“I Hope We All Catch Our Dreams” – A MNFSTO9 Tribute to Redway

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Right before Years Ahead was released, a friend of mine asked if I was downtown, and what I was doing. At the time I was pre-occupied but still said, “Not much, what’s up?” He responded back saying Redway was having his album release party – an project produced by WondaGurl who had just appeared on Magna Carta Holy Grail – at Get Fresh Company. “Not another one,” I thought. Regardless, he was convincing and sounded passionate about this artist, so I made my way over. Unfortunately, I caught the tail-end of the event with people spilling out of 498 Queen Street W. in droves. The street became loud, as if family from years just reunited. I remember this night vividly because that was also the first night I met Redway – someone I would come to know as a passionate artist, and someone most people knew as a “us against the world” type of guy.

The project knocked, and Redway immediately got thrown into my list of Toronto-artists-not-named-Drake I’d share with my American peers who inquired often about our music. Quite frankly, Redway will always be in that list of mine. I also got aquainted with Redway’s previous music, but I was steadily hooked on Years Ahead – a title that now seems to hold more meaning than ever before. I’d miss the opportunity to work with Redway from a PR standpoint, something I’d later regret in 2014, but rambled about his music when I could. Even when I was hit up by CJ Fly’s management about openers for an upcoming show, I found myself telling her the story about this guy I’d just found out about who packed a popular clothing store to the brim.

That summer, I ended up running into Redway several times – at the most random times and places, and eerily almost too many times for someone I had just met, but that bright smile and coy demeanor was always welcomed. I also respected Redway’s hustle – the respect he showed others, the effort he put into his career, and how he thought of the city’s changing landscape. As I was putting together a last-minute Toronto showcase for the A3C Festival in Atlanta in August, I reached out to him to see if he wanted to be a part of it. To my surprise, he put trust in myself and this showcase, and said yes.

Manifesto’s annual festival was soon approaching, and it was no brainer to have Redway on the bill. It’d be the third year he’d perform at our festival. That day, he had an early set for Live At The Square. A few acts passed, tensions were already high, and 15 minutes before his set he still wasn’t there. “Hey, where are you!?,” I said in a frantic call. He said he was stuck in traffic – of course he was, as he was coming from Mississauga on a Saturday morning. “There’s talks about cutting set time, get here as soon as you can!,” I continued. With seconds to spare, he made it. With a big smile and positive energy, he took the stage.

Two weeks later, a troop of GTA artists would find themselves in the sunny air of Atlanta, GA. Most of us were also all kotched up at the same hotel (so it seemed), so throughout the week, I’d see Redway networking and building, or sometimes just posted up outside the hotel with his crew. The night of the showcase came, and just before Redway’s set, the steadily packed room started to disperse for one reason or another. In a bit of a panic, I wondered whether to stall his performance or not, but once again, I saw him take the stage with a smile. The room packed right back up, and a few ATL natives asked me who he was shortly after. “That’s Redway! He just released a project with WondaGurl that you should definitely check out,” I’d reply.

It’s been a year since that night in ATL, and by now, I’ve sent the video link to “YKTO” to almost all my American friends when they ask, “What’s Toronto like?” Having recently found myself back at A3C, I also found myself speaking about that ‘416 Showcase’ and what some of those artists were up to now. “We lost one of our guys from last year’s showcase this summer,” I blurted out after that realization hit. “It’s weird, you know… He was such a dope talent. He was the one who had next. He was one of the good ones.”

I’m one of hundreds who attended Redway’s vigil and funeral this past summer – a celebration of his life; ‘how he’d want it’, we were reminded. While my story of knowing him lasted a brief moment in time, the outpour of love and admiration for Shane Redway was – and still is – a consistent testament to who he was as a person. At this year’s Manifesto Festival, we wanted to pay tribute to the late Mississauga artist who touched hundreds of lives in his time. While emotions were high at Dundas Square, there was also a beautiful energy in the air. In my brief time of knowing Shane Redway, I can confidently say that that energy matched the smile of a man and an artist who’s legacy will always live on.

We Say Goodbye to #MNFSTO9 with an Amazing 2015 Recap Video

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Over the course of 5 days, we’ve once again seen our city come together to support the arts and culture of Toronto. As we close off our 9th Annual Manifesto Festival of Community and Culture, we’re excited to say that not only was this year’s festival a success, but once again, we came out on top by showcasing our homegrown talent across multiple disciplines, and are proud to have been able to highlight our thriving arts and culture scene once more. After all, we are #OneCity! Following its premier on Complex Canada, check out our 2015 #MNFSTO9 recap video, which features interviews with our headlining acts, competition winners, and various other people who truly believe in what we do, and where we’re going.

Our most heartfelt thank you’s go out to all of our incredible sponsors, partners, artists, volunteers and amazing crowds who showed up to support our city’s arts and culture communities night after night. An extended thank you goes out to TD Canada, Complex Canada, FACTOR Canada, the Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council and the Toronto Arts Council, SOCAN, Steamwhistle, Redbull Canada and Shopify for letting Manifesto create an amazing event once again. 

Spek Won photo by Jah Grey

#MNFSTO9 Future Sounds: Spek Won interview

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Spek Won isn’t new to this. While he dropped his debut album Sofa King Amazing earlier this year, Spek Won has been making progressive sounds as part of Toronto’s creative music community for several years now, building up his reputation in collectives like 88 Days of Fortune. So while his album features some organic instrumentation and approaches, it also explores some vividly futuristic directions that much like his production alter ego Marty McFligh, take things back to the future. MNFSTO.COM caught up with Spek Won to discuss his music and approach within Toronto’s burgeoning reputation as a progressive sonic hub. – Del F. Cowie

Spek Won will be appearing as part of Manifesto at Future Sounds on Friday, September 18th with Adria Kain, a l l i e, Clairmont the Second, City Fidelia and Birthday Boy.

9pm – 2am
Daniels Spectrum (Ada Slaight Hall), 585 Dundas St. E.
$20 Advance Tickets
19+ event

Get Tickets

Join Facebook event page

 

Follow Spek Won on Twitter at @spekwon

 

On Sofa King Amazing your production alter ego and one side of the album refers to a Back to the Future character [Marty McFligh]. Do you feel like there’s a futuristic approach to what you’re doing?

I feel like there’s definitely a progressive thought process that goes into the writing and the concepts. I do my best to try to mould and put together. I come up on hip hop and music during a time when you didn’t have the influx of music through social media and what not so it was almost like you had to stand out. Me, personally when people tell me my music sounds new or futuristic, I feel like it’s more that it sounds different because I still hold on to the mentality that I have to do my best to sound like me, which is different than a lot of the paths people take. Because I feel like there’s the dominant culture that’s in Toronto right now which is I guess you can call it the OVO Sound, that it’s like it’s heavy it’s like a machine, concrete and steel. The majority of artists from Toronto in Canada and worldwide are adopting that OVO Sound, whereas there are many of us in Toronto and worldwide that are adding to what I like to call counterculture. And pretty much it’s just the culture that doesn’t oppose the popular sound but it is at the other end of the spectrum of what the popular sound is right now. So I guess I’d rather call my music counter-culture to whatever’s popular as opposed to futuristic. I guess if you call it futuristic, OK, I guess it’s futuristic.

What are some of the things that you feel have been happening for a while in Toronto. You were a part of 88 Days of Fortune collective for example.

I feel like 88 Days of Fortune definitely added to the artistic state of what Toronto has become and has been becoming because it was an alternative to the straight-forward, ‘just get on the stage with the MC and a beat [approach]. It was, like, ceremonial when you came to one of our shows and we had so many aspects to it , we even had so many types of shows we hosted parties, we hosted shows we hosted all kinds of things. 88 Days of Fortune definitely did their part for that. I feel like there was also a certain moment of time where Toronto producers were just killing it. And I mean we still are but there was a certain moment in hip-hop where every beat you may have heard it may have been someone from Toronto whether it was 40, whether it was Boi-1da, whether it was Rich Kidd, whether it was T-Minus, whether it was LordQuest. I feel like that also added to the progression to this ‘future’ sound that we have coming out of Toronto. There was a producer era where a lot of producers were just going heavy.

 


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#MNFSTO9 Future Sounds: a l l i e Interview

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Ever since allie released her  Strange Creature EP in 2013 she has explored a sound that is at once familiar and adventurous as well as being traditional and refreshingly new. Her emergence and aesthetic, rooted in soulful music has come alongside a definite sonic shift in R&B, yet she has managed to add her own inimitable and distinctive creative approach. Working collaboratively with other Toronto-area artists like Elaquent and 2nd Son who are inherently wired to push rhythmic boundaries of their own, allie has been able to issue tracks like “Cross My Mind” and the SOCAN Songwriting Prize-nominated “Private Island” that boast immediate appeal while traversing eclectic sonic paths. Having just released “I Can’t Wait,” a sumptuous collaboration with Birthday Boy, allie spoke with MNFSTO.com to discuss her sound within the context of Toronto’s creative community. – Del F. Cowie

a l l i e will be appearing as part of Manifesto at Future Sounds on Friday, September 18th with Adria Kain, Spek Won, Clairmont the Second, City Fidelia and Birthday Boy

9pm – 2am
Daniels Spectrum (Ada Slaight Hall), 585 Dundas St. E.
$20 Advance Tickets
19+ event

Get Tickets

Join Facebook event page

Follow a l l i e on Twitter at @alliemoves

 

Since you’ve started have you noticed more of an interest from the R&B coming from Toronto?

For sure, for sure.

Why would you say that?

 There’s something definitely happening here. It’s hard to define it. And a lot of people are calling it a sound. I think that’s a little too limiting a term because there are a lot of different sounds going on that are super diverse. But I think that there’s just a lot of talent here, a lot of people are like pushing and taking advantage of the fact that there are a lot of people watching right now. And I think there’s a really different feel of community for me right now where I think in Toronto where a bit of the divide on the music scene and right now it just feels like everybody is supporting each other like coming together to make some dope shit.

What are some examples of the things that are particularly impacting for you in terms of the collaborations happening in the community?

Well, like I’ve just been working with a lot of people from Toronto lately and like I’m working, obviously I’m doing some stuff with Birthday Boy. I’m working with River Tiber, there’s a bunch of different people and it feels like the scene has really opened up for me cos when I started I was working with a lot of producers that weren’t in Toronto kinda right off the jump and that was a bit tough ‘cos it was a lot of internet stuff and we couldn’t actually get in a room with each other. I was really missing that personal connection so that’s kinda been the best part of it for me to be getting in a room with people and to be actually working with close friends I can build relationships with.

So you recently dropped “I Can’t Wait” with Birthday Boy, that’s the only song you guys have worked on, right?

 Yeah, that’s the only thing that we’ve put out. We’re working on some other stuff right now. We’ve both got a lot of projects on the go, but I’m working on my full length, he’s working on some stuff for that. And then as I said River Tiber and 2nd Son [who produced allie’s debut EP Strange Creature] and then there’s just a lot of people in the scene that I’m really looking to right now for inspiration and also right now that I would love to work with, like Harrison, bizZarh and it’s cool because they’re all friends so it feels really natural and organic and I think that’s a lot of the reason people are looking at us right now, ‘cos it is actually organic, you know? It’s not forced. It’s not contrived. It’s a bunch of people who are actually friends who are really supporting what each other are doing, working together and I think that makes it something special because, I don’t know there’s a genuine quality on the scene right now that probably a lot of other cities don’t have.

You’ve said there’s a lot of eyes on us right now a couple of times. What do you think has been a main contributing factor to that?

The really obvious one is the Drake effect [laughs]which everybody talks about a lot. And now The Weeknd is like making this big move. So people are paying attention ‘cos of that, but I think that it’s more than that. I think it’s not just the music scene, it’s the city itself is really growing and changing and turning into something really completely new and in all facets of the city, so I think that it’s just natural that the music scene is having this evolution and that people are like more interested in what’s going on in Toronto and also more interested in the artists that are living here and working here and coming out of here. It’s cool because for so long as a Toronto musician you really had to leave and this feels like really the first time where you can lay down roots here and do your thing. You still have to leave, but it just feels very different to me right now.


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Exclusive Interview: From Vanity Fair to Your Favorite Local Hub, Soulection’s SoSuperSam Does It All

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Samantha Duenas lives to innovate. As SoSuperSam, the Los Angeles-based DJ and member of worldwide label/collective Soulection, boldly blends her unique variety of hip hop, R&B, electronica, and indie music into a sonic experience that has charmed the likes of top-tier rappers to Hollywood A-listers to media giants. Her unique approach to the turntables and amalgamation of a charismatic performance background soon became potent ingredients for a stacked portfolio, as a coveted slot supporting Childish Gambino’s US Camp tour and an invitation to be Vanity Fair Magazine’s DJ of choice for many of their high profile photoshoots, only scratch the surface of what the compelling DJ has accomplished. Not one to remain stagnant, the young innovator has some surprises in the works to round off the year, which may come sooner than you might think. – Interview by: Samantha O’Connor | @samomaryleona

SOSUPERSAM will be performing at Future Sounds at Daniels Spectrum on September 18. Follow her on Twitter: @sosupersam

What are you looking forward to most about playing in Toronto at this year’s Manifesto Festival?

I haven’t been to Toronto in a few years and the last time that I was there, I had a really good time. So, I’m just looking forward to being in Toronto. I’m going straight to the OVO store, because I want to get some Hotline Bling merchandise if it’s not sold out.

You’ve worked with one or two artist on the bill that you will be sharing the night with on Friday at Manifesto. What can you tell me about that?

I’m a big fan of Birthday Boy and I’ve used his songs on my mixtapes before. I really want to meet him and I’m really stoked to be on the same bill as him.

How did you come across his music?

Just Soundcloud digging, when you fall into that hole of clicking and clicking and I stumbled upon him and downloaded his entire EP. It’s all really good stuff. Sort of jazzy house remixes.

The event you’ll be headlining at Manifesto is all about sonic innovators of future soul and hip-hop, so in your own words, how does that describe your vision as a DJ?

I think I really fit in the bill in terms of sonic innovation, because my sort of signature stamp as a DJ has always been to sort of blend songs that you would never think of doing. So, a very recent example is, I was playing a party and I mixed Riff Raff with Tame Impala. I let it mix for a good two minutes. Just listening to those two artists mashed over each other, it stunned a lot of people in the crowd, because they didn’t really know what they were listening to. I thought it was a nice crossover and sort of an innovative way to share new music among different types of listeners.

Your resume is stacked. You’ve DJed many types of different events from the HBO Girl’s wrap-up party to a tour with Childish Gambino. So, what does a perfect DJ set look like to someone with a palate so versatile?

For me, a perfect DJ set goes back to sonic innovation, where I’m playing a little bit of everything. My favourite DJ sets are when I’m mixing it all up and the audience starts to really gravitate towards my every transition and what’s coming up next. There’s an anticipation while I’m playing for what’s going to happen next. That’s when I feel like I’m doing a really good job, is when I’m playing things that are unpredictable that still work together.

Any DJ rituals that you have that are important to you?

I’m a very nervous person. I thought that at the beginning, it was just a rookie thing, but I’m just a nervous person in general. The nerves and the anxiety I feel before a DJ set hasn’t really faded overtime. In terms of rituals, I’m usually very quiet and I don’t talk to anyone, which I guess is anti-ritualistic. I try to mentally focus on doing the best job as possible. But I get animated and dance around. I try to give a really good performance, not just blending music but giving as much energy as I can.

And that comes with you being a performer as well. I know before you became a DJ, you were a dancer. So, in an alternate universe where you were on the dancefloor instead of the DJ booth, what song would you be dancing to the hardest?

My all-time favourite would be, Ciara “Ride” but probably anything from the <em>Dirty Sprite 2</em> album, I would probably lose it.

What are your current sonic obsessions this fall?

I’m still on <em>DS2</em>, so that’s in heavy rotation. My label-mate Sango just released some tracks that he had from three years ago. I’ve been listening to that on the plane and it’s been my travel soundtrack. And Makonnen is really finding his way into my life. I have The Internet’s album in rotation a lot. But I’ve been working on my own music.

New stuff, what do you have in the works?

Some production stuff and some vocal stuff. I’ll be putting some of it out next week and throughout the end of the year. It’s scary but it’s time. It’s happening. In addition to dancing, I always sang way before I started DJing. After I finished school, I wanted to be a professional dancer, then I always had a dream of being a corporate power house executive with the corner office and power suits and the heels. Then, I was going to DJ on the side while being a working professional as a boss, because I never thought DJing would actually be my career. The irony is that, what I really thought my hobby was going to be, it turned into my career. I’m stoked on it. So now, I’m just circling back to dancing and singing and all the things I used to do and finding ways to incorporate it into what I’m doing now. It’s been a really fun and interesting process to find ways to do it all at the same time.

So in that regard, you’re still a boss. You’re just doing it all at once.

It works out.


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Exclusive Interview – Unmasking GoldLink: Exploring the New Generation of Future Bounce

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Photo Credit: Rog Walker

Back in 2013, I was at a festival in Atlanta working alongside Henny Yeguzu when he had mentioned he manages an artist from the DMV named GoldLink, that I should check out his music and that he’s going to blow. Naturally, based off the strength of Henny’s commentary, I did check him out, and realized he was something special. GoldLink made his official debut in 2014 with the launch of The God Complex, a 9-track mixtape that barely reaches the 30-minute mark – but that didn’t matter, the tape received media attention from Complex and Pitchfork to FADER and HHDX, and the 22-year old has been well sought after since. Earlier this year, GoldLink announced that he’ll be working alongside the legendary Rick Rubin to create new music as a part of a VSCO feature – what that truly entails, we’ll find out – but in the mean time, we spoke to GoldLink about his musical journey thus far, his native sound, and future bounce.

GoldLink will be headlining the Manifesto-curated Red Bull Sound Select event supported by Keita Juma and A K U A on September 16. Follow @GoldLinkon Twitter, and RSVP for RBSS!

It seems as if every three months a new tour or festival has been announced since the release of The God Complex last year – and you’ve also publicly stated you’re not a big fan of touring. What have been the best or worst experiences thus far?

A Goldlink show is an experience that brings unique sounds and styles in one arena. Touring can be taxing, but it’s always dope seeing the different kinds of people who come to the show and actually enjoy themselves.

In a similar breath, aligning yourself with the Red Bull network is bound to take you all over the world. For an artist who originally didn’t want to have an image attached to the music and stood by the concept of anonymity, to having a world brand associated with your name, how do you stay true to your artistic goals?

Red Bull is a great brand that’s done more for new music than some labels have. Red Bull is a part of festivals like this, and work with artists like me because they understand the music and understand the culture, so it hasn’t interfered with my artistic goals much; it’s only bolstered those goals.

At the top of the year, the word trickled down that you were working with Rick Rubin. Can you elaborate on what’s happened since February when the news dropped? In a two-fold question, how do you believe you captured the attention of a veteran ear like Rick Rubin’s by pioneering a new take on an electro-rap sound through future bounce?

Rick became a legend by having an impeccable ear. He has created plenty of waves in his career, and I think it was just a matter of him recognizing a cultural shift in music, and spotting a fresh new sound that emerged from that shift. People with great ideas happen to find each other, and I’m so honored to be able to have the eyes and ears of someone like Rick on the music I make and what I’m trying to do.

In July, a little bird tweeted that a new album is coming through Soulection titled, And After That, We Didn’t Talk. Can you speak a little more about that titled, as well as your relationship with Soulection?

Soulection is family, from day one. My sound grew with theirs, and now we’re both at a place where the world is listening – I couldn’t be more grateful to work with such a talented and progressive group of people and artists.

What about Lakim, Kaytranada, Sango or any of the other usual suspects in your discography… do they play a role in the new music you’re working on?

That’s family. They’ll always play a role.

Vulnerability in music can make or break an artist – meaning, there’s a fine line between putting your life out for the public and being unable to relate to. With you, you push the boundaries just enough that people get a sense of who you are. Why is it important for you to keep a sense of vulnerability in your music – not just as an artist overall, but also as a young man in the rap game?

As human beings, we have a natural desire to relate to others, and for others to relate to us. You gain a deeper connection with people when you can get them to see the world the way you do, and to do that, you have to offer a little bit of yourself. Keeping a sense of vulnerability in my music as an artist and a person allows my fans more insight into who GoldLink is – why I sound the way I do, why I say the things I say. It’s important for developing a stronger connection.

For a lot of young rappers / rap music fans, the concept of a bar-to-bar rap is almost an ‘outdated’ concept – yet you still have a huge respect for storyteller rappers like Slick Rick or Big L. How do these pioneers play a role in how you make your own music?

Slick Rick and Big L are pioneers of this rap shit first and foremost, we wouldn’t have a lot of hip-hop without them. My influences from legends like them are more subtle. I don’t take stylistic cues from them, but I may try to combine Rick’s pithiness or L’s dexterity in a story I may write.

Your stance on music, and from what you’ve said thus far, is about the art above everything – a lot like Kanye West. At the recent MMVAs, when Kanye accepted his Vanguard award, he said “Listen to the kids.” As someone from this new generation of artists on the come up, and at just 22 years old, what do you believe he meant by this, and why should we be listening?

Kanye has been at the forefront of culture since he came into music. What he was saying was relatively simple: kids are the future, let them build it. Young people are living and creating in a world that’s more different than it’s ever been – trailblazing is no longer unique, it’s required. We’re all forging new, exciting paths, and instead of trying to control or command the kids, just listen to what they’re saying, and where they’re trying to go.

WATCH: GoldLink – Dance On Me