In Hip-Hop, just about the best position to be in is âold enough to know what youâre talking about, yet young enough to still be dangerous.â Thatâs exactly the catbird seat Mindbender Supreme looks down from on âYoung Vet,â hurling thunderbolts of hard-earned wisdom from his quarter-century in the biz that hit all the harder thanks to vocal affirmations from Canadian rap legend Michie Mee.
Itâs a âlife well livedâ lesson in just under four minutes, with rapid-fire verses that take us from the devil-may-care indulgences of adolescence (âGet a license to drive… yourself insane!â) to the sage observances of maturity (âGrandpa Simpson was right!/ Generation gapâs a Family Feud/ I was a cool cat, now The New Cool is weird and scary/ Guaranteed it will happen to YOU!!â). Yet the mood is never less than triumphant, due in large part to Michie Meeâs periodic exultations of âYoung veteran/ Better than any medicine/ We come again/ Canât stop us, they let us IN!â
According to Mindbenderâa.k.a. Malcolm Lovejoyâit was hearing his longtime friend Michie ad-lib the pithy oxymoron âyoung vetâ on somebody elseâs track several years ago that gave him the idea for his.
âI felt the energy so much, as she was declaring her timeless wisdom that stayed connected to her youthful energy,â he says. âIt was that hip-hop ideology I love to hear, captured in such smart wordplay. So I decided to make a whole song about growing up through the life and times of adolescence and adulthoodâsurviving intelligently so you can be an icon, a legend and a mentor to the next generation.â
Thatâs a theme thoroughly in keeping with his latest album, The King of Queen Street, a double record that retraces this cultural mainstayâs exploits with a thoroughness that suggests heâs long overdue to update his billing as âTorontoâs best-kept secret.â Songs like âMr. Front Rowâ (produced by Rich Kidd) depict Mindbender as a kind of scenester Forrest Gump, consistently present and accounted for at some of the key musical events in Torontoâs arts history. Yet heâs been no mere idle bystander, as even a brief rundown of the collaborators who embrace him as a peer makes plain.
Thereâs Michie, of courseâhailed far and wide as the queen of Canadian Hip-Hopâand also producer Tough Dumpling (who helmed both âYoung Vetâ and the new albumâs first single, âThe Love That Love Producedâ). âYoung Vetâ received an extra polish from DJ Skratch Bastid, and the remaining liner notes to The King of Queen Street read like a kind of whoâs who of Ontario music royaltyâincluding Saukrates, Mel Boogie, DJX, DJ Grouch, Ian Kamau and Shad. And thatâs not even mentioning multidisciplinary luminaries like Toronto mayoral candidate Knia Singh, Neil Donaldson of Stolen From Africa and Matthew Progress of Freedom Writers.
What can we say? A guyâs going to collect a hefty stack of business cards if he works as long and as regularly as Mindbender has. In addition to the solo efforts heâs pumped out pretty consistently since 1999âs EP, In Another Universe, he spent many years advancing the hip-hop cause as half of Supreme Being Unit, a duo he formed with his (now sadly deceased) twin brother, Conspiracy. And when he hasnât been rocking the mic as an MC, heâs found time to host In Divine Style, a Queen Street open mic that ran for five years, and also to help cultivate young musical talent through the afterschool songwriting program Parkdale Street Writers.
Meanwhile, writing as Addi Stewart, heâs carved out a thriving parallel career as a music journalist, interviewing some of rapâs top stars for publications like XXL, Pound Magazine, CBC, City on my Back, Swagg and Now.
Thatâs isnât just being a renaissance man; itâs practically being a man for all epochs. Then again, you can get pretty far on just imagination, and imagination is clearly something this once-in-a-lifetime artist has in spades. Bend your mind, and the rest will follow.

