British Columbia

Rapper Ice Cube wears Tahltan beader's artwork on stage

Beader Carmen Dennis drove more than 1,600 kilometres to see the Straight Outta Compton rapper perform in Abbotsford, B.C., and gift him some of her artwork.

Carmen Dennis says she played Ice Cube's It Was a Good Day on loop while she beaded

A rapper on stage.
Footage of Ice Cube wearing Dennis' medallion made it into a promo video for his Canadian tour. (Ice Cube/Facebook)

Feb. 20 was a good day for Carmen Dennis.

The Tahltan artist, who lives in the community of Dease Lake, in B.C.'s far northwest, had spent two days driving more than 1,600 kilometres to see the rapper Ice Cube perform in Abbotsford, about 64 kilometres southeast of Vancouver. 

To celebrate the occasion, she had created a medallion bearing the Straight Outta Compton rapper's image, using beading techniques she learned from an elder. She wore it to the show, which sparked conversations with some fellow fans.

But as the rapper tore through his hits, Dennis' niece and daughter, who were also at the concert, convinced her to take the medallion off and let them throw it on stage in the hopes of getting his attention.

WATCH | Ice Cube receives and wears Dennis' medallion: 

Straight outta Tahltan: Beader creates medallion for Ice Cube — who wears it on stage

9 months ago
Duration 1:17
Tahltan First Nation beader Carmen Dennis travelled two days from her home in Dease Lake, near the B.C.-Yukon border, to see Ice Cube perform in Abbotsford, B.C. She also beaded a medallion featuring the rapper's face — which she tossed on the stage during the concert, then watched as Ice Cube picked it up, put it on, and wear it through his encore performance.

Before she knew it, the rapper — who also stars in movies including Boyz n the Hood, and the Friday and Are We There Yet? franchises — was wearing it around his neck, keeping it on for the rest of his set and his encore.

"Thank you for whoever made this," Ice Cube said as Dennis filmed him holding her artwork up for the crowd. "I appreciate it so much."

And Dennis' reaction?

"I was shaking so bad," she said in an interview with CBC Daybreak North host Carolina de Ryk. "My heart was pounding."

Ice Cube, who started his career with the rap group and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees N.W.A. before going on to have a massive solo music and film career, has just kicked off a series of Canadian tours, starting with the Abbotsford show Dennis attended.

She said the instant she heard he was coming to Canada, she knew she had to be at one of his shows, even if it meant a multi-day drive.

"He's very inspirational," she said, adding she has followed his career over multiple decades. "He's one of my favourite artists."

A split image, one showing a woman wearing a beaded medallion, the other showing rapper Ice Cube wearing the same medallion.
Tahltan beader Carmen Dennis wore her beaded medallion to Ice Cube's concert in Abbotsford, B.C. Near the end of the show, she got it to the multiplatinum rapper, who wore it for the rest of his set. (Carmen Dennis)

In the lead-up to the concert, she said, she was trying to manifest getting her work into the rapper's hands, repeatedly playing his track It Was a Good Day while she beaded.

By a twist of fate, that was the first song he performed after putting the medallion on. 

Ice Cube is now headed across the country before coming back to B.C., including a show in Prince George that is somewhat closer to Dennis' home community — an 11-hour drive, rather than 18.

Dennis is hoping to be at that show and even more hopeful the musician will continue to wear her work — but even if he doesn't, she'll always have the memory, and footage, of one of her favourite rappers displaying a part of her culture.

"To have someone as iconic as Ice Cube wearing a piece of my art, that's just, like, a dream come true."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Andrew Kurjata

Journalist, Northern British Columbia

Andrew Kurjata is born and based in the city of Prince George, British Columbia, in Lheidli T'enneh territory. He has covered the people and politics of northern B.C. for CBC since 2009. You can email him at andrew.kurjata@cbc.ca or text 250.552.2058.