Buffy Sainte-Marie as PDF file
Transcription
Buffy Sainte-Marie as PDF file
The first Native American female singer to break onto the popular music front and to make national headlines was Buffy SainteMarie. She was Cree from Canada who was raised in New England. Her first song to garner the attention of the general public was Universal Soldier. Her first song to garner the attention of First Nations peoples was Now that the Buffalo are Gone. This song was used in virtually every documentary about American Indians made in the 1960s and 1970s, and the film you are going to watch next not only used this song in the film, but titled the film after Buffy’s song. This film has local relevance and that is why the whole film will be shown. Buffy Sainte-Marie Now That the Buffalo are Gone Buffy Sainte-Marie graduated from Boston University in 1962, an era after the beatniks and before the hippies. During her years as a philosophy and education major, she played in coffee shops and local scenes and got some positive attention. At the time, she did it for fun and a little spending money. By the time she graduated, she was popular enough to schedule a national concert tour. With just her guitar and a few other instruments, she toured North America's colleges, reservations and concert halls, meeting both huge acclaim and huge misperception from audiences and record companies who expected Pocahontas in fringes, and instead were both entertained and educated with their initial dose of Native American reality in the first person. By age 24, Buffy SainteMarie had appeared all over Europe, Canada, Australia and Asia, receiving honors, medals and awards which continue to this day. Her song Universal Soldier became the anthem of the peace movement. For her very first album, It’s My Way, she was voted Billboard's Best New Artist. Universal Soldier Buffy Sainte-Marie in the 1960s/1996 She never quit her day job, so to speak, as she continued her studies at the University of Massachusetts, earning a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1971, a rarity among popular musicians. Her songs brought an indigenous philosophy to the general American pubic. That philosophy is referred to by Scott Pratt as Native Pragmatism in his recent book, outlining in significant detail the Indigenous origins of America’s predominant philosophical tradition. Native pragmatism is expressed quite poignantly in the song Until Its Time for You to Go, a classic love song of the 20th century recorded by more than 10 popular artists and selling tens of millions of copies in its various renditions. This song may have been written about Peter LaFarge. Until Its Time for You to Go In the early 1960s popular entertainment was all escapist in nature, utilizing traditional stereotypes derived from fairy tale notions of propriety. That is probably difficult for someone growing up in recent times to comprehend, but it went unchallenged before the early 1960s until songs like Until Its Time for you to Go became a part of the popular culture. Buffy Sainte-Marie became known as a writer of protest and love songs. Peter LaFarge was her close friend, and she joined his organization FAIR (Federation for Indian Rights). Having written Universal Soldier, which became an anthem for the sixties’ peace movement, she was nevertheless absent from the mass protest marches. Instead, she preferred to shed her unique light on Indian and environmental issues, which she continues to do today “because nobody else was covering those bases" after Peter LaFarge died. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee Buffy wrote scores for movies and theme songs for movies. The first theme song was for Soldier Blue, a movie about the Sand Creek massacre of the Cheyenne led by Reverend Chivington. The second theme song Buffy wrote was Up Where We Belong for the movie Officer and a Gentleman. She won an academy award for that song, and it also became a big hit. The lyrics of this song also reflect Native Pragmatism. Up Where We Belong Buffy also wrote essays, became a pioneer in digital art, presented a colloquium to Europe's philosophers, established a scholarship foundation to fund Native studies, and spent time with Indigenous people in far away countries. Buffy went from Greenwich Village to Europe, Canada, Australia, Hong Kong, and Japan, and had a very strong career outside of the U.S. She received a medal from Queen Elizabeth II, named an officer in the Order of Canada, won a Gemini for her TV special, was elected in the Juno Hall of Fame, won an Academy Award, and France presented her with the Grand Prix Charles de Gaulle Award. She has also received an honorary Doctorate of Laws degree from the University of Regina. Though she has been honored all over the world, Buffy has never let her clebrity status change her down to earth way of thinking and has always remained a country girl at heart. Today, her digital home studio is as personal and handson for her as a guitar was in the sixties. Her come-back CD, Coincidence and Likely Stories, was made at home. Using her Macintosh as a recording instrument, she played most of the parts herself. When it was just the way she wanted it, she dialed the number of her coproducer in London, England, and sent the music down the phone lines via modem, bounced it off the satellite, and it went onto tape in London. Indian Cowboy in the Rodeo 1996: She was working to help First Nations youth become more computer literate. Was this song written about Peter LaFarge? She married musician Jack Nitzsche in 1969, and regularly appeared on the PBS TV series Sesame Street for a five year period from 1976 - 1981, with her son Dakota Starblanket Wolfchild. Magic is Alive In 1976, Buffy quit recording to raise her son and to work at home as an artist after her 5 year stint on Sesame Street. In 1993 she returned to music and recorded Coincidence and Likely Stories. That same year, she helped establish a new Juno Awards category for aboriginal music. 1993 continued to be a banner year for her as she headlined a concert of Indigenous artists in Lapland. The program was televised in Germany, Sweden, Norway and Finland. France named her best international artist for 1993, and the United Nations asked her to proclaim 1993 as the International Year of Indigenous People. GOD IS ALIVE MAGIC IS AFOOT words: Leonard Cohen music: Buffy Sainte-Marie © Stranger Music, Inc./Caleb Music-ASCAP Leonard Cohen's book Beautiful Losers stole my heart in 1963, and so did the idea of electronic processing on a vocal recorder. I had a recording session scheduled and Leonard was in town. I propped two pages of his book up on a music stand and I just sang it out, ad libbing the melody and guitar music together as I went along. I've always wanted to re-record it, as I love the way the power of the words obviously commands the music and drives it beyond any consideration of time signature. Probably the strongest lyrics Buffy Sainte-Marie ever wrote or sang are in the song My Country ‘Tis of Thy People Your’re Dyeing. She was active in support of the American Indian Movement in the militancy of the early 1970s, and saw a number of her friends killed and imprisoned by the FBI and those supported by the FBI. A recent article in Indian Today says Buffy was blacklisted, and President Johnson and others praised and rewarded stations who refused to play her music, much like what recently happened with the Dixie Chicks. In this case, however, it involved letters directly from the President, if evidence in a recent court case in Phoenix is valid. Buffy Sainte-Marie's censored sounds. by: Brenda Norrell / Indian Country Today August 05, 2006 PHOENIX - Nearly two decades after Cree singer and songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie's song ''Universal Soldier'' was released and shipments of her records mysteriously disappeared, the truth of the censorship and suppression by the U.S. government became public. Now, in federal court, Charles August Schlund III stated he was a covert operative and supported Sainte-Marie's assertions that the United States took action to suppress her music because of its role in rallying opposition to the Vietnam War. Sainte-Marie says she was blacklisted and, along with other American Indians in the Red Power movements, was put out of business in the 1970s. ''I found out 10 years later, in the 1980s, that [President] Lyndon Johnson had been writing letters on White House stationary praising radio stations for suppressing my music,'' Sainte-Marie said in a 1999 interview with Indian Country Today at Diné College. During this time (late 1960s-early 1970s), Sainte-Marie was selling more records than ever in Canada, Europe and Asia. But in the United States, her records were disappearing. Thousands of people at concerts wanted to buy her records. Although the distributor said the records had been shipped, no one seemed to know where they were. One thing was for sure: “They were not on record store shelves,” Buffy said. ''I was put out of business in the United States.'' Fellow activist and Santee poet John Trudell's wife, mother-in-law and children were burned to death in a mysterious house fire shortly after Trudell burned an American flag in Washington, D.C., Feb. 11, 1979. ''I was just one person put out of business. John Trudell is just another person whose life was put out of business. Anna Mae Aquash and Leonard Peltier were put out of the living business - we were made ineffective,'' Sainte-Marie said of slain American Indian Movement activist Aquash and imprisoned Peltier. Those years, however, were filled with pain. ''It was hard - seeing people hurt,'' she said. The pain and resentment are expressed in the lyrics of My Country “Tis of thy People You’re Dying The Pain and Resentment many Indigenous people feel are expressed in the lyrics of My Country ‘Tis of thy People You’re Dying Today Buffy teaches at colleges, and lectures in a variety of fields including digital art, philosophy, film scoring, electronic music, song writing, Indian issues and the Native genius for governments. Most importantly, Buffy teaches to remain positive amidst tough human realities. Her digital paintings vary in style as do her songs, speeches, classes and essays, each reflecting her lifelong wish to empower creative people's multifaceted individual potentials "…because we need fresh alternative ideas from every direction...students, artists, women, and indigenous people." Buffy’s Digital Art Gallery Starwalker Buffy’s Albums My Generation: Featuring Buffy Sainte-Marie Final Fantasy & More The Centre In Vancouver For Performing Arts, Vancouver, BC Sat, Feb 17, 2007 06:30 PM Look For Tickets Additional Information: Doors open at 6:30pm. Show starts at 7:30pm. My Generation: A Festival of Power Buffy Sainte-Marie Final Fantasy Jim Byrnes Kinnie Starr The Canadian Office and Professional Employees Union (COPE 378) is proud to sponsor My Generation. Music and art are powerful forces in our lives and provide us with a unique opportunity to celebrate the things that matter the most. Our members work day by day to help keep BC's energy resources available to British Columbians. We care about our communities and like everyone else, we want our children to have a bright future. For more information go to:www.publicpowerbc.ca Note: Tickets may not be available in all price levels and sections.