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In 1987, Edmund Bull founded the Red Bull singers following a tradition
handed down from his father and grandfather.
Since then, the powwow group has released countless tapes of its music
and is generally recognized as one of the finest powwow groups on the
continent.
Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Cree born on a small reserve near Regina but
raised in Maine, first gained international notoriety during the 1960s
folk boom and has since been an active proponent of Aboriginal music.
Monday at Saskatoon's Right Track Studios in the city's south
industrial area, the internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter was
teamed with the powwow singers from rural Saskatchewan for a recording
session, the first time the Juno Hall of Famer ever recorded in
Saskatchewan.
"It's such a well known song and has such tremendous potential to lead
the pop ear into the powwow sound," Sainte-Marie said in an interview of
the compellingBull composition.
Darling Don't Cry was written by Bull six years ago. As a round dance
song, the eight member powwow group sings both in Cree and English.
When record producer Ted Whitecalf, whose Sweet Grass record label
specialized in powwow recordings, first introduced Sainte-Marie to the
song, she immediately fell in love with it.
What followed was a series of trans-Pacific communications from
Sainte-Marie's Hawaiian home to Bull's home on the Little Pine reserve.
"I wanted to record the song and asked Edmund for permission to rewrite
it," Sainte-Marie said.
The song, to be one of two new ones on a forthcoming release of her
re-recorded hits, is a marriage of the traditional and contemporary.
Her update version will include several chorusees from the original.
"Anyone who attends powwow is aware of the Red Bull," Sainte-Marie
said. "This music has its own integrity; these guys are great artists.
When she spoke of powwow music, she did so with reverence and devotion.
"When I hear powwow music, I go to another place. The drums certainly
are so gentle yet strong, like a heartbeat," she enthuses. "The music
can reach the listener, much like those who like symphony. It's
achingly beautiful."
Whitecalf has been working towards bringing Sainte-Marie back to
Saskatchewan for more than a year. He sees the collaborative effort
under way this week as a big step in bringing the sound of powwow
singers to a mainstream audience.
"Buffy has done a lot for grassroots producers and performers,"
Whitecalf said. "She's been a real lending hand. I think this is a
major breakthrough.
Indeed, Aboriginal music is now recognized by the Canadian music
industry as a vibrant source of original music. Two years ago, powwow
recordings produced at Right Track earned a Juno nomination.
Mainstream audiences are gradually becoming more in tune to different
sounds, Sainte-Marie suggested, but she stressed her writing partnership
with Bull is not an attempt to devalue the traditional sound.
"My idea is not to turn powwow singers into pop stars," she said.
From her vantage point of straddling the contemporary and traditional,
Sainte-Marie said the difference between Native and pop performers is
significant.
"Pop singers are taken out of their community and put in a penthouse;
Native performers remain part of the community," she said.
"I've spent my whole life playing the wonderful stages of Canada in
grassroots communities like the small towns in Saskatchewan and Alberta,
places that Madonna and Michael Jackson would be insulted to be invited
to. They have been my privilege to learn from and , boy, have I heard
some great music."
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