DOWNLOAD: Kait Angus - "The Masons Heart"

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Be prepared to be hypnotized. Download the latest from Kait Angus, "The Masons Heart".

We don't know where this song came from, how it got here, or what otherworldly fire it took to make. But, for seven minutes and twenty eight blissful seconds, we were utterly transfixed.

Cree/Mohawk singer Kait Angus has a gift for deceptive simplicity and by the time the hypnotic refrain "in our hearts / we carry the flame" rises into view, this heart crushing song will have long echoed and ached its way deep into you, with the spirit of some unknown elsewhere. Magic.

Download: Kait Angus - "The Masons Heart"      

 

Download more of her music at kaitangus.com

STREAM: Blue King Brown - "All Nations"

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Indigenous Australian urban roots crew Blue King Brown is back in a big way with their massive tune, "All Nations".

Lead vocalist Natalli Rize and her reggae and dubwise BKB comrades are set to release their powerful third album, Born Free, on November 7th and their latest single and video are already catching fire.

"All Nations" is an uplifting anthemic call out to all people worldwide to reclaim our freedom and to make what BKB calls "music for this movement, for the battle and the fight for People over profits, Justice over Greed, Freedom over Slavery".

"'All Nations' at its core is about people power", says Rize, "Calling out to All People from All Nations to recognize their power and reclaim it, use it, assert it in these times of shifting consciousness, a time of discontent with the current world system and paradigm". To this end, the band dedicated and premiered the song in support of the self-determination movement to Free West Papua.

BKB have built a huge audience for their socially conscious and politically engaged music in support of Indigenous rights and global struggles for liberation. And they've stepped up every aspect of their production and songwriting this time around: Born Free was recorded at the legendary Tuff Gong studios in Kingston, Jamaica, Sing Sing Studios in Melbourne, and Blue King Brown's own studio in Melbourne, Australia.

Capturing the sound of the struggle and the essence of what art and activism can do to inspire change, "All Nations" will have you waving the flag of freedom and singing along with a raised fist.

Stream: Blue King Brown - "All Nations" 

And check the video for this epic tune below:

6 Arrows Media Launches #6AMSessions with Live-Streamed Concert from Six Nations

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Indigenous media is on the rise in NDN Country and 6 Arrows Media is the latest out of the gate. Their new music series, the #6AMSessions, launched on November 1st with a live concert straight outta Six Nations.

UPDATE: If you missed the November 1st broadcast, watch the complete 6am Sessions show now on 6ArrowsMedia.com

6 Arrows Media is the new joint venture from acclaimed Indigenous musicians Derek Miller and Marty Ballentyne, who have joined forces with multimedia production house Thru the RedDoor to launch a "multimedia production hub" for NDN Country and beyond.

For Miller and Ballentyne, 6 Arrows is all about representing ourselves, supporting each other and building community:

“We’re eager to share what we’ve been working on. 6AM will be able to take those artists who live next door and give them every tool they need to be successful. We have the technology, we have the industry experience, and we have the vision. It is our hope that this company is there to give artists the boost that people like Marty and I didn’t have when we began. For us, this is a way of giving back."

Helped out by a few fun promo clips by the likes of their friends Adam Beach, Leonard Sumner, Missy Knott, and a Chllly Chase eating a worm (!), 6 Arrows launched their first online experiment on November 1st, the #6AMSessions, a free concert featuring incredible Indigenous artists performing at their Ohseweken studio on Six Nations—and livestreamed through 6arrowsmedia.com.

The concert was hosted by Derek Miller and featured a powerhouse lineup of (admittedly Haudenosaunee-centric) performers, including: Brendt Diabo, Logan Staats (of Ghost Town Orchestra), Ras Haile X, Chllly Chase, Cheri Maracle, Rebecca Miller, Behold the Shadows, Jeff Doreen, The Ollivanders, the 6AM Jazz Band and, of course, Derek Miller and his band The Lindas. Pretty damn impressive for the first show of the series.

Derek Miller and the Lindas

Rocking his trademark Reservoir Dogs attire, Miller kept the proceedings flowing by introducing each artist, chatting with them in between sets, and generally lending the show a casual, yet intimate feel. The sound quality was tight, the vibe was right, and the performances were killer.

A live studio audience enjoyed the show up close and personal but, for the rest of us, the livestream was a great way for viewers from around the world to catch the show, and the #6amsessions hashtag was a fun way to chat while the concert was beamed to our devices, phones and living rooms.

Livestreaming music is nothing new on the interwebs, but it doesn't happen nearly enough in Indian Country. Saturday's show was the perfect post-Halloween antidote to the saccharine aftertaste of total sugar overload from the night before. And a welcome addition to the growing Indigenous music and media landscape.

6 Arrows is clearly on to a good thing here. We're excited to see where it goes next. And Like Derek Miller said:

Although all of the artists rocked it on Saturday, for us, Logan Staats was the highlight of the night. His raw and impassioned vocal delivery and prodigious songrwriting talent stole the show.

Check out his performance of "What You Love" from the 6 Arrows promo video below. This guy is going places.

For more info and to watch an archive of the broadcast, visit: 6arrowsmedia.com  

LightningCloud to Host 'Indigenous Angels 2' Benefit Concert for MMIW

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Crystle Lightning and Red Cloud, known together as Lightning Cloud, will host Indigenous Angels 2—a benefit concert supporting, and in solidarity with, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women.

LightningCloud continue to support the Indigenous community through their music and their activism. In late November, they are throwing the second in a series of art, music and cultural events to benefit good causes.

The first Indigenous Angels show, held in late August directed proceeds to children fleeing violence in Central America, and all the proceeds from Indigenous Angels 2, which will include both a concert and art auction, will go to supporting Stolen Sisters.

Indigenous Angels 2 will feature a huge lineup of musicians, visual artists and DJs lending their talents to support the cause, including the legendary Rass Kass, Savage Family, Quese IMC, Kemo the Blaxican, MC Imprint, Neil, The Crux, First Nation Syndicate, and many more. For visual art, they've lined up contributions from Bunky Echo-Hawk, VOTAN of NSRGNTS, Steven Paul Judd, Melanie Cervantes and a long list of others.

As an added bonus this time around, though, Red Cloud will be flexing his lyrical prowess on a whole other level. During the show, he will attempt to break the Guinness World Record for Longest Freestyle Rap. What's the current record? Oh, you know, just a modest 17 HOURS.

17 hours of straight rapping! And RedCloud is confident he can best that, with no problems. He's been practicing. And he plans to "honour every single missing and murdered Indigenous woman by name" while he does it. Now that's how you break a rap world record. Check out the Kickstarter campaign for more info and to support the cause.

Indigenous Angels 2 will be held November 29, 2014 at The Airliner in Los Angeles. Check TeamLightningCloud for more info.

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DOWNLOAD: 'We're All Infected' - A Hellish Halloween Mix from D Ojibwe 1

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It's Halloween. Do it responsibly. Make sure there's good music.

You've got your costume picked out. You've got some candy to get. You've got a party to attend. And you've taken the admirable step of not being a racist this year, stepping away from the "Indian" costume, and not appropriating Indigenous cultures for your outfit. Good work. Now you just need a soundtrack.

Well, don't worry. D Ojibwe 1 has got you covered. Now go get down with the undead.

Stream and Download D Ojibwe 1's "We're All Infected" Mix (Halloween Jam Vol 2)

DOWNLOAD: A Tribe Called Red's Remix of Stars' "From the Night"

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ATCR offers a late night, minimalist rework of "From the Night", the lead single off the latest from Montreal band Stars

Given that everyone we know has worn out even their digital copies of Nation to Nation by now, it's good to see the boys from A Tribe Called Red continuing to put out new music by stepping up their remix game.

We're enjoying the more stripped down, minimalist approach to rocking headphones, homes and dancefloors that ATCR has been taking. They've proven they can throw down in huge venues for huge crowds, but there's a subtlety here that is immediately appealing and addictive.

Given that the original version of "From the Night" is a decidedly retro-facing, neon slice of disco-redux, ATCR's breakbeat-infused hi-hat/clap/hook arrangement comes off as fresh and fitting for the song's plaintive melody and chorus.

Perfect for an evening drive through rainy autumn streets, A Tribe Called Red takes a great tune and works their magic on it, turning "From the Night" into mandatory repeat listening.

UPDATE: The ATCR remix is now available to stream and download through NoiseTrade as part of Stars - "No One is Lost" Tour EP. Get it here.

Listen to Stars, "From the Night" (A Tribe Called Red Remix)

Watch the Haunting Video for Thelma Plum's "Young in Love"

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Fresh off the summer success of her Monsters EP, Indigenous Australian singer Thelma Plum drops a haunting video for "Young in Love".

Thelma Plum is going to be big. There's no question about it. Her voice, presence and songwriting are riveting. We first discovered her music through a hypnotizing acoustic folk performance she did in-studio at a local Australian radio station. Since then, she won the triple j Unearthed competition, joined forces with hip-hop producer M-Phazes, and dropped the mesmerizing Monsters EP earlier this summer. Her transition to rich soundscapes and brooding, dark pop has gained her serious attention and massive radio play. You'll be seeing and hearing a lot more of this rising talent. Guaranteed. Catch her on the road this fall on a national tour (full tour dates below).

Stream Thelma Plum's "Young in Love"

Watch: Thelma Plum - "Young in Love"

 

Thelma Plum Fall 2014 Tour Dates

THU 30 OCT | THE SMALL BALLROOM, NEWCASTLE NSW Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

FRI 31 OCT | OXFORD ART FACTORY, SYDNEY NSW Tickets available from www.moshtix.com.au | 1300 GET TIX

SAT 01 NOV | TRANSIT BAR, CANBERRA ACT Tickets available from www.moshtix.com.au | 1300 GET TIX

SUN 02 NOV | ANITA’S THEATRE, THIRROUL NSW Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

FRI 07 NOV | KAROVA LOUNGE, BALLARAT VIC Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

SAT 08 NOV | CORNER HOTEL, MELBOURNE VIC Tickets available from www.cornerhotel.com | 03 9427 9198

SUN 09 NOV | BEAVS BAR, GEELONG VIC Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

FRI 14 NOV | PLAYERS BAR, MANDURAH WA ^ Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

SAT 15 NOV | AMPLIFIER, PERTH WA ^ Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

SUN 16 NOV | NEWPORT HOTEL, FREMANTLE WA ^ Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

THU 20 NOV | JIVE, ADELAIDE SA Tickets available from www.moshtix.com.au | 1300 GET TIX

SAT 22 NOV | THE DARWIN RAILWAY CLUB, DARWIN NT ** Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

FRI 28 NOV | THE SOUNDLOUNGE, GOLD COAST QLD Tickets available from www.soundlounge.com.au

SAT 29 NOV | THE ZOO, BRISBANE QLD Tickets available from www.oztix.com.au | 1300 762 545

DOWNLOAD: Impossible Nothing's "Mechadoom"

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Skookum Sound System's Impossible Nothing continues his prolific output with this maximalist rework of MF Doom classics.

Impossible Nothing has a penchant for pulverizing samples into distorted recursive loops and new kinetic phrases. Here, he takes the mask-clad raps of the Vaudeville Villain, Viktor Vaughn—aka the inimitable hip-hop icon MF Doom—and wraps his vocals inside a kaleidoscopic blend of stuttering beats, science show snippets and souled out, glitched up samples.

DOOM is the gift that keeps on giving. His effervescent flow seems endlessly appropriate to appropriation—and Impossible Nothing's recombinant maximalism works wonders on the high priest of abstract rap science.

"Golly, he's just a pest and your worst best friend Who mend and rip space time fabric like polyester blend" 

Stream: Impossible Nothing - "Mechadoom" 

(and get the full album as free download at: impossiblenothing.bandcamp.com)

 

STREAM: Native North America, Revolutionary Recordings by Indigenous Artists from 1966-1985

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Light in the Attic Records is preparing to release the "most ambitious and historically significant project" in the label's history: Native North America—a 34-track compilation of music from the Indigenous peoples of Turtle Island, recorded between 1966 and 1985.

Native North America is a project that has been more than a decade in the making.

DJ and record collector Kevin "Sipreano" Howes spent 12 years researching, compiling music, travelling, and interviewing Indigenous artists for inclusion on the album, and the results are righteous, revolutionary and historically unprecedented.

Native North America (Vol. 1) features music from the Indigenous peoples of Canada and the northern United States, recorded in the turbulent decades between 1966 to 1985. It represents the fusion of shifting global popular culture and a reawakening of Aboriginal spirituality and expression...You’ll hear Arctic garage rock from the Nunavik region of northern Quebec, melancholy Yup’ik folk from Alaska, and hushed country blues from the Wagmatcook First Nation reserve in Nova Scotia. You’ll hear echoes of Neil Young, Velvet Underground, Leonard Cohen, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Johnny Cash, and more among the songs, but injected with Native consciousness, storytelling, poetry, history, and ceremony.

Indigenous music, like Indigenous Peoples more generally, occupies both a historical and present blind spot in settler society's consciousness.

But far from being mythic, imaginary figures of some forgotten colonial past, Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966–1985 documents the deep currents of creativity that have been continuously at work throughout Turtle Island and the wide-ranging influences and styles of Indigenous musicians.

Notably, many of these songs haven't been heard outside of local communities since they were first recorded. Howes explains:

“All 34 songs blow my mind in one way or another. They were often made for folks in their regional communities, but like musicians the world over, most were hoping that their songs would be able to reach as many people as possible. [But] much of this music wasn’t heard outside of the greater Aboriginal music community at the time of release…[although] this music was very much embraced on the reserves and in regional communities across the country, as well as gaining some traction in coffeehouses, dance halls, and the folk festival circuit.”

The album reflects a diverse musical and cultural geography: gathering music from Indigenous Peoples across Canada, north to Alaska, and covering everything from folk and psychedelia, to country soul and garage rock.

"When I first heard the original recordings featured on NNA V1"Howes explained to The Stranger, "I had to learn more about these records, how they were made and by who. These artists should take their righteous place in our collective cultural history."

Indigenous musicians, who are rarely recognized (let alone celebrated) for their artistry and collective contribution to the evolution of recorded music, deserve to take up this rightful place—and Native North America captures the continued currents of Indigenous "consciousness, storytelling, poetry, history, and ceremony" that have been encoded in song.

This music is as much about our collective past as it is our collective present: and, to paraphrase Vine Deloria, we need to hear where we have been before we see where we should go, we need to know how to get there, and we need to have a good soundtrack for our journey.

 

Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966–1985 — FULL TRACK LIST:

1. Willie Dunn – "I Pity the Country" 2. John Angaiak – "I'll Rock You to the Rhythm of the Ocean" 3. Sugluk – "Fall Away" 4. Sikumiut – "Sikumiut" 5. Willie Thrasher – "Spirit Child" 6. Willy Mitchell – "Call of the Moose" 7. Lloyd Cheechoo – "James Bay" 8. Alexis Utatnaq – "Maqaivvigivalauqtavut" 9. Brian Davey – "Dreams of Ways" 10. Morley Loon – "N'Doheeno" 11. Peter Frank – "Little Feather" 12. Ernest Monias – "Tormented Soul" 13. Eric Landry – "Out of the Blue" 14. David Campbell – "Sky-Man and the Moon" 15. Willie Dunn – "Son of the Sun" 16. Shingoose (poetry by Duke Redbird) – "Silver River" 17. Willy Mitchell and Desert River Band – "Kill'n Your Mind" 18. Philippe McKenzie – "Mistashipu" 19. Willie Thrasher – "Old Man Carver" 20. Lloyd Cheechoo – "Winds of Change" 21. The Chieftones (Canada’s All Indian Band) – "I Shouldn't Have Did What I Done" 22. Sugluk – "I Didn't Know" 23. Lawrence Martin – "I Got My Music" 24. Gordon Dick – "Siwash Rock" 25. Willy Mitchell and Desert River Band – "Birchbark Letter" 26. William Tagoona – "Anaanaga" 27. Leland Bell – "Messenger" 28. Saddle Lake Drifting Cowboys – "Modern Rock" 29. Willie Thrasher – "We Got to Take You Higher" 30. Sikumiut – "Utirumavunga" 31. Sugluk – "Ajuinnarasuarsunga" 32. John Angaiak – "Hey, Hey, Hey, Brother" 33. Groupe Folklorique Montagnais – "Tshekuan Mak Tshetutamak" 34. Willie Dunn (featuring Jerry Saddleback) – "Peruvian Dream (Part 2)"

STREAM: NATIVE NORTH AMERICA - VOL. 1

Native North America is currently available for pre-order and will be released November 25, 2014.

Native American Music Awards 2014: Full List of Nominees

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The 15th annual Native American Music Awards are set for November 14, 2014 at the Seneca Allegany Events Center. Check out the full list of nominees and vote for your favourite Indigenous artists.

The Native American Music Awards are a staple of the Indigenous music awards circuit and every year they hand out nods to an astonishing diversity of Indigenous artists in over 30 categories of music, spoken word and historical recordings. This year is no exception. From country and hip-hop, to pow wow and gospel, and even, um, "new age", the NAMAs span the widest possible spectrum of Native American music. A Tribe Called Red, Samantha Crain, and Bear Fox are all up for multiple awards this year—but there are many, many more nominees to listen to and choose from.

Voting is currently underway in all categories and winners will be announced on Friday, November 14th at the NAMA gala at Seneca Allegany Events Center. The awards show will be streamed live on FNX.org and broadcast on FNX Television.

Cast your ballot and listen to a 116-track playlist of this year's NAMA nominees right here.

Native American Music Awards 2014 Full List of Nominees

ARTIST OF THE YEAR

  • Jan Looking Wolf Reibach (Conf. Tribes of Grande Ronde – Kalapuya) - Tamanawas
  • Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida) – Nature Dance
  • Mato Nanji (Lakota/Dakota) – Vanishing Americans
  • R. Carlos Nakai & Will Clipman (Navajo/Ute) – Awakening The Fire
  • Ryan Little Eagle Molina (Lakota/Apache) – The Long Journey Home
  • Wade Fernandez (Menominee) – Breathe & Flow

BEST BLUES RECORDING

  • A Tribute To Little Johnny Taylor – Jimmy Wolf (Mohawk)
  • Back To Clearlake Oaks – Twice As Good
  • Blues Joose Vol 2 - Joel Johnson (Tuscarora)
  • Lakota John and Kin - Lakota John and Kin (Lumbee/Oglala)
  • Red Kroz Bluez Band - Red Kroz Bluez Band (Munsee)
  • Vanishing Americans – Indigenous

BEST COMPILATION RECORDING

  • CTR Country Mix – Various Artists
  • Dawn's Early Light - Various Artists
  • Don't Let Me Forget - Kelly Montijo Fink
  • Earth Bound Angel – Various Artists
  • Putumayo Presents Native America – Various Artists
  • The Hopson Live Session - Various Artists

BEST COUNTRY RECORDING

  • 3 of a Kind - John McLeod (Cree)
  • Bring It On – Donny Parenteau (Metis)
  • Senorita Dreams – Wayne Garner (Cherokee/Apache)
  • Tribute - Victoria Blackie (Navajo)
  • Tyra Preston – Tyra Preston (Navajo)
  • Woman Of Red – Tracy Bone (Ojibway)

DEBUT ARTIST OF THE YEAR

  • David Rose – Wind Dance Under The Moon
  • Gabrielle Knife (Lakota Sioux) – Ohiya Ku WInyan
  • Gareth – The Journey
  • Leah Shenandoah (Oneida) - Spektra
  • Nitanis “Kit” Largo (Various) – Serenity
  • Robert Mullinax (Cherokee) – Dream of a Sacred Song

DEBUT GROUP OF YEAR

  • A Tribe Called Red (Cayuga/Ojibway) – A Tribe Called Red
  • Fabulous Ripcords (Oneida) - Voo Doo Girl
  • Iskwew Singers (Metis/Cree/Saulteaux) – Kamawinan: Songs of Our People
  • Lightning Creek (Nez Perce) – Long Time Coming
  • Sihasin (Navajo) – Never Surrender
  • Women of Heart (Various) - Winds of Change

BEST FEMALE ARTIST

  • Donna Kay (Metis) – Uncover Me
  • Jamie Coon (Creek/Seminole) – Day After Day
  • Rhonda Head (Cree) - Nikumoon
  • Rita Coolidge (Cherokee) – A Rita Coolidge Christmas
  • Tracy Bone (Ojibway) - Woman Of Red
  • Victoria Blackie (Navajo) - Tribute

BEST FOLK RECORDING

  • Adageyudi – Clear Water Drum (Cherokee/Yaqui/Metis)
  • Songs to Keep the Earth Alive - Good Shield Aguilar
  • Heart of the Buffalo– Richard Stepp and Rick McKee (Keetoowah)
  • Home Grown - Storm Seymour (Meskwaki)
  • Keeper of the Dreams - Red Feather Woman (Assiniboine/Sioux)
  • Kid Face - Samantha Crain (Choctaw)

FLUTIST OF THE YEAR

  • Cal Silverfox Lopez (Apache) – To Touch The Sky
  • Douglas Blue Feather – Dawn of a New Light
  • Jan Looking Wolf Reibach (Conf. Tribes of Grande Ronde – Kalapuya) - Tamanawas
  • Jonathon Maracle Ohwihsha (Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte) – The Clearing
  • Rona Yellow Robe (Chippewa Cree) - The Gathering
  • Tony Duncan (Apache/Ankara/Hidatsu/Mandan) – Native Son

BEST GOSPEL/INSPIRATIONAL RECORDING

  • Don’t Let Me Forget – Kelly Montijo Fink
  • Grace & Grit: Chapter I – Dark Water Rising (Lumbee)
  • Love & Kindness - Golana (Cherokee) & Peter Kater
  • Nikumoon - Rhonda Head (Cree)
  • Season of Joy – Yolanda Martinez (Apache)
  • Speak To The Sky – Storm Seymour (Meskwaki)
  • 12. GROUP OF THE YEAR

GROUP OF THE YEAR

  • Dark Water Rising (Lumbee) - Grace & Grit: Chapter I
  • Indigie Femme (Navajo) – Te Hau Waiati
  • Injunuity (Various) – Fight For Survival
  • Plenty Wolf Singers(Oglala Lakota) – Medicine Wolf
  • Rushingwind & Mucklow (Cahuilla) – Strong Horse
  • Sweethearts of Navajoland (Navajo) – From The Heart of Dine Nation

HISTORICAL/LINGUISTIC RECORDING

  • Chillin’ Rez-Style - Will and Jesse Lee (Lakota)
  • Heart of the Buffalo – Richard Stepp and Rick McKee (Keetoowah)
  • Intikana (Arawak/Taino) – Native Eyez
  • 2 Worlds - Nataanii Means (Oglala Lakota, Omaha, Dine')
  • Mescalero Apache Creation – Fred Kaydahzinne (Apache)
  • Te Hau Waiati - Indigie Femme (Navajo)

BEST INSTRUMENTAL RECORDING

  • Awakened By The Noon Day Sun - Mwalin (Mashpee Wampanoag)
  • Fight For Survival - Injunuity (Choctaw)
  • Journey To the Sun - Sun Shadows (Choctaw/Navajo)
  • Strong Horse - Rushingwind & Mucklow
  • The Long Journey Home - Ryan Little Eagle Molina (Lakota/Apache)
  • The Clearing - Ohwihsha (Mohawk)

BEST MALE ARTIST

  • Jimmy Wolf (Mohawk) - A Tribute To Little Johnny Taylor
  • Lawrence Harris (Choctaw) – Romanze – Songs of Tosti
  • Randy McGinnis (Cherokee) – Smoky Mountain Dreams
  • TerryLee Whetstone (Cherokee) - One People
  • Tony Duncan (Apache/Ankara/Hidatsu/Mandan) – Native Son
  • Wayne Silas, Jr (Menominee) – Infinite Passion

BEST NATIVE AMERICAN CHURCH RECORDING

  • A Good Day, A Better Tomorrow - Cheevers Toppah (Kiowa)
  • Apache Peyote Songs - Joe Tohonnie Jr (Apache/Navajo)
  • As It Was In The Beginning - Primeaux & Mike (Sioux/Navajo)
  • Charity - Kevin Yazzie (Navajo)
  • NAC Songs - Aaron Adson (Pawnee/Comanche)

BEST NEW AGE RECORDING

  • Awakening The Fire - R. Carlos Nakai & Will Clipman (Navajo/Ute)
  • Bridge - Rushingwind & Mucklow
  • Dawn of a New Light - Douglas Blue Feather (Cherokee)
  • Kamama - SilverWolf/Adelaunegv Waya
  • Love & Kindness - Golana (Cherokee)
  • Smoky Mountain Dreams - Randy McGinnis (Cherokee)

BEST POP RECORDING

  • Colors - Indian City (Ojibway)
  • Day After Day - Jamie Coon (Creek/Seminole)
  • Feathers Rosary - Joey Stylez (Cree)
  • Grace & Grit: Chapter I – Dark Water Rising (Lumbee)
  • Spektra - Leah Shenandoah (Oneida)
  • Touch - Raphael (Mescalero Apache)

BEST POW WOW RECORDING

  • Elder’s Vision: Pow Wow Songs Recorded Live @ Ky1 Yo - Blackfoot Confederacy (Various)
  • In Harmony Again - Big River Cree
  • Loyalty to the Drum - Northern Cree (Cree/Various)
  • Right Now - Bear Creek (Various)
  • Save Me A Lead - Young Spirit (Various)
  • Stoic - Tha Tribe (Various)

BEST PRODUCER

  • Donald Blackfox – Earth Bound Angel
  • Eddie Webber – Apache Blessing & Crown Dance Songs
  • Kevin Chief (Algonquin/Oneida) – Honoring The Mazinikijik Singers
  • Lynn Coulter, John Mc Duffie, Randy Landas, John Thomas - A Rita Coolidge Christmas
  • Peter Blackwell – Mescalero Apache Creation
  • Robert Doyle – Awakening The Fire

BEST RAP/HIP HOP RECORDING

  • Crunk Nativez - Lil Mike & Funny Bone (Chocktaw, Pawnee)
  • Native Eyez - Intikana (Arawak/Taino)
  • One Tribe One Nation – The Council (Sounthern Ute, Jemez Pueblo, Taos Pueblo)
  • Quese Imc & Cempoalli 20 (Pawnee/Seminole) – Osahwuh
  • Rainy Days – Tha Native featuring Stuxx
  • Warriors Arise - Makardi (Navajo)

RECORD OF THE YEAR (Traditional & Contemporary)

  • A Rita Coolidge Christmas - Rita Coolidge (Cherokee)
  • A Tribe Called Red – A Tribe Called Red (Cayuga/Ojibway)
  • Breathe & Flow - Wade Fernandez (Menominee)
  • Native Son - Tony Duncan (Apache/Ankara/Hidatsu/Mandan)
  • Romanze – Songs of Tosti - Lawrence Harris (Choctaw)
  • The Gathering – Rona Yellowrobe (Chippewa Cree)

BEST ROCK RECORDING

  • Fire and Brimstone: A Tribute To Link Wray - Band of Tribes (Shawnee)
  • Never Going Home – The Gun Runners (Onondaga)
  • Never Surrender - Sihasin (Navajo)
  • Surrender - George Leach (Sta’ atl’ imx)
  • The Journey – Gareth Laffely (Mi'kmaq/Cree)
  • Two Sons - The Ollivanders (Mohawk, Oneida)

SONG/SINGLE OF THE YEAR (Contemporary / Traditional)

  • “Diamond" - Bear Fox (Mohawk)
  • “Love Of My Life” – Spencer Battiest (Seminole)
  • “Runnin’ On Empty” –Shadowyze & Shyanne (Creek, Cherokee, Han Gwich in Athabascan)
  • “Song of the Wolf” – Graywolf Blues Band (Yaqui)
  • "Sublime Gracia" - Yolanda Martinez (Apache)
  • “Witchi Tai-To – Water Spirits” – Shadowyze, Caren Knight Pepper and Jim Pepper

SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR

  • Brianna Lea Pruett (Cherokee/Choctaw) – Gypsy Bells
  • Glen Bonham (Choctaw) - Glen Bonham
  • Randy Granger (Choltan/Mayan) – Strong Medicine
  • Robert Hollis aka Bobby Bullet (Lac du Flambeau) – Crooked Tear
  • Samantha Crain (Choctaw)– Kid Face
  • Theresa “Bear” Fox (St. Regis Mohawk) – Diamond

BEST SPOKEN WORD RECORDING

  • Blessings - Fawn Wood & Dallas Waskahat
  • Grandfather Speaks – Ken Quiet Hawk (Abenaki)
  • Lost Angel – Cyrus Emerson (Cherokee)
  • Man From The Sky - Soyota (Apache)
  • Mescalero Apache Creation – Fred Kaydahzinne (Apache)
  • The Little Rocks – Windfeather Navarez Bull (Navajo)

BEST TRADITIONAL RECORDING

  • Apache Blessing & Crown Dance Songs - Joe Tohonnie Jr (Apache)
  • Blessings - Fawn Wood & Dallas Waskahat
  • From The Heart of Dine’ Nation - Sweethearts of Navajoland (Navajo)
  • Honoring The Mazinikijik Singers - Mazinikijik Singers (Algonquin/Oneida)
  • Moonlit Nights - Todi Neesh Zhee Singers (Navajo) - First Night
  • Spirit of Thunderheart - Rising (Mohawk, Blackfoot, Cree, Cherokee)

BEST MUSIC VIDEO

  • Love of My Life – Spencer Battiest (Seminole)
  • Native Eyez - Intikana (Arawak/Taino)
  • Prayer Loop Song – Supaman (Apsaalooke)
  • Song of Survival – Red Eagle
  • Women Across The River - Graywolf Blues Band (Yaqui)
  • Sisters ft Northern Voice - A Tribe Called Red (Cayuga, Ojibway)

BEST WAILA RECORDING

  • 2 Rivers Band– 2 Rivers Band (Tohono O’odham)
  • Back To Basics - Cruz (Tohono O’odham)
  • Embrace The Kaos – Dfaktion Nyne (Tohono O’odham)
  • In Loving Memory of Our Beloved Father & Uncle - Family Pride (Tohono O’odham)
  • Pisinemo & Company – Pisinemo & Company (Tohono O’odham)
  • Tohono O’odham Waila Music, Volume 2 - Valenzuela & Company (Tohono O’odham)

BEST WORLD MUSIC RECORDING

  • Dance of the Soul - Jessica Martinez Maxey
  • Kurt Wyaco – Kurt Wyaco (Zuni Pueblo)
  • Nagwetch - Wabanag
  • Nature Dance - Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida)
  • North Wind - Flying Down Thunder & Rise Ashen (Algonquin)
  • To Touch The Sky - Cal Silverfox Lopez (Apache)

NATIVE HEART

  • Big City Indians – May You Walk
  • Cornell Kinderknecht and Martin McCall - Dreamtime
  • Lex Nichols – The Long Road
  • Peter Phippen – Sacred Spaces
  • Emiliano Campobello & Kevin Donoho - Rockapelli
  • Terry Frazier - By The Still Waters

PREMIERE: Stream Silver Jackson's New Album "Starry Skies Opened Eyes"

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Silver Jackson's remarkable new album, Starry Skies Opened Eyes, bursts with life and an artful spirit of experimentation. Welcome to the future-now sounds of Indigenous expansion.

Silver Jackson is the musical alias of multi-talented Tlingit/Aleut artist Nicholas Galanin, whose recent adoption into the rising art and music collective known as the Black Constellation represents both a bold progression of the "expanding now" he is developing alongside his interstellar kin—Shabazz Palaces, Erik Blood, THEESatisfaction, OC Notes, Nep Sidhu, Khalil Joseph and Maikoyo Alley-Barnes—and an emergent model of creative collaboration and community.

Starry Skies Opened Eyes, Jackson's second album, is an effortless evolution of his style and aesthetic, where electronic-inflected, acoustic folk experiments abound with clever melodic turns and spiralling harmonies, fading and swimming through percussive clicks, crackles, and looping rhythms.

Recorded over a three year period that saw Jackson narrowly escape death in a hunting accident, the album traces his path to newfound perspectives "on life through love and gratitude...friends and family".

Starry Skies Opened Eyes is a record of resonance, transformation and re-emergence—of Jackson "losing [himself] in the blackness between light", drifting through dark horizons, reflecting the sky. This introspective illumination unfolds in a dream-like flow of cosmia, echoing out over the album's 11 tracks.

From the ambient swirl of the album's title track, "Starry Skies Opened Eyes", to the implicit critique of colonialism expressed in "Lanáalx" (the Tlingit word for "wealthy"), Starry Skies Opened Eyes is suffused with a restless spirit of interconnected being. Jackson traverses the shifting sonics of this polyvocal landscape with melodic dialogue textured by a host of collaborators, including Samantha Crain, OCnotes, Benjamin Verdoes, Jesse Hughey, Erik Blood, and Catherine Harris-White.

As the album's loping, final track "From Another World" arrives, with the hopeful prose of guest vocalist THEESatisfaction's "Cat" (Harris-White), it becomes clear that this is "rugged unexplored terrain / yet the rain still washes it anew".

Starry Skies Opened Eyes is a brilliant addition to the expanding universe of the Black Constellation and a bright spark in dark times. It is the sound of a future-now, where Indigenous presence is an act of creation, continually being renewed.

Stream Silver Jackson's "Starry Skies Opened Eyes"

 

Starry Skies Opened Eyes is available for pre-order now and will be officially released on November 14, 2014.

Stream Samian's new album Enfant de la terre

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Algonquin hip-hop artist Samian returns with his third album of bold, creative hip-hop, Enfant de la terre. 

Samian has long held it down for his people and for hip-hop music, where he uses creative flows and socially relevant lyrics to paint vivid portraits of the world around him through Indigenous eyes.

After exhausting himself with a relentless schedule of touring and performing in support of his previous album Face à La Musique, Samian took an extended hiatus to pursue other projects. But he missed the music.

Enfant de la terre ("Child of the Earth") shows his return to form. Lyrically, Samian is at the top of his game, and the album benefits from its more personal, spiritual and reflective moments, that provide an introspective counter-balance to the warrior stance of his battle-ready anthems.

The album is inspired by Samian's love of the land and the Algonquin culture he represents and, to quote a recent review by Voir magazineEnfant de la terre is a powerful "echo of the values ​​it defends".

Widely heralded as Quebec's first Algonquin rapper, Samian raps in a mix of his Indigenous language and French, and he has built a loyal francophone following in Quebec. But he acknowledges that the rising Indigenous music scene is still largely unrecognized: "We are few in Quebec—only 90,000 of 8 million people. There are plenty of Aboriginal artists, but few are known to the public. We need to walk together".

Enfant de la terre is a step in the right direction. The album is available now.

STREAM: Samian - "Enfant de la terre"