Aquakultre

Aquakultre is a Canadian soul and R&B musical project from Halifax, Nova Scotia, whose core member is singer and rapper Lance Sampson.[1] They are most noted for their album Legacy, which was a longlisted nominee for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize.[2]

Sampson's ancestors are from Africville, and he grew up in the Uniacke Square neighbourhood of Halifax.[3][4] He was a troubled teenager, who spent some time trafficking drugs and received a five-year prison sentence as a teenager. After being exposed to the music of Common and Erykah Badu, he taught himself to play guitar, and was released from prison after just 19 months for good behaviour.[5] He began performing as a rapper and singer in 2015, and in 2018 he won CBC Music's annual Searchlight competition with "Sure", a song he had written in prison.[6]

He recorded Legacy in just seven days at the National Music Centre in Calgary, Alberta, with a band that included Nathan Doucet, Jeremy Costello and Nick Dourado.[7] Following the release of preview singles "Pay It Forward", "I Doubt It" and "Wife Tonight",[8] the album was released in May 2020 on Black Buffalo Records.[9]

In August 2020 he announced that his second album Bleeding Gums Murphy, a collaboration with DJ and producer Uncle Fester, would be released on October 9.[10]

His video for "Pay It Forward", directed by Sampson and Evan Elliot, won the Audience Award at the 2021 Prism Prize.[11]

Aquakultre performed on the 2021 FreeUp! The Emancipation Day Special.[12] He contributed vocals for "Summer Night Songs", the title song of the 2021 documentary The North Star: Finding Black Mecca.[13]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.