Cadence Weapon
Cadence Weapon | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Roland Pemberton |
Born |
1986 (age 29–30) Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
Genres |
Canadian hip hop Alternative hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, producer |
Years active | 2005–2014 |
Labels |
Upper Class Recordings ANTI- Big Dada |
Associated acts | Buck 65, Skratch Bastid, Noah23 |
Website |
www |
Roland "Rollie" Pemberton, better known by his stage name Cadence Weapon, is a Canadian rapper.[1] Born and raised in Edmonton, Alberta, Pemberton released his first album, Breaking Kayfabe, in 2005 to positive reviews. He subsequently signed with the American record label ANTI-, releasing the albums Afterparty Babies in 2008 and Hope in Dirt City in 2012. In 2009, Cadence Weapon was named Edmonton's Poet Laureate.[2] His first book Magnetic Days was published by Metatron in 2014.
Biography
Born and raised in Edmonton, Alberta, his father was Teddy Pemberton, a pioneering hip hop DJ on CJSR-FM, and his grandfather was Rollie Miles, a football player for the Edmonton Eskimos.[2] He began rapping at 13, and following high school he briefly attended journalism school, dropping out soon afterward to concentrate on music.[3] He released the mixtape Cadence Weapon Is the Black Hand in 2005, and his full-length debut Breaking Kayfabe at the end of the year.
Breaking Kayfabe garnered strong reviews in Canadian, American and British media, and Cadence toured extensively to support the disc, including concerts across Canada and three shows in Austin, Texas at the 2006 South by Southwest festival. Chart magazine named Cadence Weapon one of the 15 Canadian artists to watch in 2006. In addition, the composite review site Metacritic listed Breaking Kayfabe as one of the best albums of 2006.[4]
Cadence described his inspiration to pursue a career in music: "It was around me all the time when I was growing up, my dad was a DJ and he would play all sorts of stuff around the house, Hip hop, electro, funk and my mum would play piano. And I suppose I just randomly got into rapping. I remember rapping in math class, I failed maths, but I suppose I did OK in other things."[5] Cadence has said that he is inspired by dance music: "I’m a big Basement Jaxx fan. I like the way their music sounds, really like it’s a party happening. It sounds really organic and super-tech. Switch. Obviously Daft Punk. I’m into very European stuff. I like some of the Ed Banger stuff. Dubsided Records." [6] In addition to his own recordings, Cadence Weapon has also remixed tracks for Lady Sovereign[1] and Ciara, and has written hiphop reviews for Stylus Magazine and Pitchfork Media.
Cadence Weapon was nominated for the 2006 Polaris Music Prize,[1] which awards $20,000 for the Canadian album of the year. However, he lost to Final Fantasy's He Poos Clouds. Coincidentally, the Toronto alternative newspaper Eye Weekly's cover photograph the Thursday before the award was presented featured both Cadence Weapon and Final Fantasy's Owen Pallett adopting a mock confrontational pose. The accompanying article, in fact, revealed that Cadence and Pallett had become friends and both really admired each other's records. Cadence and Pallett also performed together on the CBC Radio concert series Fuse in April 2007. He has also been a guest performer on music by other artists, including Super Extra Bonus Party's "Radar" and Shout Out Out Out Out's "Coming Home".
On February 21, 2007, Pemberton announced that he signed an American record deal with Epitaph Records sublabel ANTI-, a move that would give him greater exposure in the United States. As a part of his new deal, Breaking Kayfabe was released in the US on March 13, 2007. In the fall of 2007, Big Dada became Cadence Weapon's representative label in Europe. Cadence Weapon's second LP, Afterparty Babies was released by Anti-/Epitaph on March 4, 2008. In 2008 he also played at ZXZW in the Netherlands.
On May 26, 2009 Cadence Weapon was sworn in as Edmonton's Poet Laureate for a two-year term beginning July 1, 2009, and as such served as an ambassador of the literary arts, as well as creating original works.[2][7]
In 2011, he participated in the National Parks Project, collaborating with musicians Laura Barrett and Mark Hamilton and filmmaker Peter Lynch to produce and score a short film about Alberta's Waterton Lakes National Park.
Cadence Weapon released the album Hope in Dirt City on May 29, 2012.[8] The album became his third straight to be nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, and second the make the short list.[9] Moreover, the National Post's Jesse Kinos-Goodin and Noah Love described how Drake may be Canada's most commercially successful rapper, but Cadence Weapon is certainly one of the most creative. Hope in Dirt City was short listed as one of their best of albums so far of 2012.[10]
In 2015, Cadence Weapon began a residency on Toronto Independent Radio Station TRP called Allsorts.[11]
Discography
Studio albums
- Breaking Kayfabe (2005)
- Afterparty Babies (2008)
- Hope in Dirt City (2012)
Mixtapes
- Cadence Weapon Is the Black Hand (2005)
- Separation Anxiety (2009)
- Tron Legacy: The Mixtape (2010)
Singles
- "House Music" (2008)
- "Conditioning" (2012)
- "When It's Real" (2013)
Guest appearances
- Antimc - "Canadian Dream" from It's Free, But It's Not Cheap (2006)
- Buck 65 - "Benz." from Situation (2007)
- Noah23 - "Half Drunk" from Rock Paper Scissors (2008)
- Dragon Fli Empire - "Outside Inn" from Redefine (2009)
- Shout Out Out Out Out - "Coming Home" from Reintegration Time (2009)
- B. Dolan - "Fall of T.R.O.Y." from Fallen House, Sunken City (2010)
- The Hood Internet - "Critical Captions" from FEAT (2012)
- Shad + Skratch Bastid - "Homie" from The Spring Up (2013)
Productions
- Think About Life - "Sweet Sixteen (Cadence Weapon Remix)" (2010)
- Liars - "Brats (Cadence Weapon Remix)" (2012)
References
- 1 2 3 Henley, Tara. "Candence Weapon: It's All About The After Party". Ur Magazine. Rogers. p. 33.
- 1 2 3 CBC News. "Cadence Weapon becomes Edmonton's poet laureate". Retrieved July 5, 2012.
- ↑ Marie Bartlett (May 28, 2012). "Cadence Weapon releases ground-breaking "Hope in Dirt City"". CBC Music. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
- ↑ "Breaking Kayfabe Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More". Metacritic.
- ↑ "Cadence Weapon Interview". UKHH.com.
- ↑ Tedder, Michael (March 10, 2008). "Q&A with Cadence Weapon". Self Titled Mag.
- ↑ Richard Helm (May 26, 2009). "Weapon of distinction; Rapper named new Edmonton poet laureate". Edmonton: Canada.com. CanWest Global News. Retrieved May 28, 2009.
- ↑ "Cadence Weapon Hope In Dirt City".
- ↑ Alan Ranta (July 25, 2012). "Polaris juror Alan Ranta on why Cadence Weapon could take the prize". CBC Music. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
- ↑ "The best albums of 2012 so far, part 2: Cadence Weapon, Japandroids and more". National Post. June 27, 2012.
- ↑ "Allsorts - TRP".
External links
- Official website
- Cadence Weapon discography at Discogs