Cadence Weapon

Share this post

Independence Day

cadenceweapon.substack.com

Independence Day

A story about management, trust and self-reliance

Cadence Weapon
Jul 6, 2021
10
3
Share this post

Independence Day

cadenceweapon.substack.com
Crowdsurfing at Pitchfork Music Festival in 2007

When I was a teenager, I signed a 360 deal with an independent label. A 360 deal is when the label gets a cut of everything you do instead of just record sales. This includes live performances, publishing, syncs, merch sales, endorsements and any other entertainment income. I signed a management contract with them where they received 20% of gross proceeds from my career. I signed a publishing contract where they received 50% of my publishing revenue forever (they currently still get money from my first three albums quarterly). I signed a record contract where they owned the masters and I’d only start seeing income when I recouped the expenses for the albums.

I never had an entertainment lawyer look at the paperwork, just a regular lawyer. Reluctant to lose my shot at success, my mom and I signed. Initially, the label believed in me and worked really hard to get my music out there. We had some great successes in those early years: I was nominated for the inaugural Polaris Prize in 2006, I got to play Glastonbury, signed licensing deals with Anti and Big Dada, received critical acclaim.

But during the first ten years of my career, I basically didn’t make a dime. Everything went to the label, even my honorarium for becoming Edmonton’s poet laureate. I travelled the world and played hundreds of shows but I was penniless the entire time, always hungry, living off whatever per diem or rider the venue would give me. When I wasn’t on the road, I was a seasonal temp worker in the shipping department at Holt Renfrew in Edmonton and I wrote for the alt-weekly papers in town.

On set for the “Sharks” video in 2006

Either way, I was just happy to make music. After Hope In Dirt City came out in 2012, I was primed to build on the momentum of that album getting on the Polaris shortlist and coming off of a series of sold out dates with Japandroids in the UK and USA. I got ghosted by the label and management, who stopped responding to my emails and demos. They ignored me for so long that I shifted to focusing on DJing in Montreal and essentially stopped making music for a few years. I felt trapped in the label situation, on the verge of quitting permanently.

The label never accounted once to me over the first 12 years of my career so I never had any idea when things would balance out and I’d start seeing some money. This hypothetical debt became an albatross around my neck. When I’d ask what I owed, they would say, “You don’t wanna know.” I never sold a ton of albums but I was always pretty organized and kept records of how much cash I had sent them over the years and it wasn’t nothing. By my count, I had sent them around $255,000 over the years and they’d gotten grants on top of that. My ex-girlfriend connected me to a music lawyer she knew who linked me with a litigation lawyer who helped me move on from the contracts. This whole situation is why I didn’t release an album for six years.

DJing in a loft somewhere in Montreal

I wanted to talk about this to show that these exploitative artist/manager/label relationships don’t only happen in the major labels and they aren’t just a vestige of the 20th century. I’m just another musician in a long line of Black artists taken advantage of by an industry that is inherently extractive and predatory.

I’m still dealing with the fallout of having bad management today. These experiences made it difficult for me to trust people in the music industry. This is why I began managing myself at the end of 2015. I moved to Toronto and started my career over from scratch, having lost all momentum and buzz I had built up previously. I didn’t have a job and cobbled together a living with freelance writing, DJ gigs and voiceover narration. I was determined not to become a Canadian rap footnote and worked ceaselessly, finding a recording arrangement that worked for me, an engineer I really liked working with and a new label.

I did extensive research and connected with producers, photographers, visual artists, directors and collaborators in person and on social media. I shaped my vision and found the people to help me execute it. I booked my own shows until I got an agent again, coordinated my own travel and lodging and tour managed for myself on the road. I negotiated deals on my own behalf. It’s been like this for years and it’s been really gratifying to learn that I have the capacity to do it.

But recently I’ve gotten to the point where it makes sense for me to work with a manager again. It’s exciting to think of a world where I can spend more time making music, working on my book and writing newsletters and less time creating invoices and doing admin. But I’ve also been emotional thinking about getting into that type of relationship again. Finding people who have your best interests in mind and are willing to work with you to reach your goals are priceless. When it comes to this side of the industry, I’m finally optimistic to see what the future has in store.


Parallel World is on the 2021 Polaris Music Prize Long List! It’s an honour to be recognized alongside such a remarkable group of Canadian artists. If you’re reading this and somehow haven’t heard the album yet, check it out on Bandcamp and all streaming services.


Just dropped a new track with UK electronic producer 96 Back called “Coup de grâce” on Local Action, one of the coolest labels in England. We originally wrote this together during the sessions for Parallel World but ended up making it the lead single for his upcoming Flex Time EP. On the track, I give Jessy Lanza a shout out and try my best to embody the spirit of Viktor Vaughn.


MONTREAL: My first live show in over a year is happening at SAT on Saturday July 17 as part of Marée Nocturne. I’ve put together a full live band just for this show and there's gonna be wild visuals. I couldn’t be more excited to be able to perform these new songs for the first time in person. I’ve been told that capacity is extremely limited so get your tickets here!


Just added a stop in San Antonio on October 14 to my fall tour with Fat Tony! Don’t worry y’all, Canadian dates are forthcoming. My American friends can get tickets to the shows below:

9/30 - Denver, CO - Hi-Dive - Tickets
10/2 - Chicago, IL - The Empty Bottle - Tickets
10/3 - Cleveland, OH - Beachland Tavern - Tickets
10/6 - Brooklyn, NY - The Sultan Room - Tickets
10/8 - Atlanta, GA - The Earl - Tickets
10/13 - Houston, TX - White Oak Music Hall (Upstairs) - Tickets
10/14 - San Antonio, TX - Paper Tiger - Tickets
10/15 - Austin, TX - Far Out Lounge - Tickets
10/16 - Fort Worth, TX - Wild Acre Live - Tickets
10/20 - Los Angeles, CA - Zebulon - Tickets
10/21 - San Francisco, CA - Bottom of the Hill - Tickets
10/22 - Portland, OR - Polaris Hall - Tickets
10/23 - Seattle, WA - Clock Out - Tickets


You can find me at my website, updating my playlist, DJing on Twitch or hanging on Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. You can listen to my music on Spotify, Apple Music and Bandcamp

3
Share this post

Independence Day

cadenceweapon.substack.com
3 Comments
jason
Jul 7, 2021

i'm a manager, experience limited, but i can't understand what type of deal you had. shame. i followed your edmonton moves w/ the laureate - my good friend tanya had it in halifax. that you didn't get the $ - makes me sad. feels like the kind of thing you wouldn't've even cashed the cheque and pinned it somewhere. anyway, i feel like i know who it was. and hate to think i've ever been like them. probably i have. i know i did walk away from some things that i was starting to think less about - and i still feel bad for walking away - mostly because my team started to disagree with the artist decisions and i couldn't rally them. i kind of always believed the artist was the one to rally. and i would say that. it's hard to be everything. i know about the "captain goes down with the ship" and all, but i never asked to be captain. half the time i don't even want to be on the boat. i'm a business person. land i love art. it's kind of a curse. the circus can get messy, with financial, personal things involved. sometimes i stay away. it was a luxury. but you didn't have that. if i was a business person, you were the business and also a person. doesn't mean i'm not a trooper. but i agree with you fully. all i can say is that i've taken pride in guiding peoples careers, i feel badly about misguiding some, but i did have the balls to admit it to them and help them seek a new path. and i've never been fired. which means a lot to me. considering i'm far from perfect. i'd rather be trusted than rich...anyway, long time admirer, and long time watcher of this weird industry. let's chat some time. i'll find you...

Expand full comment
Reply
Adam
Jul 7, 2021

This seems corny, but is so relevant. https://youtu.be/CcCRs0Ic3FI

Expand full comment
Reply
1 more comment…
TopNewCommunity

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Rollie Pemberton
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing