OVO’s Noah “40” Shebib Releases ‘Toronto Rising’ Mini Doc

noah 40 shebib

Drake’s Grammy-award-winning producer Noah “40” Shebib releases a mini-documentary titled Toronto Rising. The 14-minute doc directed by Alim Sabir, is a collaborative partnership with Native Instruments and 40.

40 is a notoriously private person, so this doc is a rare and unique look into his private life, featuring archival footage of his come-up including never-before-seen home videos of him discovering his love for the piano as a child and the early days of his legendary partnership with Drake.

READ MORE: Drake’s New Deal With Universal Music Group Called “LeBron-Sized,” Estimated to Be $400M.

I’ve always considered myself a visitor in hip hop. When I was 21, I got diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. I learned a lesson in the hospital, which was that as long as I had like one finger that still worked, no matter what the world took from me, I could play the keyboard and I could make music. All the things in my life just kind of pointed me in one direction. I’m here to play my part and to leave my impact.

Noah “40” Shebib

Toronto Rising serves as a backstory to the legacy 40 has built for himself . As well as inspire the next generation of producers who may be struggling to find their footing amid adversity. It’s also a love letter to Hip-Hop and the city which he and Drake played an integral role in putting on the map.

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The Last Two Decades of Canada’s Music Scene, Through the Lens of Norman Wong

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong
Image via Theo Skudra

Based in Toronto and the photographer of choice for some of the biggest artists in town, Wong aspires, he says, to be “a part of the cultural fabric of the city,” a chronicler of a unique—and uniquely important—time and place. For him, it’s all about capturing what’s going on. And what’s going on right now is amazing. “Toronto has become a cultural hub for the world, like London in the 1960s,” he says. “I want to tell that story—but not my own story. I don’t like the spotlight much. I prefer to be slightly invisible.” There’s so much happening here, in sports, in the arts, in fashion, in music. Wong is right there to shoot it.

“I’ve been blessed with making so many incredible connections with so many artists in this city and it really has made Toronto world-class over the past decade,” he explains. “Toronto has this insecurity about itself. It’s hated across the country and it’s small compared to other major world cities. The music we export has helped with that confidence immensely.”

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong

When I got on the phone with Wong, on a recent Friday afternoon, the first thing he wanted to talk about was movies. He knew I sometimes worked as a film critic; did I like the French New Wave and Eric Rohmer, and the Korean filmmaker Hong Sang-soo? It begged the question: If Wong was such an avid cinephile, why wasn’t he making films? “Originally I always wanted to get into filmmaking, but I purposely turned away from it,” he says. “Photography as a life is better-suited to my personality. If I’m making movies, I’d be sitting on my ass all day trying to write, and I’m a terrible, terrible writer. I’m not Ang Lee. So instead I gave up filmmaking and did photography—although recently I have started dipping my toes into some directing.”

Wong came up as a photographer in the early to mid 2000s, and from the start his career, he explains, “was all about indie rock.” Toronto, at the time, was in the middle of an indie rock boom: Feist, Metric, and Broken Social Scene, among others, were blowing up like crazy, and Wong managed to get in on the ground floor, following bands around “like the kid from Almost Famous,” as he puts it. “The first thing I ever did as a photographer professionally was the Live 8 benefit,” he remembers. By his own admission “not a music nerd,” he was bewildered to find himself on stage shooting the likes of Motley Crue and Neil Young. He laughs to think of it now. “It was pretty fucked.”

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong

In 2011, a friend of Norman’s, the cinematographer Anthony Von Seck, was working on a project on behalf of Drake, which Drake himself had commissioned on the strength of a doc Seck had made about boxing. The project ultimately never came to fruition, but Seck brought Wong on for a while as the official on-set still photographer. “That was how I met Oliver and 40 and all those guys,” he explains. “But I didn’t see them for a long time after that.” Still, it would turn out to be a pivotal moment in his career. And it wouldn’t the last Wong would see of the OVO crew.

Years later, Wong produced a short documentary for Vice about the secretive world of suburban street racing in Toronto. Oliver got wind of it, and he admired Wong’s work elsewhere in the Toronto creative community. The result was a monumental opportunity: he invited Wong to shoot Drake for what would become the instantly iconic cover art for Drake’s album Scorpion. The moody, high-contrast black-and-white photo has emerged as one of the most striking hip-hop album covers in recent memory—truly an indelible image. And as celebrity portraiture goes, it doesn’t really get any bigger.

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong

What was the impact of shooting a Drake album cover? To hear Wong tell it, not much. “It’s funny, because I thought at the time, you shoot a Drake album cover and things will be crazy, but it wasn’t like that,” he says. “It was nothing. It was just chill.” What was important was the professional relationship that was established. Wong is in deep with the OVO crew today: He’s traveled to Tokyo for OVO events, worked closely with OVO Sound’s Majid Jordan since the beginning of their career.

“It was the diversity that stood out to me,” Wong says about working with the duo. “That crew was the most diverse team I’ve worked with and that truly felt like Toronto to me. It was exciting to work with those guys right when I felt Toronto really hit a cord in terms of its sound. I think Drake’s album Views really captured that moment. Summer 2016 was a great moment for Toronto music and it felt like OVO was a good reason for that.”

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong

More recently, Wong shot the Nocta campaign for Drake’s new line of streetwear with Nike. As for the man himself, he’s quick to point out that while they work together well, they’re not exactly close. “It’s not like I’m best friends with him,” he says.

Canada’s music scene has certainly undergone quite a metamorphosis over the last two decades. In the early aughts, sprawling indie-rock collectives defined the sounds of major Canadian cities. Now, hip-hop and R&B do. Wong has been there to capture it all. “It’s wild to have been so involved with the music scene on polar opposite ends of the spectrum,” he says. “From organic lattes and bicycles to Hennessy and Bugattis—it’s been an incredible journey to be a part of. To see what those artists did to open doors and inspire everyone around them is incredible to watch.” 

Images via Norman Wong/Collage by Lauren Armstrong

Though he’s primarily based in Toronto, Wong has helped capture the scenes in other parts of the country as well. He’s especially had his eyes locked on the 514. “Toronto and Montreal are like musical siblings. Different sounds and feelings, but they’re both world class music hubs,” he says. There’s one artist he’s been watching in particular. “I really feel like Skiifall from Montreal will be making a very big wave. What he is doing now is only the beginning. I’m excited to see what he produces in the coming years.” 

Wong’s work continues to be ubiquitous. He’s still shooting celebs, from Kevin Hart to Snoop Dogg to Twitter founder Jack Dorsey. But doing a little bit of everything is the only way Wong knows how to do it. “In Europe, you get these photographers with a clear vision and voice, and I envy that,” he says. “I never have a game plan. I never know exactly where I’m going to be. I find I have to be kind of a chameleon.” The ethos has certainly made Wong versatile—and has made it as likely for his work to be plastered across a billboard as to be featured in a serious gallery. The diversity of styles is what’s made him so ubiquitous Toronto- and Canada-wide. “I’ve come across so many situations,” he says. “And I can facilitate whatever the situation is.”

Drake’s OVO Fest Is Returning In 2022

In addition to anointing UK rapper Dave as one of the most unique artists in the business today, Drake also had another surprise for fans at Dave’s tour stop in Toronto last night. After performing “Wanna Know” and “Knife Talk” alongside his host (or guest, since Drake owns the venue, History), Drake told the diehards in attendance that he’s also planning on bringing back his own event, OVO Fest, sometime this year. “I love you with all of my heart,” he said. “They let the city back open so I will see you at OVO Fest soon.”

Drake’s festival would have had its 10th iteration in 2020, but COVID-19 and the resulting safety restrictions forced him to forego plans to celebrate the 10th anniversary at the event itself. Unfortunately, as a side effect of the slowed income from that year, there was no 2021 edition, either. The last OVO Fest took place in 2019 with guests like millennial favorites B2K, Chingy, and Lloyd. Intriguingly enough, Drake’s festival isn’t the only one coming back to Toronto this year; in April, Rolling Loud announced its own event in The Six featuring none other than Dave as a headliner alongside Future and international superstar Wizkid.

Drake didn’t offer any more details, but you can bet when he does, there will be a frenzy to get tickets to his hometown show — no matter how much they cost.

Drake Announces Return of OVO Fest

OVO Fest is back.

Drake has announced the return of his signature festival. Last night, the 6 God joined Dave as a special guest during the U.K. rapper’s show at Rebel in Toronto. Before leaving the stage, he told the hometown crowd that he plans to bring back OVO Fest this year.

“I love you with all my heart. They let the city back open, so I will see you at OVO Fest soon,” he said to cheers.

It’s been three years since OVO Fest was last held in Toronto, when B2K headlined and Drake brought out surprise guests including Cardi B, Chris Brown, and Meek Mill. It was canceled in the wake of the pandemic. He has yet to announce 2022 dates, but the event is typically held in early August.

Since its inception in 2010, OVO Fest has featured appearances from hip-hop and R&B’s biggest stars including Eminem, JAY-Z, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, The Weeknd, and Kendrick Lamar.

During Thursday night’s show, Drake also praised Dave, who stars on the Drake-produced Netflix series “Top Boy.”

“This guy right here is a once in a generation talent,” he said. “Whether he’s rapping, pouring out his heart, whether he’s turning all the way up, whether he’s playing the piano, whether he’s acting in our show, ‘Top Boy,’ I promise you this guy right here is a one of one.”

Drake Joined Dave Onstage At His Toronto Show, Calling Him A ‘Once In A Generation Talent’

Streatham, London rapper Dave has been rising in acclaim and esteem over the last few years. In addition to dropping the well-received albums Psychodrama and We’re All Alone In This Together — both of which topped the UK’s Albums Chart — he was a thrilling villain in the Drake-produced revival of the street crime drama Top Boy and recently became a BRIT Award-winner for We’re All Alone. It’s safe to say that he’s one of the UK’s most exciting acts today.

Leave it to Drake to make that coronation official during Dave’s North American tour stop in — where else? — Toronto, Drake’s hometown. Drake joined Dave onstage mid-show to perform their 2016 collaboration “Wanna Know,” as well as a rendition of Drake’s Certified Lover Boy track “Knife Talk.” Afterward, Drake addressed the audience, giving Dave his benediction.

“This guy right here is a once-in-a-generation talent,” he said. “Whether he’s rapping, pouring out his heart, whether he’s turning all the way up, whether he’s playing the piano, whether he’s acting in our show Top Boy, I promise you, this guy right here is a one of one.”

Drake’s blessing is no small one; his pop-outs for collaborators and friends have helped increase their popularity by several orders of magnitude. In recent years, he’s done so for artists like Giveon and Jack Harlow, and if past trends are anything to judge by, it probably won’t be long until Dave’s own profile similarly skyrockets. Check out video of Drake onstage with the breakthrough UK artist above.

Noah “40” Shebib, Noted Drake Producer & Pal, Drops Surprise Documentary

Noah Shebib

An extremely private person, rap producer Noah “40” Shebib steps out of his shell to tell his own story. Whether it is about his life or his impressive career, this new mini-documentary shows a side of him not often seen. In a new documentary called “Toronto Rising: 40’s Very Own,” Shebib lets his truth be […]

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Kendrick Lamar Expresses His Confusion At Drake And Kanye West’s Reunion On His New Album

The turnover from autumn to winter last year saw Drake and Kanye West apparently set aside their longstanding differences. It was a surprising time for many who had been paying attention to the many chapters of their relationship, as it all seemed to happen so fast. The two hip-hop heavyweights quickly agreed to perform at the LA Coliseum in a concert dedicated to Larry Hoover and appeared like the best of friends on stage, sharing high fives, side hugs, and covers of each other’s songs. Among the many confused was Grammy-winning rapper Kendrick Lamar, though it was more personal for him.

On the new album Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, K Dot’s first solo LP since 2017’s Damn, he addresses the reunion and what it reveals about his own maturity as a man. “When Kanye got back with Drake, I was slightly confused / Guess I’m not as mature as I think, got some healin’ to do,” he says on “Father Time,” which features Sampha.

Drake and West threw jabs at one another for years but their bubbling tension reached its peak in 2018, when Ye produced Pusha T’s Daytona album, which included “Infrared,” a shot at the 6 God for his ghostwriting allegations, among other things. Drake replied on the very same day with “Duppy Freestyle,” a two-birds kind of approach that fired back at both of them. What would ensue from there is Pusha responding with “The Story Of Adidon,” revealing to the world that Drake has a son, and a lot more subtle shots over the years between the three until this past year.

Listen to “Father Time” above.

Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers is out now via PgLang/TDE/Aftermath/Interscope. Get it here.