck$, who had recently released the mixtape
“Body High”, and he landed kind of in the middle.
Lucki Eck$ came onto the scene out of Chicago and made a splash for his uncanny musical style relative to a lot of the hip hop being made at the time. Lucki, especially in his early career, was one of the first of what I would call a “xan rapper”. He was sort of doing things that would become really popular in the SoundCloud mumble rap era, a couple of years before it became trendy. In that way, I would say he is somewhat of a pioneer to that whole wave of music. However, I should stress that
“Body High” does not fit into the conventional mumble rap mold.
On this album, Lucki raps lethargically over atmospheric beats that sometimes border on sounding like dreamwave, which effectively puts you in the headspace of someone who is in the throes of a Xanax dependency. His bars are callous, as he describes numerous situations where his dealings with the drug causes damage to those around him with little detectable remorse. The content of his rhymes is made more harsh by the fact that Lucki was a high schooler when he made this mixtape. While I can't cosign a lot of the activities portrayed and I would strongly discourage anyone from recreational Xanax use, this mixtape was undeniably innovative and an impressive body of work for an 18-year-old no matter how you slice it. In a way, I view it as an insidious spiritual counterpart to
“Acid Rap”, the sophomore mixtape of Lucki's fellow Chicagoan Chance the Rapper, which was released the year prior. It may also be worth mentioning that Lucki drops multiple wrestling-related bars on the mixtape, such as:
“Man I probably just lost it, a cross face killer
Damn and I knew it, that bitch Chris Benoit'd me”
“Get guap out your dash stash, problem solver Christian Cage”
“Hope she all off the ropes like watching Rey Mysterio wrestling”
Lucki remains a fairly prominent underground rapper to this day with something of a cult following. However, as the SoundCloud era really kicked into gear, there was definitely a shift in his music that, I feel, led him away from lyricism and more towards the metrical mumble delivery that is less about the content and more about the cadence. I have no problem with that kind of music. I'm actually a big fan of a lot of rappers that would be considered mumble rappers. Maybe that's why Lucki adapting more to that style caused him to fade into the background for me, as I actually find him one of the less compelling artists in that sphere. Despite Lucki moving in an artistic direction that doesn't quite jibe with my tastes,
“Body High” remains a nifty piece of music that will likely always hold up as his Magnum Opus in my eyes.
Favorite tracks: “Witchcraft”, “Finesse”, “Reflections”, “Xan Cage”, “Count On Me 3”
Rating: 7.25/10
And while we're here, a couple of bonus tracks from Lucki that have come out since this mixtape -