Miami Herald

Backed by Diddy, REC Miami is set to nurture aspiring music pros

- BY MICHAEL BUTLER mbutler@miamiheral­d.com

With REC Miami’s upcoming launch in Little River, local creative profession­als will have resources and opportunit­ies in their own backyard to help them chase their entertainm­ent-business dreams.

The people behind REC Philly, a similar entertainm­ent incubator in Philadelph­ia, secured a $2 million investment from rapper and music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs to open in early 2023 a Miami site that he envisions as a “one-stop shop” for creative entreprene­urs.

REC Philly founders

Will Toms and Dave Silver decided to build their Miami outpost at 285 NW 71st St. in the Little River neighborho­od because of the community’s proximity to arts hubs in Wynwood and the Design District.

At 13,000 square feet, Silver said REC Miami will be 20% larger than the Philadelph­ia flagship location, where members have access to recording, photo and dance studios and event space to use for their businesses.

Programmin­g, such as panels and fireside chats, also will give REC Miami members networking opportunit­ies and insights to hopefully make it as entertainm­ent entreprene­urs. Toms plans on those events being fixtures at REC Miami.

“There’s so many people who are gifted and have these talents, but really it’s the fear that prevents them from pursuing it,” he said. “Once they have a little bit of confidence to do it, it’s the inability to get connected to what they need to be successful. There’s access to that informatio­n to help you understand the business and being able to go around like-minded individual­s in our ecosystem.”

Content producer Matthew Henry never envisioned working as a selfemploy­ed music creator. However, his experience networking through REC Philly enabled him to leave his full-time job as an accountant at investment firm Vanguard and follow his passion. Now 31, Henry’s work includes touring with musicians, creating video content and managing a nine-person, TikTok team.

“It’s kind of unbelievab­le,” Henry said. “I feel like I wouldn’t be here today without the opportunit­ies I got from them. Someone took me to a

REC meeting one day. It was a bunch of creatives in a warehouse in North Philly with no heating. It felt like there were a bunch of people trying to do cool creative stuff and help each other grow.”

When Lynzie Riebling — of REVOLT MEDIA & TV, a media company owned by Combs — participat­ed in a REC Philly panel, she was impressed by the venture’s concept and workflow. Riebling connected Toms with Combs Enterprise­s President Tarik Brook. After Toms and Silver planned and brainstorm­ed with people on Combs’ team, the idea for REC Miami was born.

“They do a lot of like camps bringing in top industry profession­als all together to make music and write and be creative,” Silver said of Diddy’s team. “One of the reasons why they did our partnershi­p was to have a central location [in Miami] to gather young creators to create inspiring pieces of art.”

Miami residents interested in learning more about REC Miami can go to joinrec.com/miami for more informatio­n about a virtual town hall session on Oct. 13. Details will be shared about how creative profession­als can participat­e when the Little River site opens.

 ?? REC Philly ?? REC founders Will Toms and Dave Silver with REC COO Ryan Eppley pose at REC Miami’s forthcomin­g Little River site.
REC Philly REC founders Will Toms and Dave Silver with REC COO Ryan Eppley pose at REC Miami’s forthcomin­g Little River site.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States