Interview: Crank Lucas Talks Comedy, Going Viral & Sticking To His Vision

Washington, D.C. – There are plenty lanes into the music industry, but Washington D.C. rapper/producer Crank Lucas has found himself relishing in one his own. Having begun making music at the young age 11 — and being the product a musical family — the “making music” part came naturally.

As he explains to HipHopDX, it was the pursuit comedy that pushed his career over the edge.

“I actually wanted to do comedy before I started really pursuing music,” Crank says. “I wasn’t raised around a family comedians, so that’s a skill that I had to work towards.

“It wasn’t even something that I really decided to jump out there with.”

In 2015, he began making the skits that made him viral enough to kick-start his following — which now tops half a million subscribers.

“I always tried to infuse comedy into my music in some kind creative way … everything popped f and, you know, just took everything to the next level,” he states.

Fans have since become obsessed with his insanely accurate portrayals different types artists in his largely humorous — but sometimes pround — videos. Though one the more lucrative elements he notes is the production, which he does himself.

“The whole point even doing this in the first place was to promote my beats,” he says with a laugh.

Self-produced as a solo artist, his next play will be rebranding his production catalog.

“I haven’t focused on the production as much, so right now as we speak, I’m in here revamping my website and organizing the beats,” he explains.

“I also] have a project that I’m working on right now,” he adds. “I like my stuff to be diverse … the last project that I put out was trap stuff, but this project I’m working on right now, I kind want to just do something different.“

As he goes on to elaborate, it’s not something that’s deliberate. Quite brilliantly, if you watch a large portion his videos, it becomes evident that he is able to nail just about every sub-set Hip Hop. So on a project to project basis, he’s never trapped into one box, stylistically.

“I’m in the creating stage the album and I have an idea where I want it to sound like and where I wanted to go … but tomorrow I might change my mind.“

What also becomes abundantly clear is that his actual projects are not to be confused with certain types artists he portrays in his skits.

“I’m not making a name for myself, you know, making a song about overdosing on drugs. It’s funny, it’s entertaining. It sounds good. But if that’s not my shit, I’m not going to put it out,” he explains.

When asked if stand up is something he’d ever considered, he says that he sees it as a natural progression that he will likely become a future pursuit.

Currently, though, he seems focused on his music and building a brand that seemingly catapulted and has yet to hit the ground. It’s something he is taking into his own hands.

“My purpose is to entertain people … my entertainment comes from being up there on that stage with that beat,” he says.

“I’ve been doing these videos since 2015 and when I started, they went viral pretty quickly. So, I’m just trying take a step back] to get the whole brand and everything to that next level,” he says. “I’m doing it, but there’s a lot … It’s a lot work.”

Check out all Crank Lucas’ video on his YouTube channel. Stream his latest project, It Ain’t Fair, now Spotify.