Canada Council for the Arts · FACTOR Canada · BC Arts Council · Alberta Foundation for the Arts. A comprehensive funding strategy for the Frozen Bars Tour 2028.
The Frozen Bars Tour 2028 is positioned to access multiple streams of Canadian arts funding simultaneously. This document outlines the four primary grant programs, eligibility assessment, application narrative templates, and a realistic funding projection for each program.
Grant funding, if secured, supplements the base operating budget and directly enables higher production quality, broader artist rosters, and expanded community engagement. Grants are applied for as supplementary funding — the tour is designed to be financially self-sufficient through ticket sales, sponsorship, and merch revenue even without grant support.
| Program | Funder | Potential Amount | Application Deadline | Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arts Across Canada – Circulation & Touring | Canada Council for the Arts | $15,000–$30,000 | Jan 28, Jun 3, Oct 7 | High |
| Live Performance Program | FACTOR Canada | $5,000–$20,000 | Rolling (Artist 2&3) | High |
| Artist Development Program | FACTOR Canada | $5,000 | TBD (26/27 Guidelines) | Medium |
| Arts Circulation & Touring | BC Arts Council | $5,000–$15,000 | Per intake (2025/26) | High |
| Music Program | Alberta Foundation for the Arts | $3,000–$10,000 | Per intake cycle | Medium |
| Total Potential Grant Funding | Up to $75,000 (combined, not guaranteed) | |||
The Canada Council for the Arts is the primary federal funding body for arts and culture in Canada. The most relevant program for the Frozen Bars Tour is the Arts Across Canada and Abroad – Circulation and Touring funding opportunity.
Funds the circulation and touring of artists, exhibitions, and artistic works by artists, artistic groups, and arts organizations from Canada. Supports domestic touring across Canadian provinces and cities — which directly aligns with the Frozen Bars Tour's 6-city Western Canadian route.
Project Description (adapt as required):
The Frozen Bars Tour is a multi-city hip hop and rap concert tour across six Western Canadian cities — Vancouver, Kelowna, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, and Winnipeg — producing 8 to 12 live performances during the summer/fall 2028 season. The tour is produced by 3ON Entertainment Group in partnership with Asylum House Records.
The tour serves a dual cultural mission: to provide Western Canadian hip hop artists with a significant national touring platform, and to bring hip hop music culture to audiences in cities that have historically had limited access to high-quality, professionally produced rap concerts. The Frozen Bars Tour is aligned with the 2028 World Cup of Hockey, leveraging the influx of national and international visitors to Calgary and Edmonton to expand the reach of Canadian hip hop to new audiences.
Requested funds will be applied toward eligible touring costs including ground transportation, accommodation, and artist travel across provinces.
FACTOR (Foundation Assisting Canadian Talent on Recordings) is the primary private/public sector music funding body in Canada. Two programs are directly applicable to the Frozen Bars Tour.
The FACTOR Live Performance program subsidizes the cost of domestic and international performances including showcases and tours. For Artist rated 2 and 3, the rolling deadline means applications can be submitted as the tour is confirmed — ideal for our timeline.
Each artist on the Frozen Bars Tour roster should have an active FACTOR account with an Artist Profile rating. The higher the rating, the more funding available. If artists are not yet registered, registration should begin immediately (2026). All participating 3ON Entertainment and Asylum House artists should apply for the Live Performance program for the 2028 tour window.
The Artist Development Program offers a $5,000 subsidy toward a year of artist development activities including touring and showcasing, recording, video production, and marketing. This program is ideal for emerging artists on the Frozen Bars Tour who are in the early stages of their career. Multiple artists on the roster can apply simultaneously — compounding the total potential funding.
The BC Arts Council's Arts Circulation and Touring (ACT) program supports BC-based arts organizations to circulate and tour their work within BC and across Canada. Since the Frozen Bars Tour originates in Vancouver, BC and features BC-based artists, this program is directly applicable for the BC component of the tour.
Apply under the BC Arts Council's online portal. The Frozen Bars Tour should frame the Vancouver kickoff and Kelowna stop as the BC-based touring component. Emphasize the hip hop cultural access angle — bringing quality hip hop to BC communities including the Interior (Kelowna). Highlight the community engagement and artist development dimensions alongside the commercial touring model.
The Alberta Foundation for the Arts supports Alberta-based artists and arts organizations. For the Frozen Bars Tour, the Alberta component is the largest and highest-profile — Calgary (3 shows) and Edmonton (3 shows) are the tour's anchor cities, directly aligned with the World Cup of Hockey host venues.
Apply on behalf of Alberta-based artists on the Frozen Bars Tour roster and/or as an Alberta-resident organization if 3ON or Asylum House Records has Alberta registration. Emphasize the cultural significance of delivering hip hop concert experiences in Calgary and Edmonton during the World Cup of Hockey — when Alberta is hosting the world and hip hop provides the cultural soundtrack.
The following narrative can be adapted for all grant applications. Adjust program-specific language, eligible costs, and regional focus as required per funder.
Project Title: Frozen Bars Tour 2028 – A Western Canadian Hip Hop Touring Activation
Applicant: 3ON Entertainment Group / Asylum House Records (or nominated artist applicant)
Funding Request: [Amount specific to program]
Project Dates: Summer/Fall 2028 — aligned with the World Cup of Hockey 2028
The Frozen Bars Tour 2028 is a multi-city hip hop and rap concert series touring across six Western Canadian cities — Vancouver (BC), Kelowna (BC), Calgary (AB), Edmonton (AB), Saskatoon (SK), and Winnipeg (MB) — producing between 8 and 12 live concerts across 10 days of touring.
The tour is produced by 3ON Entertainment Group, a Western Canadian music and entertainment production company, in partnership with Asylum House Records, an independent hip hop label. The tour is specifically aligned with the 2028 World Cup of Hockey — the premier international best-on-best ice hockey tournament, hosted in Calgary (Scotia Place arena) and Edmonton (Rogers Place, hosting the Semifinals and Final).
The Frozen Bars Tour operates under the tagline "From the Ice to the Mic" — a deliberate creative positioning that connects two of Canada's most defining cultural identities: hockey and hip hop. The tour activates nightlife and live music culture in each host city during the hockey event window, creating a unique cultural access point for local hip hop fans, international hockey tourists, and emerging Western Canadian artists alike.
The Frozen Bars Tour provides a significant, professionally produced touring platform for hip hop and rap artists from Western Canada — a region that has historically been under-represented in the national touring circuit relative to Toronto and Montreal-based artists. The tour's concert programming reflects the full breadth of Western Canadian hip hop culture: original lyricism, beat-driven production, and live performance energy rooted in the lived experiences of artists from BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.
Each city features local support artist slots specifically reserved for emerging artists from that city, ensuring that the tour has genuine cultural roots in each community rather than simply passing through. The tour's media content — a YouTube documentary series and full-length tour documentary — creates a lasting cultural record of this moment in Western Canadian hip hop history.
The Frozen Bars Tour creates direct economic and cultural impact across six Western Canadian communities. It employs touring artists, local support artists, production staff, and venue workers. It drives traffic to local nightlife businesses, creates content that showcases each city's character, and builds audience development for hip hop as an art form in markets that are typically underserved by major national tours.
The alignment with the World Cup of Hockey creates an extraordinary multiplier effect: hundreds of thousands of national and international visitors descending on Calgary and Edmonton become potential new audience members for Canadian hip hop, many of whom may never have attended a hip hop concert in Canada before.
Hip hop is an art form with deep roots in Black culture and the experiences of marginalized communities. The Frozen Bars Tour is committed to centering those roots while celebrating the diversity of Western Canadian hip hop, which includes artists from Indigenous, Black, South Asian, East Asian, and mixed cultural backgrounds. The tour's open application process for local support slots actively creates space for artists from underrepresented communities in each city.
The Frozen Bars Tour is financially self-sufficient through ticket sales, merchandise, and corporate sponsorship revenue. Grant funding is sought as a supplementary investment that enables higher production quality, broader artist compensation, and expanded community engagement activities. The tour does not rely on grant funding to proceed — it is designed to break even and profit at the base model. Grant support elevates the project from viable to exceptional.
The following budget represents the eligible costs for grant applications. Note that grant funders typically fund only eligible project costs — marketing, profit, and overhead are generally ineligible. This budget reflects the direct project costs that grant applications should reference.
| Expense Category | Description | Total Cost | Grant Eligible % | Grant-Eligible Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Artist Fees | Touring artists + local support (6 cities) | $12,000 | 100% | $12,000 |
| Transportation | Van rental + fuel + parking | $4,300 | 100% | $4,300 |
| Accommodation | Hotels across 6 cities | $3,000 | 100% | $3,000 |
| Venue Costs | Rental deposits + technical | $4,000 | 100% | $4,000 |
| Marketing | Paid social + print | $2,000 | 50% | $1,000 |
| Media / Documentary | Camera, editing, production | $2,000 | 100% | $2,000 |
| Total Grant-Eligible Expenses | $26,300 | |||
Note: Grant programs typically fund between 50–75% of eligible costs. A $26,300 eligible expense base supports requests of $13,000–$20,000 per program. Multiple applications across programs are not double-funding if each program funds different eligible cost categories.
The following official grant application documents are ready for download. Each document is formatted for professional submission and includes all required fields, budgets, and supporting information templates.
Complete application form with project narrative, budget, and all required sections for the Circulation & Touring program.
Application template for FACTOR Live Performance program with artist eligibility checklist and budget breakdown.
Complete AFA project grant application for Alberta-based programming, artist fees, and touring costs.
Detailed budget breakdown by funding source, expense categories, and allocation across all grant programs.
Instructions: Click "View HTML" to open the application form in your browser. Use your browser's print function (Ctrl+P / Cmd+P) to save as PDF for submission. All forms include {{placeholder}} fields that should be customized with your specific information before submission.
Critical: Grant applications must be submitted by the lead applicant organization (3ON Entertainment Group or Asylum House Records). The organization must be properly registered as a Canadian corporation or non-profit. All grant applications require a Canada Council / FACTOR / provincial portal account created well in advance of application deadlines.
Pro Tip: Contact each grant program's advisors before submitting — Canada Council, FACTOR, and BC Arts Council all offer pre-application consultations. This dramatically increases the quality and success rate of applications. Use the reference numbers in this document to direct the conversation to the specific programs identified.