Different Gear Mgmt Inc. — federally incorporated June 10, 2025 (Corporations Canada), registered extra-provincially in British Columbia.
Corporate officers: Matthew Owchar (President), Angela Donna Christensen (Secretary). Legal counsel: Taylor Oballa Murray Leyland LLP, Toronto.
Different Gear is an artist management company in the middle of a banner year with Sophia Stel’s breakout campaign. Matthew Owchar, founder, has spent decades as a taste-driven operator in Vancouver’s music scene — most recently running Paradise (2019–2025), a membership-based live music venue built against the volume-operator model, and now rebuilding that philosophy through UV, his event company, alongside Different Gear. A breakout anchoring a small independent company is the kind of moment that creates the option to build durable multi-artist capacity — access, relationships, and operating know-how are available at this moment that weren’t available before and won’t be available in the same shape later. Different Gear crosses into its second year with a breakout as the anchor. The company is the vehicle for turning this moment into durable capacity for B.C. artists beyond Sophia.
Jarett Holmes leads the company’s technology build as Strategic Partner & Technology Lead. His writing, production, and engineering credits — WALK THE MOON, Neon Trees, Beach Weather, Lund, Noah Cyrus — have combined streams over 4.3 billion with RIAA Diamond and Platinum certifications, and his brand and agency composition work spans major global campaigns. He co-founded the music-licensing platform Ritual Music in 2016. He has been working on the frontier of AI model operations since 2020 and building multi-agent systems since 2023, with commercial AI work at a firm deploying to DoorDash, Pinterest, Telus, and Sotheby’s, and accuracy-critical systems in legal and finance.
The size and timing of this project are calibrated against how that moment converts. The relationships, the access, and the operating know-how a breakout earns are convertible into multi-artist company capacity, and the conversion is materially easier while the moment is live than it becomes after. Three places in the company’s day-to-day operations carry that time-sensitivity, and the grant-funded build is scoped against them directly.
First, roster expansion. Three artists are in Different Gear’s pipeline right now — Sophia Stel, Lovefoxy, Prado Monroe — and the commission base to hire additional full-service operators is not yet there. Waiting until revenue catches up lets the moment narrow before the roster reaches the scale it could otherwise serve.
Second, Sophia’s strategic arc. A breakout concentrates high-stakes decisions — brand partnerships, sync licensing, tour routing, announce timing, press prioritization, label relationship management — and each wrong call compounds into the next cycle. The tools this project funds hold the company’s thinking across those decisions in one organized place, rather than in one operator’s head during a busy week.
Third, inbound valuation. A breakout generates heavy deal and opportunity traffic both for the artist and for the roster — festivals, support slots, syncs, brand approaches, collaborations, press asks — each carrying different value in different territories against different stages of an artist’s career. Consistent, sophisticated evaluation across that inbound is central to running a coherent campaign rather than a scattered one.
Different Gear’s central product is one structured system that holds everything the company knows — about each artist, each deal in progress, each campaign in motion, and each decision the company has made. Adapters to the platforms where the company’s data already lives (streaming, ticketing, advertising, email, booking) deposit records into it; four are in the repo today with more scoped into the grant-funded build. Per-artist and per-campaign records organize that data into goals, active experiments, open decisions, and a live working log. A single view across the full roster, with role-based permissions so each person sees only what they should — load-bearing for production use and in scope for the grant — gives the operator one coherent picture. Every other tool the company runs is a view on this system, which is what the build is designed to make possible: two operators carrying a roster, not one campaign.
These tools were built on Sophia’s campaign and are running against it now. The grant-funded Workstream 1/2 work integrates them into the shared information system and hardens them for multi-artist use.
Moving from pilot tools that one operator runs against one campaign to full production tools that multiple people use across multiple artists — and that hold private artist data — changes what the company has to take seriously. Pilot tools can defer questions that production tools cannot: who is allowed to see what, how the login credentials for outside platforms are stored and rotated, how one artist’s data is kept separate from another’s so one artist’s agent cannot see another’s deals, how the company’s action log stays trustworthy, what happens to an artist’s information when they leave the company.
This work is scoped into the shared-system build (Workstream 1) and the production conversion (Workstream 2) — it’s not an afterthought and it isn’t compliance veneer. The company’s claim that artist data is used only in the service of the artist’s career (stated in the AI disclosure and the respectful workplace policy) depends on the underlying system actually enforcing it. Permissions by role, strict separation between one artist’s data and another’s, safe credential handling with regular rotation, a trustworthy action log, and clear artist data consent and retention policies are load-bearing deliverables of this grant.
The tools are a set of views on the shared intelligence system. The system is the company’s accumulated knowledge and decision-making framework.
Sophia Stel. Signed to A24 with a US$100,000 album advance paid in November 2025. 2026 touring:
Gross 2026 artist revenue contracted: ~$390,000 CAD excluding label advance (~$527,000 CAD including). Different Gear management revenue on this book (20% on tour, brand, and label; 0% on merch): ~$66,000 CAD excluding label advance, ~$93,000 including.
Sophia is the proof case. The working tool set is in use on this tour; measuring its actual effect against the campaign — incidents avoided, operator hours saved, decisions grounded in the record — is the Workstream 2 measurement obligation inside the grant.
$50,000 ask against a $100,000+ total project, eligible period January 1, 2026 – June 30, 2027. The match side is grounded in contracted 2026 management revenue (above) and company cash.
The grant funds four connected workstreams:
The underlying management economics: a small company can only carry N artists, where N is constrained by the per-artist operational time cost multiplied by the commission required to serve that artist well. Better infrastructure lowers the per-artist time cost. The economic floor for taking on a developmental artist drops. A company that today can carry one breakout can carry a breakout plus two or three developmental artists at similar quality.
On Different Gear’s 2026 roster:
A breakout campaign earns things that can’t be bought: working relationships with the label and the agents, access to the touring circuit at the level Sophia is now operating, and the hands-on know-how of what a modern international touring campaign actually requires. Matt has earned those on Sophia’s work. Without infrastructure, that earned capital stays locked inside one campaign. The grant-funded build is what lets Different Gear extend those relationships, that access, and that know-how to more artists.
Outstanding: reference letters (this packet), artist roster final phrasing, final budget lock.