Home is an elusive concept to Roland Pemberton. For the 25-year-old rapper/producer – stage name Cadence Weapon – arts journalist and, until July 1, the City of Edmonton’s Poet Laureate, home is both physical and abstract, a permanent place on the map and a constantly shifting idea.
The physical part of Pemberton’s home is easy enough to define. He was born and raised in Edmonton and has a homegrown legacy to go with it. His late father is Teddy Pemberton, the DJ credited with introducing hip hop to Edmonton airwaves in the 1970s, and his grandfather, and namesake, is Eskimo hall-of-famer Rollie Miles.
It’s the idea of Edmonton that is more difficult to define.
“This is something I was talking to [filmmaker] Trevor Anderson about,” says Pemberton over a mug of tea at a downtown Internet cafe. Relaxed but excitable, he enthuses about Anderson’s short film The High Level Bridge, which played at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. “What he’s doing with that movie is really valuable. It’s a permanent document about Edmonton, and there’s not a lot like that.
“You think about New York. There are untold amounts of tributes to it – books, movies, everything you can imagine. But Edmonton is not as exciting, and has less people in an artistic discipline who have the insight to talk about it. So I feel required to be that person with a lot of the things I make.”
When, as Cadence Weapon, he raps about Edmonton, he doesn’t go in halfway. “Oliver Square” is the opening track off Pemberton’s first album, Breaking Kayfabe, which was written, produced and recorded when he was just 17, and subsequently nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, an annual award that goes to the best album recorded in Canada regardless of genre. It tells of drunken nights on the town, and it’s filled with references to local landmarks so specific, you could chart the lyrics on Google Maps. “We Move Away,” from the follow up, Afterparty Babies, is a meditation on all of the friends he lost to other cities. On a recent free-for-download album, Tron Legacy: The Mixtape, he brings the music to a sudden halt to deliver a monologue in favour of closing the City Centre airport. (It’s worth pointing out this piece is equal parts political and playful; Pemberton loves nothing more than to disorient his listeners, and he delights in imagining outsiders’ reactions to his Edmonton-centric skit.)