
In the House with CADENCE WEAPON (and his Fridge Full of Condiments)
Author: Dave Bertrand
Published by:
The Skinny Magazine
Over the phone from Halifax, Pemberton explains his channel-panning beat marvels as, “Sample pastiche stuff, really cut up, soft synths and my DJ scratching over it.” His first album, 2006's Breaking Kayfabe, eschews a Nintendo influence. “More sample-y, darker & spooky….kinda slower, and more methodical,” he adds. By comparison, the brand-new Afterparty Babies is: “Way faster, House-influenced. More electro. I've been definitely influenced by the club scene that way.” It also opens incongruously with a-cappella and is dedicated (apologetically) to ‘Stephanie.’
“Stephanie is a girl that exists,” says Pemberton. “She's a kind of muse. I inadvertently write about her all the time. She's just a girl that I really used to like, and now she lives in Germany. She has this sense of youthful excitement. She reminds me that I'm actually still a young dude.” Stephanie is all over the album - '”Tattoos (And What They Really Feel Like)” uses Rollie's tattooist as bartender/shrink for his girl troubles. It's story-oriented, like all Cadence material. Pop-culture-referencing, literate, personal or (like “The New Face of Fashion”) poking great fun at Rollie's annoying hipster culture.
“South By was pretty cool,” Pemberton gushes. “We had to do a fanatical amount of shows - six shows over three days! And our gear melted, eventually. The CDJ - a signal turntable that we put CDs into to play our beats – it melted outside.” When asked of using organic instruments: “Well, the next record will be that,” Rollie answers. “I mean, I kind of have a specific idea of where I want to go sonically with every album I do. The next one, I'm getting ready to start a band. It will have human parts – the band and my DJ. World conqueror shit.”
Pemberton muses on Edmonton: “It's a lot more artistic than people give it credit for. We're a happy people. Everyone I know is an artist - all my friends. Most of them end up moving to Vancouver anyway. I feel like now it doesn't really matter where I live. I live kind of a transient, nomadic existence. But I can see why Edmonton can also be a hard place for a young artist to live. There are not a lot of opportunities. One of the main focuses of the album is the transient nature of youth. And that's the reason that I have all my friends on the cover, and on the back they're gone. ‘Cause I feel like eventually these young people will decide to go somewhere else, to change their life or whatever. It's very strange. I feel kinda like... I feel floaty, all the time. I've been having trouble sleeping. It's fun, but it's kinda weird not having normal stuff that other people have. I'm shocked that I can maintain a girlfriend!”
Thoughtful and concerned, yes, but live Cadence Weapon shows no respect for body or ego. It's a balls-out hype party, freaky all over the room. Rollie Pemberton (and co-hort DJ Weez-l) visit Vancouver (with Buck 65 and Scratch Bastid) Wednesday May 7th at the Commodore Ballroom. Posted: May 6, 2008
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Cadence Weapon



