Luck-One Interview Author: Adam Bernard
In basketball circles Portland is known as a city of missed opportunities.
It was Portland that drafted Sam Bowie ahead of Michael Jordan. It was
Portland that drafted Greg Oden ahead of Kevin Durant. Comedian Fred Armisen
has a hit show on IFC called Portlandia, which depicts Portland as a place
where the 90s never died. No one mentions Portland hip-hop. Portland native
Luck-One has an inkling as to why–there isn't very much of it to speak of.
Now residing in Seattle, Luck-One recently released True Theory, an album
broken up into three distinct acts. Luck-One's own life has almost been
broken up into three distinct acts–his childhood, his half decade of
incarceration, and his current status as one of Portland's few shining hopes
in hip-hop. Will Luck-One be able to be the replacement for the Michael
Jordan and Kevin Durant Portland missed the opportunity to have? Will he be
the one to bring the city into the present day? Only time will tell, but we
caught up with him to find out more about his life, his music, his activism
while he was in prison, and why he no longer partakes in activism now.
Adam Bernard: What's been lucky for Luck-One?
Luck-One: What's been lucky? Man, honestly I can't really say I even believe
in luck. Luck-One is actually an acronym that I took on a long time ago. It
used to be MC Lucky One and then I shaved it to Luck One. It means Living
Under Capitalism is Knowing that Oppression is Nearly Everywhere.
AB: How did you come up with that, and please tell me you did it when you
were 12 and you're just a genius?
LO: I probably came up with that when I was about 17 and I was not a genius,
I was incarcerated and didn't have much else to do but come up with
acronyms. {*laughs*}
AB: Seventeen was when you started serving half a decade in jail for robbery
and gun charges. While you were in jail, however, I hear you proved to be a
bit of an organizer. What were you doing while incarcerated?
LO: We used to do food strikes, hunger strikes, work strikes. If you
understand how the economy works, in Oregon, where I'm from, the timber
industry kind of took a hit with a lot of the green people advocating
against clear cutting and things of that nature. Around that time, I think
it was the 1980s, they began to build prisons in places with poor economy to
create jobs. Where I'm from, in Portland, there's some diversity. These
places are all like three hours, at least, out of Portland, so you have a
lot of administrators that aren't very, I won't call them racist because I
think that's a little bit of a harsh term, but I'll say they aren't very
privy to interracial interaction. Probably the only Black people they've
ever seen are on television and if you know anything about the media in
general it tends to put a pretty cold slant on how people of color conduct
themselves. So there were a lot of problems with being locked up in like
Pendleton, Oregon trying to get a job other than wiping down tables, or
trying not to get criminalized for everything that we did, so what we did
was we began to do hunger strikes and we started to realize that we weren't
the only ones to have those grievances, so we started to go across the board
and engage, even the skinheads and the Mexicans and the Natives, and we all
started to kinda create a little vehicle. I don't know how much change we
affected, but I think there were a lot of good things born out of just
people being able to realize that they have the power to change things if
they so choose to take action.
AB: Is this something that was in you and that you were doing before your
incarceration, or is this something that incarceration brought out of you?
LO: I think it's something that was in me and was definitely aggrandized by
my incarceration. The closer you are to the flame the more appreciative you
are of the rain. I don't know if that sounds corny, but being in prison, and
being directly oppressed, I wanted to take action to change that. Before I
was locked up I did little stuff, but I wasn't really a huge activist. Now
I'm definitely not an activist at all.
AB: Why aren't you involved in activism right now? Is this a conscious
decision, or do you just not have the time?
LO: It's a conscious decision. I think a lot of the activism, at least in
America, is very superficial. We tend to try to treat the symptom instead of
the cause. People will show up to an anti-child labor march in their Nikes.
They'll drive their SUV to the war protest. There doesn't seem to be any
inner-connectivity of thought, or understanding of the fact that if the
world were to change as we ostensibly want it to change, the biggest change
would be amongst ourselves and not amongst starving children in Lesotho.
People have to curb their own desires because that is what the world is
being impoverished for, in my understanding. So I don't really engage in
activism because I don't really like go to marches and then go home and have
30 pairs of shoes and 600 channels and all this excess. I don't really think
that's the proper way to challenge things. If I really want to bring about
change I need to begin to challenge my own vices first and let that radiate.
AB: What are some the vices you have that you're sure you're NOT going to
give up? We all have at least one.
LO: That I'm NOT going to give up? OK, I'm gonna say... Twitter {laughs}.
I'm not giving up Twitter. I'm gonna say... speaking too much. I'll probably
never shake that one. I'd like to think that I'l be able to give them all up
as far as over-consumption. I don't want to say I'm definitely not giving up
anything, other than Twitter. I'm sticking with Twitter. I'm rockin with
that.
AB: Moving to your music, you're from Portland and you currently live in
Seattle. Both of those cities are known more for basketball tragedies than
hip-hop. How did you go about jump starting your career in these places?
LO: I think Seattle actually has a really vibrant hip-hop scene. Portland is
non-existent, but you can't tell the rappers there that. The other night I
was on the radio down there and I said True Theory was the most significant
piece of rap music to ever come out of the city and they were like "what are
you trying to say?" I was like, I'm trying to say I'm the best rapper here.
"What do you mean?" Well, there's nobody else here. You're acting like I'm
saying I'm the best painter in France. I'm saying I'm the best rapper in
Oregon, home of the Gardenburger. Portland is one of those places where
people have a very poor understanding of economics, at least in the rap
community, so everybody does everything for free and expects everything for
free so the economy of hip-hop is depressed because there's no circulation
because the money's all concentrated in a few people's hands and they don't
want to share it. I had to get out there because it's frustrating. I've been
written up by every paper in Portland probably three times and I've opened
up for everybody. Then you go to California and you're small potatoes again.
Contrary to popular opinion, Portland is a metropolis, and we have all the
problems that every other city had. Growing up where I grew up, people used
to always say "Portland's such a nice place" and I was like what do you
mean, there's all kinds of violence. Then I went past 33rd Avenue and I
realized wow, this place is really nice. As far as rapping; I started
writing rhymes to express myself. Being black and living in a city that's
pretty white you kind of cling even more to those media images. It was
really good to let everything out in a rhyme. I figured out it was the only
thing I was really good at. I've never had anybody in my life ever call me
wack. Nobody's ever been like "you can't rap," so I've stuck with it.
AB: Has Greg Oden showed up at any of your shows?
LO: Absolutely not, but at least we have a basketball team, unlike Seattle,
so I can't complain.
AB: That was pretty brutal, and totally undeserved because that city should
have a basketball team.
LO: They're pretty upset about it. I like to bring it up every time I'm on
stage here.
AB: Your new album is True Theory, and you set it up in three acts. Why did
you decide to put your album together in this way?
LO: I broke it up that way because when I started making True Theory I tried
to make a perfect composition, so it had to have a theme. When you get a
piece of sheet music from Bach or Beethoven, you get a whole bunch of
different instruments, but it's one piece of music. The trumpets have their
dogfight, but it's mixed in with the violins that are playing background and
the syncopated timpani. It's one piece of music. I tried to make every song
extremely significant, impactful, Grammy material, but there's certain songs
that I felt like I have to end the album with. Then I realized, looking at
when you try to make your album something amazing, something impressive,
something humongous, I felt like it sounded like a movie. I thought about
all the songs and if you study a screenplay and you think about how to write
movies, in act one you're introducing the character, you figure out what the
character's about and the plot begins to take form. You certainly get some
depth as to who I am. Act two you get conflict. The protagonist is faced
with obstacles. So you have songs likes "Palestine," which is actually two
narratives about one Palestinian and one Israeli on opposing sides of the
conflict. That went WAY over everybody's head. In act three the conflict is
resolved. You have the climax. You have ideas that come together. That's why
I did it like that, because it made sense. As I got closer to finishing the
album I realized this isn't a piece of music, this is a screenplay.
AB: I notice you said at least one of the things you wrote went over
people's heads. Does that bother you, or is it cool as long as they get most
of it?
LO: This is the first time this has happened to me. When I make music I
never make it for any other reason than the first reason I started making
music initially, to express myself, and I feel like people can sense
authenticity. That's why I do it that way. When I was writing songs like
"Palestine" and "Double Time" and third person narratives from two different
perspectives with a tri-lingual chorus, it never occurred to me oh, people
have been listening to Gucci Mane, they're not going to be able to digest
all this. People would even call me and say "what's this song about?" I'm
like, you have a copy of it, why are you asking me? You have to engage in
art to gain context. You have to be an active participant, you can't just be
a passive receptacle all the time.
AB: Do you think including the lyrics would have changed things?
LO: Yes, I do, I absolutely think that it would've. Even though most people
are just buying it off of iTunes, I think that would have been a good call.
I haven't actually thought about that until you said it, but yeah.
AB: Speaking of ideas, I read you had an epiphany of sorts at SXSW this
year. I forget what the exact quote about "if a show gets murdered..."
LO: If a show gets murdered in Austin and nobody hears it does it still make
a sound.
AB: Yes! Those shows like SXSW and CMJ that have a thousand artists, what
use are they for artists?
LO: The good thing about it is, I really don't want you to think that I'm
bragging, because I'm not, but the good thing about it is my live show is
better than anybody that I saw down there. So it's like you go to those
paces and you have all these rappers you used to look up to and then you
realize oh, they're wack. They haven't been rapping in front of empty
audiences and packed audiences and mid-sized venues and weird vegan bagel
shops for the last three years, they just kinda got put on, a lot of them
are created, and you realize that once I get in front of an audience of
people that are actually doing something and can put me in position it's
gonna be a piece of cake because all these years of honing my craft. The sad
thing about it is realizing how far you have to go because it's really easy
to be killing it in your region and then you get down south and you see all
the dudes that are doing all the things you want to do, they get posts on
all the blogs you want to get on, they got a management team that's really
getting it in, and THEY'RE not even on cuz you've never heard of them. I'm
cyphering on the corner with dudes, go home and Google their name and
they've got like 100,000 views on their YouTube videos and it's pretty
impressive and I'm like how did I miss this? It was depressing, it was
inspiring, it was exciting, it was boring, it was a lot of things wrapped in
one and I'm definitely going back next year.
AB: And we're going back for a second because did you say vegan bagel shops?
LO: I'm telling you, man. I did a show with no microphone one time. I killed
that show. There were about 30 people there and I sold about 50 discs.
AB: That leads into my last question beautifully; what moment, or action,
from your life so far are you most proud of?
LO: That's tough actually. I'll keep it all the way real. My sister and I
hadn't spoken for about a year and I'm pretty proud of reaching out and
talking to her. I'm starting to really understand that humility and
forgiveness are some of the greatest human traits and characteristics and
trying to embrace them has been very difficult so I'm proud of myself for
trying to at least take a step in that direction even though it's not
something that's particularly easy to do.
You can find Luck-One on the web at
luckoneconscious.com.
Originally posted: April 19, 2011
source: RapReviews.com
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