Global Sound - Musical Treasures of the World
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Smithsonian Global Sound offers many archival recordings of American Indian music, as well as contemporary pieces by innovative and traditional musicians. Each track illuminates the central role that music plays in American Indian culture and is evidence of both difference and similarity across a hemisphere of Native peoples.


Click for Track Details Welcoming Drum Music
Solo drum (Shipibo)

Click for Track Details Comanche Moon Song
performed by Doc Tate Nevaquaya (Comanche)

Click for Track Details Buffalo Dance
performed by Kenneth Anquoe (Kiowa)


Sounds of the Land
Land and climate are important in shaping the music of American Indian cultures. Zuni rain dances, Andean mountain music, and Inuit throat singing reflect unique aspects of the environment in which they are performed. Songs inspired by wind, water, or animals often reflect cultural relationships with nature and sacred connections to the earth.


Click for Track Details Rain Dance
performed by a male chorus (Zuni)

Imitations of Walrus
performed by Harry Gibbons (Inuit)

Click for Track Details Prairie Chicken Dance
performed by Blackfoot Crossing Singers

Click for Track Details Music for Alpacas
performed by Louisa Sera Chompi (Peru)


Sounds of Change
Despite their wide variety of languages, geographies, and cultures, most American Indian societies share a history of European contact and of rapid social and economic change due to European immigration and expansion. This encounter affected traditional musical styles as well. Some foreign muscial genres (Christian hymns) were imposed on American Indians, but certain traits (vocal stylings) and whole genres (fiddle dance music) were adopted willingly. Although European origins may be discernable in some American Indian songs, it remains Indian music, played by and for American Indian people with distinctive styles and musical values.


Click for Track Details Rock of Ages
performed by Maisie Shenandoah, Liz Robert, Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida)

Click for Track Details Le Chanson du Bataille (Song of the Battle)
performed by Ojibwa Indian School Children

Click for Track Details Catholic Mass sung in Quechua
performed by a Catholic congregation (Ocongate)

Click for Track Details Araku
performed by Gervasio Martinez (Argentina)


Sounds of Protest and Pride
Protest singing during the period of American social unrest in the late 1960s included many American Indian voices. They addressed issues of social injustice, governmental interference, environmental degradation, and poverty on the reservation. While many American Indian protest singers strummed acoustic guitars, some recognized and reinvigorated Native musical traditions and languages while singing for the rights of and respect due to American Indians. Their songs convey a deep pride in their musical and cultural heritage and ensure, as Founding Director Rick West stated at the opening of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, that "American Indians will be part of the cultural future."


Click for Track Details The Ballad of Ira Hayes
performed by Peter La Farge

Click for Track Details Welcome Home
performed by Sharon Burch

Click for Track Details Radioactive Eskimo
performed by Peter LaFarge

Click for Track Details Proud to Belong to the Indian Nation
performed by Periwinkle


Browse many more American Indian sounds of nature, innovation, and identity, as well as a wide range of religious and social musics from American Indian cultures on Smithsonian Global Sound.



FEATURED VIDEOS





Highlights from the festival celebrating the opening of the National Museum of the American Indian.

Source: 512k Quicktime Video, 10m 38s.









The National Cherokee Youth Choir performs "Orphan Child." The song is of unknown origin, but Cherokee tradition holds that is was composed on the Trail of Tears in the 1830s.

Source: 512k Quicktime Video, 2m 27s.









Nukariik (Inuit) Sisters Karin and Kathy Kettler demonstrate traditional Inuit throat singing.

Source: 512k Quicktime Video, 2m 40s.







FEATURED RADIO PROGRAM



American Indian Flute Music
Featuring Indian flute sounds from throughout the Americas.






FOR THE CLASSROOM




Lessons and Activities for Teachers
Explore American Indian stories with your students.


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