Lucien Parker
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Lucien Parker

Minneapolis, MN | Established. Jan 01, 2015 | SELF

Minneapolis, MN | SELF
Established on Jan, 2015
Solo Hip Hop R&B

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"Lucien Parker Is The Best He Could Have Been In "After Recess""

HipHopDX Exclusive Premiere: Lucien Parker is one of the most promising up-and-coming emcees out of Minnesota. Growing up, he often found himself to be the outcast, having been raised on the Southside of Minneapolis to his middle class white adoptive parents. Lucien is the "Black Sheep."

The multi-artist delivers lines of poetry and was taught to play several instruments at a young age. Later, he would receive a spot on the highly exclusive First Wave roster at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, which comes with a scholarship to the prestigious public university.

Today, we get the "After Recess" visuals, shot by Niko Hagen around the UW campus. Lucien gets out of his body on everything he does. It's clear he has a greater vision in mind - to change the landscape of Hip Hop as it is. Enjoy this mood music, and drop your comments below. - HipHopDX


"Lucien Parker plays the optimistic outsider on "Black Sheep""

Minneapolis native and UW-Madison student Lucien Parker titled his just-released new album Black Sheep, so naturally he spends a lot of time on it rapping about feeling othered and apart, as both a young black man and an MC/singer/songwriter trying to find his way. Parker, 19, finished the record during finals week of his freshman year in UW's First Wave program, a time when students of color were confronting UW administrators over racist incidents and racial disparities on campus. This bleeds into his rhymes on the beat-less track “Black Sheep—Interlude”: “Just moving perpetrators from the dorm to a dorm just down the block is your form of a solution? / Please excuse us / if I don’t give a fuck about the policies where white kids lurk and follow me and try to get abusive / let me knuckle up / take 'em for a ride my nigga buckle up / they never get the consequences / School gonna tell us, ‘suck it up.’”

And yet, as a whole, Black Sheep doesn’t come off as a documentation of alienation or bitterness. Instead, Parker’s sense of being the odd man out fuels a parallel theme of ambition. He begins “From The Jump” with the lines “I been feeling underrated / unappreciated, got me feelin’ jaded,” but soon turns from frustration to a conviction that better things are ahead: “They ain’t gonna cage me, I’m shooting for the hundreds / give my shit a chance and I promise you gonna love it.” He tends to see both sides of that in both his songwriting and in real life: Parker was given up by his birth parents, but says the white family that adopted and raised him has been very supportive of his decision to be a musician, even if that family situation inevitably contributed to his feeling of being out of place.

Parker learned several instruments as a kid—violin, trumpet, and jazz drums—and soon after he got into rapping and spoken-word as a high-schooler, he got more and more interested in also writing hooks and crafting songs as a whole. That musical well-roundedness might explain why he sounds sincere and self-possessed while dabbling in a variety of styles on Black Sheep. His 2015 EP Take A Breath showed an affinity for jazz-influenced production and Parker’s beginnings in spoken word. This time around he wanted to experiment with beats he considers “a little more industry.” Most are from NYC production duo Geek Session, whose contributions range from the eerie, crawling, synth-misted “Late Night Trip” to the seductive and trap-like “Chapter II Sacrifice” to the warm horn hooks of “After Recess.” Parker also hooked up with Madison-based producer DJ Pain 1 for “Sacrifice Pt II,” which combines a prickly zither-like melody with woozy, swelling bass.

The important part, though, is how Parker adapts to this variety as a rapper and songwriter. On “Good Side,” produced by Toronto-based RelOne, he intersperses his sung vocal hooks with verses that patiently examine the yearnings and hopes of young love. On “Sacrifice Pt II,” his rhymes suit both the stuttering pace and hazy atmosphere of Pain’s beat: “I feel like rioting, so impulsive / Chain on my ankles, just take ‘em off me / I’m bout to set off this fuckin’ blaze / Back in the summer with sultry days.” Parker not flashy or grandstanding, so it can take a few listens to really appreciate his workmanlike versatility on this record.

Parker is spending most of his summer in the Twin Cities, but sat down with me last month when he was in Madison to play a show.

Tone Madison: Do you find yourself playing around a lot with song structure as you write? I noticed on "Chapter III Resurrection" that you stretch out the song a bit and throw in some little structural twists.

Lucien Parker: Yeah, I definitely try to play with it as much as I can. I kind of try to find specific pockets within the beats. Every beat has a pocket for the hook somewhere that will sound similar later in the track that it did the first hook, so I'm kind of trying to find those and then do whatever I really want to and go from there. Sometimes I like to incorporate sub-hooks, I would call them, for lack of a better term. I'll have a phrase that I use maybe in both verses that isn't the hook but that comes up again.

Tone Madison: Tell me a bit about how the Pain 1 track came together.

Lucien Parker: It's called ["Sacrifice Pt II"]. It's a really dope Chinatown trap-beat. It's a banger, it's a hit. But yeah, he sent me a really good track that I was really excited to work with. But yeah, he's crazy. When he sent me that one, I was really surprised—I knew he made a lot of stuff, and obviously you can't be a platinum producer without having versatility—same with being a recording artist—but it was definitely a surprise to hear the one he sent me, and that's why I really wanted to work with it, because it was something that I hadn't heard from Pain 1 before.

Tone Madison: Do you find that being from the Twin Cities and going to school in Madison, you kind of have two different pools of collaborators to draw from?

Lucien Parker: Definitely. It was definitely important to come to college, and now I have two fanbases. I mean, I have small fan bases in other places, but it was definitely important to have a two-city structure. It really helped out with the sound and what I could do and who I could work with.

Tone Madison: And right here, there's a lot of people within First Wave and the campus community, but also folks outside of that.

Lucien Parker: Exactly, yeah, and I definitely work with a lot of people outside of First Wave, but First Wave artists are really great. I think they're doing a lot of big things, and a lot of them haven't put out some the stuff they're working on yet, but it when it comes out, it's going to be a force to be reckoned with.

Tone Madison: Since you called the record Black Sheep, what were some of the themes you wanted to sort of tie into that?

Lucien Parker: Yeah, there's a few things in there. One is "black sheep" for me has kind of always been a way of thinking. I've always kind of been outside the box and off doing my own thing and trying to be an innovator and trying to do things that people have done before. And not all of it is purposeful. I think a lot of it just happens with being open to trying things. Part of it is that I was adopted into a white family, so I've been the only black person out of two in my entire family, on my dad's side at least. Then being in Madison, where you have a campus that's 77 percent white, and two percent of the population is African-American, is definitely a factor in what I wrote for the album, and what sound I made. All those things kind of meshed together.

Tone Madison: On one of the tracks, "After Recess," you even talk about being "the product of a family who ain't want me."

Lucien Parker: That line is actually about being adopted from the family that didn't want me. I've always kind of felt—it's very interesting growing up in a white family and being a black kid, because your parents want what's best for you, but can't really teach you how to be a black male in today's society. They can give me morals, they can give me life lessons, all these kinds of things, but can't prepare me for the experiences that I'll face as an African-American male. I've always struggled with this idea of not really knowing where my bloodline or legacy comes from. A lot of my music talks about that because I want to have my music last for decades—centuries, if it's possible, that'd be incredible. I wouldn't know, but it'd be incredible! Part of that is that I never had a legacy to look back on, so I want to build one for my kids and their kids and their kids' kids.

Tone Madison: And on that same track, you also talk a lot about how your ambitions and worldview have changed throughout your life, even though you're only 19 now.

Lucien Parker: I think that's the only track on the whole project where the beat isn't an overwhelming beat and the lyrics really breathe for themselves. That track, I kind of just went through a progression of childhood to now, of how I dealt with certain things that were happening and how I tried to form myself into what I am now, and the things that I did to become the rapper and the artist that I am now, and what factor were incorporated into me even becoming an artist in the first place. If you talked to my 10-year-old self, I wasn't like, "Oh, I'm gonna be a rapper one day, and maybe I'll be really good and work with Pain 1 and get these beats from New York and stuff." I was like, "I'm going to go into the NFL, I'm gonna go to Michigan for college and I'm gonna study business." I finally for the first time sat and really thought about, what has happened in my life that could have been a factor in pointing me in this direction? And a lot of those things that I've talked about, I mean, I realized that I've always had a very ambitious hustler mentality, of going out and getting it and doing it and being an innovator and getting things done, so I wanted to put that on the track.

Tone Madison: And so then you're sort of looking at how that ambition has taken different forms over time.

Lucien Parker: Exactly, yeah, and I wanted it to be the last track so that people would be left with that. The point of it is for people to listen to it and think, "OK, because of this ambitious mentality," what comes next?I always want people to be looking for the next thing. I don't think that projects should be finite. I don't think that they should be final and that should be the end of the discussion.

Tone Madison: So this being your first full-length project, what did you find were some of the challenges of making it?

Lucien Parker: Well part of the challenge was definitely finals week. [Laughs.] And just trying to keep the inspiration going and do it in an allotted amount of time. Once we announced the release date, then it kinda had to be done by the release date. But a personal challenge, I think, was trying to elevate my sound while staying authentic to me. A lot of people loved Take A Breath and don't want to see that part of me fade with industry music. Any artist that understands the business side of this understands that you have to play the game a little bit to get to where you want to be so that you can make the music that you want to make. To Pimp A Butterfly—that was so well-received partly because Kendrick already had such a big fan base. I feel like if he had dropped that when he first started, people would have listened to it and there would have been people who were die-hard for it, but it wouldn't have been as big and as widely promoted, because people don't want to listen to things that make them think that much. I struggled with Take A Breath more in that regard because it was hard trying to get people to listen and to hear the artistry that went into it. With this one, it wasn't like I just made stupid songs that were gonna be catchy, but I tried to take a little bit of what people that wanted more hook-oriented and very catchy mainstream stuff and smash that with my very lyrical, poetic, conscious side. You don't have to fit your music into a margin—I think you can do whatever you want with it—but it's definitely part of playing the game, understanding who your audience is and how far you can go.

Tone Madison: I saw you play live a few months ago, and your voice sounded a lot more scratchy and husky than it does on the recordings. Were you going for a smoother delivery on the album?

Lucien Parker: To be honest, I've noticed that a lot too, and I think some of that just comes from when I play live, sometimes I'm trying to hear myself while I perform, because we don't have earpieces at this level, at the local level. I guess I'm just trying to find where I can put my voice live, so that people will hear it out of the speakers and it will be clear. Sometimes I think I perform at a different level, vocally, than my tracks are, whether higher or lower or it's more intense or I'm projecting harder. But yeah, for this one, the recordings are definitely smoother, especially because that comes with getting better at mixing and engineering. But I'm sure live, it will probably sound a little bit different until we get to venues where they can push my voice and I can actually rap it at the level that I want to rap it at and people will be able to hear it. - Tone Madison


"Lucien Parker "From The Jump" f. Wave Chapelle"

As Millennials, we've all, at one point in our lives, felt like an outcast in certain situations. Whether that's not fitting in with certain peer groups, or simply feeling like the odd man out in our families, we've had our brushes with being labeled the "black sheep."

Minneapolis' Lucien Parker understands this relatable struggle. As a young, Black man who grew up in a middle class neighborhood in South Minneapolis, Lucien was quickly "made aware of the stereotypes imposed on African American people as portrayed by the media today."

To drive home this school of thought, Lucien set out to create a project, whose driving motif is finding Knowledge of Self, inner peace and accepting whatever curveballs life may throw at you. Through multiple recording sessions, Lucien constructed the upcoming Black Sheep EP. The process was also a twofer for the young emcee — apart from creating engaging and empathetic music, the sessions also served as therapy.

As he explains:

"Music is a tool that can be used to change the world. It can be used as a platform to help eradicate a system that is hell bent on trapping people of color. I may only be a piece of the puzzle, but I will continue to make music that will continue to uplift my children, and their children after them transcending the boundaries of time and place."

Before #Blacksheep arrives, Lucien linked up with fellow friend and Milwaukee native Wave Chapelle for "From the Jump," a song that reflects on "his successes, failures, and relationships." Peep it below - 2DopeBoyz


"Premiere: Lucien Parker "From The Jump" Feat. Wave Chapelle"

Wisconsin is totally on the come-up! I’m very humbled to premiere this track from Lucien Parker and Wave Chapelle, partially because this song is absolute fire, and partly because both of these artists are very important to growing local music. “From The Jump” is the first single off of Lucien Parker’s forthcoming LP Black Sheep, which will be dropping on June 15.

As I’m sure a bunch of you all are, I’m a sucker for really creative bars. Lucien and Wave have those bars that’ll make you go, “Got DAMN.” (I know that’s what came out of my mouth, anyway.) In all seriousness, “From The Jump” is a dream collaboration for me. Their styles are so complimentary, and it makes this track a great listen.

Lucien and Wave are both very talented artists, but I can’t forget Geek Session, the joint producers on this track. They opened the track up with it sounding like a live recording in front of a MASSIVE crowd, which I really dug. Small stuff like that really builds up the hype going into a track. They sampled a women singing faintly in the background throughout the entirety of the song, which gives this “From The Jump” a very dramatic, serious vibe to it. Without any further adieu, I would love to present to you all, “From The Jump.” - DailyChiefers


"Album Review: Lucien Parker's 'Black Sheep'"

The album art for Lucien Parker’s third project, Black Sheep, is a portrait of the animal incarnation of Parker. A bipedal black sheep dressed sharper than goat gouda in a tuxedo stares forward. It isn’t a sheep embarrassing David Spade, wearing a little coat. Like the silent repose of the calm sheep’s gaze, no headlights to deer-up its eyes, Parker’s music is cooly confident. He is not covering up insecurities, perpetually painfully aware, overcompensating for his wooly black coat.

His dual-delivery warbles between his rapping and singing which creates for an improvisational crooner-flow, each quick melodic turn and spate of exacting bars keeping the listener in the moment. Parker’s versatile voice provides warmth through his soulful, deep register, which he layers over sparse, drill beats. He used to just rap, but now says he prides his ability for making hooks and exploring melodic vocal layers. He puts his vocal layering on display in Black Sheep, making for a few fun dual melodic experiences during hooks.

In the “Black Sheep-Interlude,” he spits a ccapella over the sound of what appears to be young, campus-type people (he currently attends the University of Wisconsin-Madison) laughing and cavorting around him. The South Minneapolis native has rapped a cappella before, a talent that harkens back to his spoken word and slam poetry days at Washburn High School. This time, you can especially feel his black-sheep perspective as he laments what feels like the fact that everyone knows the facts of the Drake-Meek Mill beef and not so, so many other things. He does too, after all, but there’s an obliviousness of the masses eating that or Kardashian news up and not being concerned a little.

“I’ve always been comfortable saying what I needed to say,” says Parker. “I don’t have social anxiety. There are always people who agree with you and always people who don’t agree with you. I can’t stress that. My confidence comes from that.” Logical to the point of serene oversimplification, Parker straightforwardly explains his pragmatically detached disposition. We all tell ourselves it doesn’t matter what others think, but there is still something black-sheep about walking around truly secure in that.

He describes himself as the black sheep, as someone that’s always wanted to go off and do his own thing, as a very extroverted kid. Parker is adopted, raised by a white family. He describes himself as a black guy in a white society. Because of theses outsider identity markers, he has made sure his perspective has shown through, that he has had a solid perspective at all. Knowing what he is, what he wants, something he says he’s done from the jump on Black Sheep’s single “From the Jump” featuring Milwaukee’s Wave Chapelle (“I wrote my first rap at nine,” he says) is his search for authenticity – what is his best, most authentic life and who around him are keeping it authentic for themselves.

Authenticity is not a unique notion to explore. What’s unique about Parker’s vantage point in is his steeliness and pragmatism. He isn’t scorned, he’s learning. There aren’t any girls or group of friends for him to show up, no added bravado to big-league everyone.

Parker says he used to have some friends who he would make the effort to go to their things, but they never came to any of his first shows, never listened to his music. That was back in high school, before anyone really did anything seriously. Parker was in the booth, paying for tracks to be mastered by the time he was a junior. “Everyone’s rapping now,” says Parker, “everyone’s a producer.” Those people who ignored him back then don’t get through to him now.

The thing is, he felt like a black sheep then, starting out alone, but he always believed his career would progress. Like the dressed up sheep in the album art, Parker is clean and in control. He was always going to be granted access, wearing the outfit to match. He always knew he would waltz in, be confident, say what he wanted to who he wanted. Yet, he feels like the black sheep. Regardless of what becomes of Parker’s musical career (he’s already working on a strictly R&B album and putting together thoughts for a jazz record), he is confident and talented. He’s like a certain blue chip high school recruit in basketball who plays at some big college and becomes a high lottery draft pick. He’s heading toward the height of his powers and people believe in him, but he can’t let go of each little slight in his life. Even though he is the man and people tell him that, he hits the court or the booth, harboring the bitter passion from a slight from 10 years ago. No matter what, the chip on the shoulder is always there. And that steely pragmatism isn’t unfortunate or unnecessarily cold, it equips him with the thick skin he needs to continue to forge ahead in the music industry.

“(My experiences) have made me work harder, made me work the industry harder. The industry is full of people who I don’t need to trust or need to be around. Next levels from here become more and more dangerous,” says Parker. “If I blow up, which, I always say I will, because, that’s where I need to be at.”

The instrumentation on Black Sheep, provided primarily by Geek Sessions, is sly and subtle, allowing for Parker’s voice to test pace and stretch out. The two have worked well together before, and with how much Parker shifts his voice, you do get the sense the two are having a bit of an instrumental back and forth. Geek Sessions is lobbing up the most feathery alley-oops and Parker is slamming them down.

Parker and his people are putting together the final details for a tour later this summer. Black Sheep drops June 15. - Solomon Gustavo


"Lucien Parker's Black Sheep"

Lucien Parker has been putting in work for quite some time now. The Minneapolis artist (WI livin) is as soulful as they come showing off his versatility on every track. His latest project, Black Sheep, has been making the rounds as of late and we’ve got to say; it’s pretty damn good. Laid back, but hard hitting instrumentals provide a perfect back drop for Lucien’s flow. His vocals cruise over the records effortlessly, it’s obvious he’s no rookie. Our favorite tracks feature production from Geek Session, but there are plenty of solid records on the project. Check out Black Sheep for yourself above and keep an eye out for more from Lucien Parker. - MADE


Discography

'Black Sheep LP' - Released June 15th, 2016

'Take A Breath' EP - Released November 13th, 2015

Photos

Bio

Lucien Parker is a hip-hop artist from the South side of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Finding a passion for poetry and spoken word at a young age, Lucien made a name for himself throughout high school as a competitive slam poet and penned rhymes in his free time. Twice he was invited to be a member of the Minnesota International Slam Team that travelled to Brave New Voices, an international slam poetry competition. This earned Lucien acceptance into the First Wave Program at UW Madison, a hip-hop & spoken word scholarship for young creatives.


In the fall of 2015 he released the ‘Take A Breath’ EP and signed to management company Strange Oasis Entertainment. The project earned him an opening slot on the 11-date “Next Gen Tour” with headliner Wave Chapelle which saw Lucien Parker touring around the country at just 18 years old. In the spring of 2016 he embarked on the “Breakfast Tour” with Mic Kellogg which hit 6 cities around the Midwest, all while balancing a full-time education and mixing/mastering his fellow students records for extra cash on the side.

As Millennials, we've all, at one point in our lives, felt like an outcast in certain situations. Whether that's not fitting in with certain peer groups, or simply feeling like the odd man out in our families, we've had our brushes with being labeled the "black sheep."

Minneapolis' Lucien Parker understands this relatable struggle. As a young, Black man who grew up in a middle class neighborhood in South Minneapolis, Lucien was quickly "made aware of the stereotypes imposed on African American people as portrayed by the media today."

To drive home this school of thought, Lucien set out to create a project, whose driving motif is finding Knowledge of Self, inner peace and accepting whatever curveballs life may throw at you. Through multiple recording sessions, Lucien constructed the upcoming Black Sheep LP. The process was also a twofer for the young emcee — apart from creating engaging and empathetic music, the sessions also served as therapy.

As he explains:

"Music is a tool that can be used to change the world. It can be used as a platform to help eradicate a system that is hell bent on trapping people of color. I may only be a piece of the puzzle, but I will continue to make music that will continue to uplift my children, and their children after them transcending the boundaries of time and place."

Black Sheep is available everywhere.

Band Members