Career
In 1989 he became the first Canadian rapper to have a Top 40 hit, "Let Your Backbone Slide". In 1991 he collaborated on the one-off single "Can"t Repress the Cause", a plea for greater inclusion of hip hop music in the Canadian music scene, with Dance Appeal, a supergroup of Toronto-area musicians that included Devon, Dream Warriors, B-Kool, Michie Mee, Lillian Allen, Eria Fachin, HDV, Dionne, Thando Hyman, Carla Marshall, Messenjah, Jillian Mendez, Lorraine Scott, Lorraine Segato, Self Defense, Leroy Sibbles, Zama and Thyron Lee White. After the success of his 1991 album, The Black Tie Affair, Maestro"s career faltered as he attempted to break into the United States market.
However, he returned to the Canadian charts in 1998, with the hit singles "Stick to Your Vision" and "416/905 (TO Party Anthem)".
In 2000, "Ever Since" featured the track "Bustin Loose", in which Maestro Fresh Wes teamed up with Kardinal Offishall. In 2005, Maestro covered Lawrence Gowan"s song "A Criminal Mind" (featuring Infinite).
Gowan appears in the video and his vocals are sampled on the track. In 2006 Maestro again made Canadian hip hop history when he and Rochester AKA Juice joined Professor Doctorate and The Dope Poet Society on stage in Cannes, France.
Together, they become the first Canadian hip hop acts ever to showcase at Midem, the world"s largest and most influential annual music industry conference.
In 2012, Maestro released his first set of new material in more than seven years with the release of an European Parliament entitled Black Tuxedo. This was followed by an album, Orchestrated Noise in 2013, which features rocker Sam Roberts, opera singer Measha Brueggergosman, rapper Kardinal Offishall, among others Orchestrated Noise was released under the name Maestro Fresh Wes, reclaiming his original title from the 1980s.
As an actor, he is normally credited as Wes Williams.
Currently, he plays the role of Paul Dwyer on the Canadian Broadcasting Company Television program Mr. Doctorate.
In 2003, Deejay Ra launched a series of radio PSA"s to launch the first Canadian "Hip-Hop Appreciation Week" with the support of the National Film Board of Canada, aimed at stronger industry recognition of Canadian hip hop pioneers Wes "Maestro" Williams and Michelle "Michie Mee" McCullock.
Professor Rinaldo Walcott, a scholar at Ontario Institute for Studies in Education/University of Toronto dealing with themes related to Black Canadian experiences and expressions, has written about Maestro Fresh Wes" lyrics, as well as his move from Canada to New York, in his book Black Like Who?.