Welland Tribune e-edition

Rapper overcomes his dashed dreams

First album, ‘Heavenly,’ features 12 tracks written during early days of the pandemic

BRUCE DEMARA

“I mean by now man the progress should be evident” “I was in a wheelchair / walking like the president” — from “Heavenly”

One dream dashed, Tymaz Bagbani has moved on to the next one with characteristic determination and flair: becoming a rap/hip-hop star.

But still, as Canada made its first World Cup appearance in 36 years, the former aspiring soccer player was wistful about what might have been.

He’s confident he would have been on Team Canada because he played with “over half the starting lineup or attended the same inviteonly camps growing up.”

He was playing as a teenager in Spain before a recurrence of illness forced him to return home and abandon his hopes to play professionally.

Bagbani survived acute myeloid leukemia three times — he’s been in remission for a decade — but contracted graft-versus-host, an autoimmune disease caused by rejection of bone marrow or stem cells, which sheared the skin from his chest down to his feet and left him unable to walk.

He experienced excruciating pain as he endured the equivalent of fourth-degree burns as a result of graft-versus-host and from the physiotherapy needed to so he could walk again.

This led to an addiction to painkillers, which he references in two songs on the album.

“I put all my experiences together in this album,” Bagbani said. “(And now) the project is out and I’m just excited.

“I’ve worked hard enough to get myself to a body where people can’t even recognize I went through anything,” he added. “I’m playing sports and I’m completely independent.”

The album, released Monday, was produced by Soul Gala Studios, an artist development incubator and music studio that helps new artists with production, marketing, public relations and distribution.

“I heard about his story and we ended up talking about making music together,” said producer Jorden James, who also performs, under the handle Jhrted.

James noted that Soul Gala is “selective” in whose music it decides to back.

“We both went (through) struggles in our life and I can relate to him,” James said. “I thought I might as well work with this guy because he’s a cool person.

“From a musical standpoint, I like that (Tymaz) is very lyrical and he doesn’t fit the mould of the typical artist in Toronto,” James added. “He’s kind of different and he says real stuff; he says things that actually matter.”

His first album has what Bagbani regards as his 12 best tracks.

His first single last year, “Told You,” has had a few hundred thousand views on various platforms. During the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bagbani began writing songs with a fervour: 30 a month at his fastest pace.

“The way I’m branding myself is I’m being honest with the audience,” he said.

“People are too worried about being cool. To end up being real is really cool and my brand is real.”

ARTS & LIFE

en-ca

2022-12-03T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-12-03T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://wellandtribune.pressreader.com/article/281655374100082

Toronto Star Newspapers Limited