S|D Native American Music/Compilations?

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A lot of stuff on Folkways, but I'm not sure what's good, so I'm appealing to ILX expertise. Ideally looking for a good compilation that'll cover a lot of history/geography, but a few good albums that represent different geographies/communities would work too. A few things I turned up and I'm curious for opinions on:

The 1973 Anthology of North American Indian and Eskimo Music
This 1994 release from the National Museum of the American Indian, Creation's Journey: Native American Music
Cry from the Earth: Music of the North American Indians (1979)
Less encompassing, but very cool: Healing Songs of the American Indians

Any others?

Mordy, Saturday, 14 August 2010 16:33 (fifteen years ago)

It's different from what you're asking for in terms of covering a lot, etc., but can I recommend Primeaux & Mike to you? their Four Harmonized Peyote Songs is simply gorgeous.

http://www.myspace.com/primeauxmike

gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Saturday, 14 August 2010 16:42 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.woundedbird.com/pepper_jim/images/731.jpg

scott seward, Saturday, 14 August 2010 17:30 (fifteen years ago)

hate to generalize, but a lot of the native american records i've heard...aren't my kind of thing. as far as music goes. not big on the peruvian flute either.

scott seward, Saturday, 14 August 2010 17:31 (fifteen years ago)

came here to post that jim pepper album. so amazing. jazz rock mixed w/native american chants. and the original to Harpers Bizarre 'witchi tai to'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2YeEUlyhQw

jaxon, Saturday, 14 August 2010 20:09 (fifteen years ago)

two years pass...

I have spent a lot of recent weeks obsessed with all things CBC Northern Service Broadcast Recordings, like this...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDSc0HFMGQk

http://www.somewherethereismusic.com/article-morley-loon-cree-songs-83186435.html

http://www2.brandonu.ca/library/cjns/8.2/lintell.pdf

read through some of the encyclopedia of native music, but not sure are any artists worth prioritizing.

kruezer, Thursday, 25 July 2013 03:42 (twelve years ago)

*there are

kruezer, Thursday, 25 July 2013 03:43 (twelve years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zH9wHWMi_k

dylannn, Thursday, 25 July 2013 05:45 (twelve years ago)

one year passes...

I am so excited about this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpnnwYn93UA

JacobSanders, Sunday, 16 November 2014 04:30 (eleven years ago)

yeah that looks good!

I saw a few of these today:

http://www.discogs.com/label/155416-Indian-Records-Inc

sleeve, Sunday, 16 November 2014 04:55 (eleven years ago)

just ordered!

the late great, Sunday, 16 November 2014 06:54 (eleven years ago)

if you're ever traveling thru the area, make sure to check out Hopi Radio 88.1

A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Sunday, 16 November 2014 18:44 (eleven years ago)

That's for that link, I want all of those! I vaguely knew about this music, but never were to start.

JacobSanders, Sunday, 16 November 2014 22:24 (eleven years ago)

I am curious if the future LITA Native North America compilations will shift the regional focus away from Canada/Pac NW. Very excited about it regardless, and will pick it up ASAP.

I have some friends on the navajo rez who are working on interviewing old timers from the punk and metal scene and tracking down old tapes and records. Some great recordings, but never any seminal compilations or "break through" releases that opened up the scene.

Tomás Piñon (Ryan), Sunday, 16 November 2014 22:49 (eleven years ago)

I came across a few of those Indian Records while in Beaumont but they were over priced and not in great shape.

*tera, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 08:29 (eleven years ago)

I was happy to see MTV do Rebel Music Native America but have yet to catch any episodes. Not sure if it started. Bookmarked this last year: http://nativepunxunite.tumblr.com

*tera, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 09:11 (eleven years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4N-6Ce3I-SA

XIT

Maybe obvious, maybe not. The whole record this tune's from is supposed to be a concept record telling the story of the white man coming and messing up the peaceful life.

m_b, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 17:19 (eleven years ago)

Not to start the slippery slope into Leon Redbone or Indian Reservation or anything, but if Jim Pepper fits, XIT probably does too. Maybe Winterhawk also?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRa373q6I40

m_b, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 17:30 (eleven years ago)

I am so excited about this

― JacobSanders, Saturday, November 15, 2014 11:30 PM (4 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

freakin awesome, me too

marcos, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 17:37 (eleven years ago)

The Light In the Attic package is just beautiful, two discs in a hard cover booklet with extensive interviews and great archival photos, just everything you'd want in a compilation like this.

Brio2, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 19:54 (eleven years ago)

can't wait

the late great, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:11 (eleven years ago)

Light in the Attic is such a great label. Really enjoyed the Marcos Valle re-issues.

millmeister, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:24 (eleven years ago)

three weeks pass...

I picked up the Light in the Attic compilation yesterday. I haven't had a chance to read the book yet, but the music is quite good.

Ex Slacker, Monday, 15 December 2014 21:34 (eleven years ago)

gotta get this ...

tylerw, Monday, 15 December 2014 21:51 (eleven years ago)

it's so solid! vinyl package is full-on deluxe too.

Brio2, Monday, 15 December 2014 22:08 (eleven years ago)

Are there any labums/compilations of traditional Native American songs with a decent sound quality? I've tried a couple of the Smithsonian comps, but they consisted of field recordings made in the 20s/30s/40s, so the sound quality is pretty awful. I do dig artists with a more (post)modern approach to NA folk music, like Joanne Shenandoah, R. Carlos Nakai, and Mary Youngblood, but I'd love to hear more of the strictly traditional stuff too.

Tuomas, Tuesday, 16 December 2014 14:04 (eleven years ago)

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000001DKH

This one looks like it has some more modern recordings, anyone heard it?

Tuomas, Tuesday, 16 December 2014 14:08 (eleven years ago)

eleven months pass...

full reissue of one of the standout artists from last year's native north america comp
http://www.othermusic.com/products/willie-thrasher-spirit-child
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZGSp0iBb4w

tylerw, Friday, 20 November 2015 19:03 (ten years ago)

FYI

http://indianrecordsinc.com/shop/original-archive-collection-23-lp-records/

sleeve, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:04 (ten years ago)

wow that price

Mordy, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:05 (ten years ago)

I know! Couldn't resist, I think I will have a couple of dupes now but w/e

sleeve, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:08 (ten years ago)

yeah crazy - haven't pulled the trigger just yet, but ... you recommend?

tylerw, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:09 (ten years ago)

yeah, i ordered that (the 23 LP collection) without even thinking. the credit card number flew out of my fingertips

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:11 (ten years ago)

xp yeah they are solid records, and quite varied, I certainly have appreciated the 2 or 3 I picked up previously

sleeve, Wednesday, 2 December 2015 16:28 (ten years ago)

six years pass...

2017 doc Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked The World is worth checking:
https://www.rumblethemovie.com/home
And, ah, speaking of "Rumble," of course: Link Wray hasn't been mentioned on here, has he?

He played with Dylan, Clapton and Lennon: the unsung genius of guitarist Jesse Ed Davis https://t.co/RxC7nDGq89

— The Guardian (@guardian) September 7, 2022

dow, Thursday, 8 September 2022 02:03 (three years ago)

six months pass...

From Riot Act Media:

Paradise of Bachelors announces the reissue of Roxy Gordon's Crazy Horse Never Died

This first-ever reissue of the 1988 album by Choctaw, Assiniboine, and Texan poet, journalist, artist, activist, and musician Roxy Gordon (First Coyote Boy) includes new and restored artwork and a chapbook, featuring forty-eight pages of lyrics, essays, photographs, and Gordon’s extraordinary drawings for each song.

Arrestingly singular and deeply moving, this 1988 album by Choctaw, Assiniboine, and Texan poet, journalist, artist, activist, and musician Roxy Gordon (First Coyote Boy) (1945–2000)—whose long out-of-print work has been acclaimed by friends such as Townes Van Zandt, Leonard Cohen, and Terry Allen—sets his cold-blooded, bone-lean reflections on the complexities and contradictions of American Indian (and American) history and identity to atmospheric, synth-damaged country-rock that skirts ambient textures and postpunk deconstructions.

The gatefold package of this first-ever reissue—a decade in the making and the first in an archival series—includes new and restored artwork and a chapbook, featuring forty-eight pages of lyrics, essays, photographs, and First Coyote Boy’s extraordinary drawings for each song. (The chapbook is included in the LP edition only and also available for purchase separately.)

“Roxy Gordon is a brother of mine. I don’t like the word ‘poet’; it is usually used too lightly. Roxy, however, is a real one. God bless him and the buffalo he rode in on.” – Townes Van Zandt

“His work is strong. The word goes out. Can a change come on dove’s feet?” – Leonard Cohen

“Roxy Gordon is one of the great outlaw artist American misfits. He writes like an angel and sings like livin’ hell. His voice is as stone, true as the history of blood and dirt.” – Terry Allen

“Someday maybe Steinbeck will be my favorite writer again but, right now, it’s Roxy Gordon.” – John Stewart

...Roxy Gordon (First Coyote Boy) (1945–2000) was above all a storyteller, known primarily as a writer of inimitable style and unvarnished candor, whose wide-ranging work encompassed poetry, short fiction, essays, memoirs, journalism, and criticism. Over the course of his career he recorded six albums, wrote six books, and published hundreds of shorter texts in outlets ranging from Rolling Stone and The Village Voice to the Coleman Chronicle and Democrat-Voice, in addition to founding and operating, with his wife Judy Gordon, Wowapi Press and the underground country music journal Picking Up the Tempo.

...The ten songs on Crazy Horse Never Died, his first officially released and distributed album, were recorded in Dallas in 1988. “Songs” is perhaps an imprecise taxonomy for what Roxy captured on this and his other albums, all of which remain out of print or were released in instantly obscure limited editions of homebrew cassettes and CD-R’s. (Paradise of Bachelors plans to reissue remastered, expanded editions of his catalog; Crazy Horse is the first.) He only occasionally attempted to sing, and his musical recordings are primarily corollaries of, and vehicles for, his poems. His sharp West Texan drawl, tinged by formative years of reservation living in Montana and unmistakable once you hear it—high, lonesome, flat, and cold-blooded as a bare rusty blade—instead patiently unfurls in skewed sheets of anecdotal verse and discursive narrative rants.

Although Gordon’s music at times incorporated powwow style drumming, fiddling, or unaccompanied ballad singing, the majority of it hews to an idiosyncratic spoken word style, accompanied by atmospheric, sometimes synth-damaged country-rock that skirts ambient textures and postpunk deconstructions. His songs are essentially recitations over backing tracks of fingerpicked guitars, rubbery washtub bass, and buzzing, oscillating keyboards. On the stark yellow and red jacket of Crazy Horse, which he designed himself, Gordon describes these recordings as innately ambivalent in terms of form, content, and identity:

These are poems and/or songs about the American West, white and Indian. My life has been Indian and/or white. Maybe there’s not a lot of difference—maybe. I guess that’s mostly according to which white person or which Indian you’re talking about. That’s probably what this album’s about.

Crazy Horse Never Died comprises songs that span the personal and political arcs of his writing practice and the poles of his native and white ancestries. His introduction to the almost-title track in the strikingly illustrated poetry chapbook supplement to the album (included in the LP edition of the reissue and also available for purchase separately) draws explicit parallels between the oppression and displacement of Palestinians by Zionists and the similar treatment of Native Americans by Europeans, justifying the historical necessity of resistance to racist imperialism through terrorism. On “Junked Cars” he describes his lonely youth in rural Talpa, Texas amid the desolate landscape and the human wreckage of discarded American material culture.

“The Hanging of Black Jack Ketchum” and “The Texas Indian” confront the complexities and contradictions of Texas history and Gordon’s own family history, which included several Texas Rangers, infamous hunters of Indians and Mexicans. The frenetic, synth-spraying “Living Life as a Moving Target” and the chilling, sinister-sounding “Flying into Ann Arbor (Holding)” confront the complexities and contradictions of mortality, the blind forces that threaten and ravage us, collectively and individually, externally and internally. “The Western Edge” begins in Hollywood, at “Chuck Berry’s girlfriend’s house,” and then careens amiably right off the continent, over the Pacific Ocean ledge. Stabs of sly humor such as heard here punctuate the album with winks of recognition.

“I Used to Know an Assiniboine Girl,” the devastating centerpiece of the record, tells a tragic, elliptical tale of domestic violence and a young woman’s governmental punishment for defending herself, all refracted through the narrator’s deep regret and sorrow as a spectator to her brutalization. As Roxy bluntly explains in the spoken introduction, regardless of extenuating circumstances, “Indian girls up in Montana don’t beat up white guys and not expect to spend time in the penitentiary.”

In “An Open Letter to Illegal Aliens,” Gordon enumerates a litany of diseases—namely, capitalism, communism, materialism and money, Christianity, and Judaism—the “baggage” imported by European immigrants to “these American continents,” which had been doing “pretty well” for some forty thousand years before their arrival. This acid retort to conservative white America’s hysteria about immigration is, in the end, a rather compassionate and tolerant transposition. It’s the ideological baggage that is not welcome on “these American continents,” not those foreign human beings who bear it, who in Gordon’s estimation might be just “as native American as Crazy Horse” (note the lower case “n”), even if they do not behave that way.

In his 1984 essay “Breeds,” from the fine collection of the same name, he concludes with a note of hope:

“The voices of these continents are not stilled because, for a few centuries, this land is overrun by human beings who cannot hear. Over years of cultural and racial genocide, over centuries of lies and misdirection, That Which Is still calls . . . and the old American blood in us listens.”


More info, links:
https://mailchi.mp/riotactmedia/paradise-of-bachelors-set-to-reissue-crazy-horse-never-died-by-choctaw-assiniboine-and-texan-poet-journalist-activist-and-musicianroxy-gordon?e=adc06515ce

dow, Thursday, 30 March 2023 17:51 (two years ago)


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