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Nomadic Massive

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Nomadic Massive
Nomadic Massive in 2015
Background information
OriginMontreal, Quebec, Canada
GenresHip hop, World music
Years active2004 (2004)–present
LabelsMonde
Outside Music
Les Faux-Monnayeurs
MembersWaahli
Lou Piensa
Butta Beats
Ali Sepu
Past membersVox Sambou
Sayen
Narcy
Taliwah
Meryem Saci
Rawgged MC
DJ Static
Hest One
Websitenomadicmassive.com

Nomadic Massive is an independent Canadian hip-hop supergroup based in Montreal that has been active since 2004. [1] The group has performed in Canada, the United States, Brazil, and France, among other international venues. The ensemble rotates members depending on the song, but their membership includes rappers, singers, keyboardists, saxophonists, trumpeters, trombonists, guitarists, bass players, and drummers. Many of them are multi-instrumentalists and trade spots onstage.

The group's current roster includes Waahli, Butta Beats, Lou Piensa, and Ali Sepu. Alongside them, other musicians include bassist Mark Haynes, keyboardist JMF, drummer T-cup, and singer-songwriter Malia Laura.

Nomadic Massive writes songs in English, French, Spanish, and Haitian Creole. The group's genre is characterized as an Afro-Latin take on hip-hop. They have performed at Montreal International Jazz Festival for several years. [2]

Band biography

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In 2004, a collective made up of solo artists was created in Montreal in order to participate in a hip-hop festival in Havana, Cuba. After spending three weeks living together with music as the main focus and sharing moments with Cuban artists, the group came back to Montreal with the idea of putting together a mixtape and a show in order to showcase their experience. The night of the concert, the venue quickly packed up, and the mixtapes rapidly sold out. The next day, Nomadic Massive decided to push the experience even further by participating in any community shows between Montreal and Toronto.

In 2005, the group launched its first EP Nomad’s Land. The record was critically acclaimed in the local and international scenes and Nomadic Massive started to create its own niche.[3] As of 2024, over 3,000 copies have been sold.

The group subsequently continued to perform at various events across Canada and later returned to Havana in 2006 to present their new material and their new live show. In 2008, the group managed to independently organize a tour in São Paulo, Brazil, where their music and community workshops found a new fan base and where they produced a new mixtape with local artists, catching the attention of the record label Outside Music, which, in 2009, offered Nomadic Massive a national distribution deal for their second self-titled album, which sold more than 4500 copies.

In 2012, the group released a mixtape project entitled Supafam, which came out digitally but also on 300 exclusive cassette tapes. During that time, the group continued to tour in new areas, such as French Guiana and the United States.

The arrival of a new EP in 2013 announced the beginning of a tour across Canada, the United States, and France.

In 2016, after years of international touring, Nomadic Masiive launched a new album on the Coop Les Faux-Monnayeurs record label The Big Band Theory, a release that included soul, jazz, and funk music. This album opened new markets particularly in Europe and Latin America.

From 2017 to 2019, the band heavily toured Europe twice a year (France, Germany, Switzerland, and Spain) and recorded and released an EP (Miwa, 2018) and a full-length album (Times, 2019). They were also chosen as one of the bands that represented Canada at the Cervantino Festival in Mexico. Just before the COVID-19 Pandemic, they have celebrated their 15-year anniversary with a sold-out show in Montreal in the context of the Mundial Montreal showcase.

In 2022, the band began touring internationally again with a week-long project in Paraguay, where they recorded and released a live session of a brand new song called "Pocket Full of Lingo." This was followed by shows in New York and Marseille at international showcases. A second single, "Fly Sh*t," entirely shot in Marseille, was dropped in July 2023 as they tour Mexico at the Querétaro Experimental festival. A brand new EP was released in the second half of 2023.

Performance highlights

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Active founding members

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Lou Piensa

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Lou Piensa is a French-born MC, producer, and educator. He had a nomadic childhood, born in France and raised in Ecuador, Algeria, Canada, and Cuba. Active in the international hip-hop scene since his teenage years, Piensa has been involved in many aspects of the movement, including radio, music production, performance, and event organization. His music had him travel and share the stage with world-renowned artists (Common, Wyclef Jean, Dead Prez, K'naan, Julian Marley), particularly with Nomadic Massive. Piensa speaks multiple languages and his raps are frequently mixed with French, English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

Lou Piensa is one half of The Loop Pilots, a collaborative beat-making duo founded in 2015 with his former English student and established producer, Dr. MaD. [4]

In 2007, NoBad Sound Studio, a music studio for youths, was founded in affiliation with Maison des Jeunes Côte-des-Neiges, where Piensa, alongside bandmate Butta Beats, was hired to conduct workshops.[5]

In 2016, the two would help create Up Next Studio at James Lyng High School.[6]

Waahli

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Waahli (also known as Wyzah) was born in Montreal to Haitian parents. His father, also a musician, knew at an early age that music would play an intricate part of his life. As a solo artist and member of Nomadic Massive, he is a self-taught rapper, freeslylist and guitarist. Waahli has shared the stage with acts such as Guru, Antibalas, Yasiin Bey, Georgia Anne Muldrow, Blackalicious, K’naan, and Wyclef Jean. His musical styles and influences range from traditional to soul, funk, and jazz. He has cited the Jungle Brothers, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, J Dilla, and KRS-One as inspirations. Beyond his musical influences, Waahli also derives inspiration from the work of black activists such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X. More recently, he has been exploring skills as a beatmaker, releasing the instrumental EP series Soapfactory Volumes 1 (2011) and 2 (2012), which he showcased at Artbeat Montreal Revelation in 2012.

Waahli is also a father, a grassroots community builder, a youth worker, and a soap maker (Wyzah Musk).[7]

Ali Sepu

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Ali Sepu is an Ottawa-born musician. Sepu has been in the music industry since the age of twelve, when he received his first guitar from his father. He proceeded to become involved in many Chilean cultural events, which served as a training ground for his unique guitar style. He was influenced by the traditional music of the Andes, as well as the blues and the psychedelic music of the 1970s. He later discovered his interest in the hip-hop genre, which he chose to attempt. Hip-hop expanded his musical repertoire as he explored new styles emanating from the diverse cultures in the Montreal music scene. Although his original loops were done on the same classical guitar he received as a child, he opted for a Japanese Stratocaster when the group decided to go with a live band.[8]

Butta Beats

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Butta Beats is an Argentinian beatboxer, emcee, multi-instrumentalist, producer, songwriter, and educator. Butta Beats was often seen and heard in countless freestyle sessions and beat-boxing encounters at concerts, on street corners, and on the radio. He was part of the WEFUNK Radio with DJ Static and Professor Groove. He also collaborated with Ali Sepu on the Iron Chef Project, which allowed him to integrate his South American folkloric influences with occidental urban music. Joining Nomadic Massive gave him the medium to express positive social discourse through music.[9]

In 2007, NoBad Sound Studio was founded in affiliation with Maison des Jeunes Côte-des-Neiges, where Butta Beats, alongside bandmate Piensa, were hired to conduct workshops.[5]

In 2016, the two would help create Up Next Studio at James Lyng High School.[6]

Past members

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Nantali Indongo

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Nantali Indongo (who also goes by Tali, IamBlackgirl, IBG, or Taliwah) is a Caribbean singer, songwriter, and MC. Indongo studied literature at the University of Ottawa and received a graduate certificate in journalism from Humber College. She is also the daughter of activist Kennedy Frederick, who was one of the six original plaintiffs and a leader in the infamous Sir George Williams Affair, a series of protests held at Sir George Williams University (now Concordia University) in the 1960s after the administration failed to address students’ claims that a professor at the school, Perry Anderson, was guilty of racism; these events make the subject of the 2015 documentary film Ninth Floor, in which Indongo stars.[10]

Indongo is also the co-founder of Hip Hop No Pop, an educational and interactive workshop series that looks at the non-violent origins of hip hop culture and uses hip hop as a tool to encourage storytelling and foster confidence in youth.[11] She currently sits on the board of the Maison des Jeunes de la Côte-des-Neiges as well.[12]

Indongo is also a researcher and reporter for CBC Radio Montréal.

Meryem Saci

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Meryem Saci (also known as Meduza Ma’at) is an Algerian singer, songwriter, and MC. Saci was born in Algiers, Algeria, and immigrated to Canada in 2000 to escape the civil war. Fluent in Arabic and French, she learned English through long hours of religiously listening to Wu-Tang Clan, Big L, Fugees, Public Enemy, Dead Prez, and other influential hip-hop artists. Her love for hip-hop comes from the genre’s tradition of encouraging social critique and free speech. She joined Nomadic Massive in 2005 after recognizing the group’s passion for music and positive social change.

While mentoring young women and facilitating singing workshops at La Maison des Jeunes de Côte-des-Neiges, she obtained a degree in commerce, a license in real estate, and began her bachelor's degree in political science. As a singer, she has collaborated on soundtracks for films and TV shows like Lance et Compte, On the Beat (Sur le rythme), Omertà, Dérapage, and more, adding the Netflix Marvel Original Iron Fist to the list in 2017.[13] Saci released her debut single “Concrete Jungle” in March 2017;[14] her debut solo album, On My Way, was released on June 1, 2017.[15]

Rawgged MC

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Born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Diegal Leger moved to Montreal in 1982. Between two academic diplomas, he will become Rawgged MC. He is a founder of the Students for the Advancement of Hip Hop Culture at Concordia University and is responsible for the symposium on hip-hop culture that was held in Montreal from 2002 to 2005 and again in 2009;[16] and in Port-au-Prince in September 2011. Leger is also a founding member of Solid’Ayiti, an association dedicated to cooperation between artistic and academic communities in Montreal and Haiti.[17] He continues his parallel evolution in the worlds of medicine and music.

His private podiatry practice, Leger Foot Clinic, is expanding, while Nomadic Massive is gaining steady momentum. He also plays bass in fellow Nomadic Massive bandmate Vox Sambou's solo project.

Vox Sambou

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Vox Sambou was born in Limbe, Haiti. He has been composing and performing for over 15 years. He sings in Creole, English, French, and Spanish. He holds a bachelor's degree in psychology and anthropology. For more than 10 years, he ran the Maison des Jeunes de la Côte-des-Neiges, a non-profit organization whose mandate is to prevent delinquency among adolescents in Côte-des-Neiges.[18] Sambou, as a solo artist, has always incorporated socially conscious themes since his first album, Lakay, which was released in 2008.[19] He continues with Dyasporafriken, his second solo album, combining reggae sounds with traditional Haitian music. Sambou has launched several video clips, including "DiscriminaSida" on World AIDS Day,[20] as well as "Article 14" in collaboration with Narcy and Professor Noam Chomsky.[21] Most recently, Sambou launched his video "Tout Moun," featuring Malika Tirolien and Kaytranada. His latest release, The Brasil Sessions, incorporates songs from his live show, fully recorded in Brazil with his musicians, with whom he has toured across the Americas as well as in Europe, Africa, and Asia.

Sambou has been instrumental in the implementation of educational and community projects based in Limbe. He is a founding member of SOLID'AYITI, an initiative of artists and activists working for long-term solidarity between Montrealers and the movement fighting for social justice in Haiti, according to the principles of self-sufficiency, education, decentralization, and reforestation.[22]

DJ Static

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DJ Static (born Michael Lai in 1977) is a well-known Canadian DJ and radio personality.

He arrived in 1988 from Hong Kong, settling first in Vancouver, British Columbia, then in Montreal. He credits hip-hop music with helping him learn English, and he started DJing in 1994.

In 1996, in collaboration with fellow Canadian DJ Professor Groove, he launched the award-winning WEFUNK weekly radio show on Montreal's CKUT 90.3, McGill University's radio station.

Since 1999, the show has also been available online through WEFUNK Radio. Both DJs play a symbiotic mix of funk, soul, R&B, and rap, both old and new. The name of the radio show comes from the Parliaments' song "P. Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up)," in which WEFUNK is a fictional radio station broadcasting "directly from the Mothership, top of the Chocolate Milky Way, 500,000 kilowatts of P Funk power." The Internet radio stream in 1999 became one of the oldest continuously operating radio streams on the Internet, as well as one of the longest-running online radio shows.

DJ Static became the DJ for the Canadian multicultural multilingual hip-hop group Nomadic Massive. The members of the band come from Haiti, Algeria, Iraq, China, Argentina, Chile, and France.

In addition to his radio work and work with Nomadic Massive, he has club residencies in Blizzarts and Boa in Montreal. At various times, he has DJed internationally, including at various American and Canadian venues, Cuba, Hong Kong, and Zurich.

Hest One

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Hest One is a Paris-born graffiti artist who has lived in Montreal, Jakarta, Indonesia, and Saint-Louis, Réunion. Having made his name in the underground of Paris's 1980s and 1990s graffiti scene, he moved to Montreal at the turn of the century, and, as part of the NME crew in Montreal, he has left his mark as one of the most respected graffiti artists in the city. As an original member of Nomadic Massive, his art has graced the covers of every Nomadic Massive album and logo, as well as some of their early show flyers.

Narcy

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Yassin Alsalman, better known by his stage name Narcy (formerly The Narcicyst), is an Iraqi-Canadian rapper, author, university instructor, and actor. He currently resides in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Sayen

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Sayen is a Chilean-Canadian singer with influences ranging from R&B to Latin jazz and folkloric music. Based in Ottawa, she now performs regularly alongside Afro-Cuban jazzman Miguel de Armas and his musicians.

Mentorship

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NoBad Sound Studio

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Ex-member Vox Sambou served as director of the Maison des Jeunes Côte-des-Neiges youth center for 10 years. [23] The youth center is located in the Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood, part of the Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough, the most populous and culturally diverse in Montreal. In 2007, Butta Beats and Lou Piensa would be brought on by the Maison des Jeunes to facilitate workshops in the new NoBad Sound Studio, just under their own rehearsal studio.[24] NoBad Sound Studio, affiliated with the Maison des Jeunes, was developed with the intention of offering young budding musicians a place where they can develop their musical talents and express themselves artistically. The space offers neighborhood youth a wide variety of music workshops each week that include beatboxing, rap, speech writing, singing lessons, music production, DJing, and performance skills.

In 2009, the studio began producing professional-quality music published on CD. This initiative offered young artists the opportunity to work directly with professional staff to create, record, and develop musical projects that express socially conscious lyrics. In 2010, the studio began expanding its activities outside of Montreal, which gave them the opportunity to bring five youths to Toronto, ON, after being invited to play and speak at the Regent Park International Film Festival. The studio intends to create international exchanges with marginalized youth around the world in the near future.[5]

Naïka Champaïgne (left) and Mags (right) in Montreal, QC in June 2021.

In 2014, NBS launched their first all-girl initiative, with the result being a trio of singers, songwriters, and beatmakers, Strange Froots. [25] As the most successful act to have come out of NBS to date, Sambou would go on to call them "the pride of NoBad Sound Studio and of the Maison des Jeunes" in an interview with France Ô and Outre-Mer 1ère.[26]

Strange Froots

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Strange Froots, founded in 2014, is the first all-girl group to have formed at NBS. [27] The group, composed of Mags, Naïka Champaïgne (having attended NBS since 2013), and SageS (from 2014 to 2020), takes its name from the Billie Holiday song "Strange Fruit". As Nomadic Massive's protégés, they have made waves in the Montreal hip-hop scene, having released their eponymous first EP at the Hip Hop You Don't Stop festival in September 2014 with Tali as one of the fellow acts, only 3 months after their first meeting. [28] Tali, Waahli, and Piensa would open for their first music video launch in February 2015. [29] Since their inception, they have performed in many different venues and festivals across Montreal, such as WE Day, the St-Ambroise Montreal Fringe Festival, POP Montreal, and RIDM. Their second EP, Blossom This Froot For Thought, was released in July 2016 through Concordia University's official campus and community radio station CJLO, by way of their OnRotation artist residency. [30] The second EP has charted across Canada in the top 10 in hip-hop for most of Fall 2016 on campus and community radio.[31][32][33] In 2017, the group was brought on by Colonelle Films to provide the score for their short film Mahalia Melts in the Rain, released in 2018.[citation needed]

The group would announce in the spring of 2021 that SageS was no longer part of the band.[34]

Discography

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Albums

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  • Times (2019)
  • The Big Band Theory (2016)
  • Nomadic Massive (2009)
  • Nomad's Land (2006)

EPs

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  • MIWA (2018)
  • Any Sound (2013)
  • Nomads Land EP (2005)

Mixtapes

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  • The Radio-Tape (2015)
  • The Brazil-Canada Get-down (2008)
  • The Canada-Cuba Get-Down (2004)

References

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  1. ^ "Biography – Nomadic Massive – official website". Nomadic Massive - official website (in French). Retrieved 2016-06-03.
  2. ^ "Artist : Nomadic Massive – Festival International de Jazz de Montréal". Retrieved 2016-06-03.
  3. ^ "Nomadic Massive Nomad's Land". Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  4. ^ "The Loop Pilots — And Then… The Sea - BRBR TFO". BRBR TFO (in French). Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  5. ^ a b c "Nobad Sound". NoBad Sound studio (in Canadian French). 2013-08-15. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  6. ^ a b "Tonight @ 6pm: Nomadic Massive's Lou Piensa & Butta Beats w/ young talent Shad Enar, Fili Al, & Rayana Speede | CJLO 1690AM". www.cjlo.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  7. ^ "Wyzah Musk Soap | Made in Montreal". Wyzah Musk Soap. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  8. ^ "Ali Sepu, Auteur à Nomadic Massive - official website". Nomadic Massive - official website (in French). Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  9. ^ "Nomadic Massive - COOP Les Faux-Monnayeurs".
  10. ^ "Reflections: Interview with Nantali Indongo, co-founder of HipHopNoPop and famed Nomadic Massive MC | Mapping Memories: Stories of Refugee Youth In Montreal". www.mappingmemories.ca (in French). Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  11. ^ "Hip Hop No Pop! | Inspire Art". inspireart.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  12. ^ "BOARD". Maison des Jeunes Côte-des-Neiges / Jeunesse 2000. 2009-12-15. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  13. ^ "HHQc.com - Meryem Saci dans la bande originale de " Marvel : Iron Fist " de Netflix". HHQc.com. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
  14. ^ "HHQc.com - Meryem Saci dévoile un premier extrait de son album solo". HHQc.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  15. ^ "Montreal: 10 emerging acts to watch". CBC Music. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
  16. ^ "North Side Hip Hop | International Symposium on Hiphop Culture". www.nshharchive.ca. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  17. ^ "Solid'Ayiti - Promoting self-sufficiency, independence, social justice and peace in Haiti". www.solidayiti.ca. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  18. ^ "Vox Sambou: un artiste, un quartier, une planète". Le Devoir (in French). 11 June 2016. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  19. ^ Lakay by Vox Sambou, 2008-10-21, retrieved 2018-06-28
  20. ^ VoxSambou (2009-11-11), Vox Sambou - DiscriminaSida English, retrieved 2018-06-28
  21. ^ BANMHIT.COM TV (2015-07-22), Vox Sambou - Tout Moun feat Malika Tirolien and Kaytranada (official Video), retrieved 2018-06-28
  22. ^ "Vox Sambou and the Solid'Ayiti initiative for Haiti". Vox Sambou and the Solid'Ayiti initiative for Haiti. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
  23. ^ "TEAM". Maison des Jeunes Côte-des-Neiges / Jeunesse 2000. 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  24. ^ "No Bad Sounds For NDG | Fringe Arts". Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  25. ^ "No bad sounds | The McGill Daily". www.mcgilldaily.com. 22 September 2014. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  26. ^ NATHALIE sarfati (2015-07-20), VOX SAMBOU, un artiste haïtien au grand Coeur, retrieved 2017-03-02
  27. ^ "Strange Froots Website". --strange-froots--. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  28. ^ "This Week-End : Hip Hop You Don't Stop / Girlz & Hip Hop / Elementakiza 2014 - Elementality". Elementality. 2014-09-17. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  29. ^ "Strange Froots + Waahli, Tali & Butta (Nomadic Massive)". La Presse (in Canadian French). Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  30. ^ "Strange Froots - CJLO's first Hip Hop Artists in residence!!! | CJLO 1690AM". www.cjlo.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  31. ^ "charts : september 2016 : !earshot". www.earshot-online.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  32. ^ "charts : october 2016 : !earshot". www.earshot-online.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  33. ^ "charts : november 2016 : !earshot". www.earshot-online.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  34. ^ "Farewell, StarFroot". Tumblr. May 10, 2021. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
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