One to Watch: Thabo Chinake
Partway through his second year of university, Thabo Chinake 鈥 an international student from Harare, Zimbabwe 鈥 was homesick, weary of the cold, and doubting his creativity and academic fortitude. He decided it was time to open the first in a stack of letters that had been addressed to him nearly 22 years earlier.
鈥淢y mom, who was an English teacher at the time, wrote the letters when she was pregnant with me,鈥 says Chinake. They were tributes of love to her unborn son, and to the adult she envisioned he would become.
鈥淗er words helped me bounce back,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey gave me space inside myself to move.鈥
Chinake, who received his Bachelor of Commerce from the Haskayne School of Business in 2021, is now an account manager at a staffing and recruitment firm, and he鈥檚 also a rising hip-hop artist.
He jokes that sometimes he feels like a superhero, hurriedly changing out of his office clothes to inhabit his musical alter ego, KTheChosen (a name inspired by an endearment his mother uses). Still, he finds alignment between the two endeavours. 鈥淎s different as the recruiting work is from what I do as an artist, it鈥檚 similar in that it鈥檚 about talking to people, and learning and sharing their stories,鈥 he says.
Indeed, if Chinake has a superpower, it鈥檚 supporting and encouraging people to tell their stories 鈥 on their own and via his own artistry. Last fall, he released his latest project, , in collaboration with the Blackfoot rapper, Tribe, as well as Cree and M茅tis musicians. Chinake leveraged the album to raise funds for Indigenous causes linked to Orange Shirt Day.
Jason Stang
In October 2021, the same month the album came out, he was chosen as artist of the month by the . As well, he was invited to join 25 other artists 鈥 ranging from dancers to graphic designers 鈥 in the inaugural cohort of the incubator program. The program gives artists opportunities to learn from one another鈥檚 craft while also illuminating the kinds of equipment, space and support artists need from visual and performing arts organizations.
Chinake says business school taught him the communication, marketing and organizational skills he needs to fuel and manage his career as an artist. Likewise, his involvement in extracurricular clubs increased his confidence, honed his networking abilities and, he says, expanded his capacity to empathize with diverse perspectives. Chinake says his close relationship with his mom and other female relatives motivated him to join the campus Consent Awareness and Sexual Education Club to, he says, 鈥渦nderstand what sex positivity looks like, and what consent looks like. People generally only think about consent in terms of sexuality, but it falls into so many things we do, including posting on social media.鈥
Ultimately, Chinake sees himself staying in Calgary (he鈥檚 decided that nasty winter temperatures are outweighed by frequent-enough blue skies) where he believes there鈥檚 room for art to become a more robust economic driver. He鈥檒l continue to make his own music, and work with other emerging artists to market and develop their careers.
鈥淚 feel like a bridge or connector of people 鈥 I think that鈥檚 my main purpose,鈥 he says.
Well, that and fulfilling the ongoing demand of his parent to 鈥 as she signed off in one of her prenatal letters 鈥 鈥淟ove your mother (that鈥檚 an order).鈥