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Robbie Robertson (Original Post) sagetea Nov 2018 OP
Gave me chills democrank Nov 2018 #1
me too... hlthe2b Nov 2018 #2
Beautiful Bayard Nov 2018 #3
Wado------------Thank you turbinetree Nov 2018 #4
Ahhee' SergeStorms Nov 2018 #5
Oki! sagetea Nov 2018 #6
Robbie Robertson and the Red Road Ensemble Haggis for Breakfast Nov 2018 #7
I like that, have to find the album. 2naSalit Nov 2018 #8

Bayard

(22,005 posts)
3. Beautiful
Thu Nov 8, 2018, 07:16 PM
Nov 2018

Photo's and music. I appreciate that he used their Native names, and not the Americanized versions.

2naSalit

(86,323 posts)
8. I like that, have to find the album.
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 01:04 AM
Nov 2018

This is the first song I heard from the album in an interview with Robbie Robertson back in 99, I think.

I live in Indian Country and have for decades, many of my friends and neighbors have been and are Indians and have attended many ceremonies after being invited by elders, I have some background knowledge.

In the interview Robertson talks about this song. He was in Canada touring reservations and researching histories and stories about Indian life when he came upon the recording of the woman singing this song. I can't recall all the details as it was 20 years ago but what I recall was something about this woman's family had been murdered and this was part of her lament. He got permission to use the recording to incorporate into a song for the album. He said he carried the cassette of this recording around with him for quite some time because the story hung on him for some time. I think he went to the home of the murdered people and may have spoken to the woman whose voice is in this recording.





I like other songs on this album though I haven't heard the whole thing. But the songs are haunting, as they should be given what took place and is still taking place on this continent with regard to the indigenous peoples who were here for tens of thousands of years before Europeans showed up and effectively carried out an ethnic cleansing of horrific proportion.
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