Canadian Musician - March / April 2020 | Page 42

PROGRESS, EMPOWERMENT & PRIDE Celebrating 25 Years of Honey Jam PARTICIPANTS FROM THE 2019 EDITION OF HONEY JAM ONSTAGE AT THE MOD CLUB IN TORONTO E BY ANDREW KING bonnie Rowe was well ahead of the curve in calling out the Canadian music industry for being behind the times. In the first quarter of 2020 alone, FACTOR announced its $350,000 investment in a women’s mentorship program. The SOCAN Foundation held its inaugural Her Music Awards to celebrate and support female-identified artists, which came just a couple of months after it unveiled its own mentorship program to create equity and access for women+ music producers. And continuing a trend that’s emerged over the past couple of years, companies and associations are announcing commitments to and achievements of gender parity on their boards of directors on an increasingly regular basis. Of course, such progress is welcome, necessary, and encour- aging in addressing longstanding and deeply-rooted imbalances in our industry’s infrastructure. But Rowe and a revolving cast of supporters and collaborators have been steadfast in pointing out and proactively counteracting those imbalances for 25 years. Back in 1995, Rowe – who’d developed a reputation as an outspoken critic of how women were portrayed in certain segments of hip-hop culture – was invited to edit an all-female edition of Toronto’s now-defunct entertainment publication Mic Check. The launch party for that issue was dubbed “Honey Jam” and intended to be a one-time event, but the audience obviously wanted more – 42 CANADIAN MUSICIAN and the industry obviously needed it. Rowe founded PhemPhat Entertainment Group that year to “foster the growth, education, and promotion of women in all aspects of the music business,” and the annual Honey Jam showcase and development program has become its marquee initiative. Today, a quarter-century after its inaugural edition, Honey Jam is as relevant and – as far as its participants are concerned – rewarding as ever. “When it comes to your goals and aspirations, it’s important to see yourself and people like you reflected out there the way you want to be; otherwise, you see or imagine a barrier to entry for these kinds of opportunities,” begins Rowe about her ongoing commitment to the cause. “I just have that type of personality where no obstacle or barrier is going to prevent me from getting what I want, and I’ll nev- er feel a need to dishonour or disrespect myself in order to climb up the ladder. But not everyone is like that, so we want to promote and build that self-confidence, that refusal to be denied what you’re due.” The goal isn’t and never has been just to loudly cry foul, or to concede “that’s just the way it is” and come up with workarounds; it’s about proactively generating ideas and plans to give women the visibility they deserve and the tools they need to step up and over existing biases and attitudes, regardless of whether they’re individu- al or systemic. Again, the central component of those efforts is Honey Jam.