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Larry Knudsen


Last Updated: 11/14/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 49
Sign: Sagittarius

City: Minneapolis
State: MINNESOTA
Country: US
Signup Date: 5/18/2006

Who Gives Kudos:


Sunday, July 12, 2009 

Category: Music
High Noon

Indigenous in the News Featured Artist Review
The Way It All Began





I am filled with grieving at the loss of my brother Dave last week and I am looking for relief from this mean ass darkness and I want to hold his memory close without trembling in fear. Generally when I feel like this I like to listen to Pow Wow drumming and singing.

The notes on the CD insert state, “Holder of six World Championship titles for their singing and drumming, High Noon carries one of pow wow’s most enduring and honored singing traditions. Beginning more than two decades ago on the Thunderchild Reserve, Saskatchewan, they continue to be among pow wow’s most respected groups. Singing in the original Plains Cree style, High Noon maintains the pride of their people and sings from the heart whenever they sit around the drum.”

Consisting of members (Cree Tribe unless otherwise noted) Ted Noon, Ron Noon, Marlon Deshamps, Travis Meguinis, Jay Dusty Bull (Blackfeet), Faron Lujan (Tiwa), Shaylen Gopher (Chippewa/Blackfeet), Shane Redstar, Jacob Faithful, Irvin Waskewitch, Galen Sharp. The women singers are Betty Noon, Elisha Noon, Stacey McGilvery, Candace Faithful, Lateachia Pemma (Potawatomi/Ho-Chunk); I am excited at the prospect of some desperately needed spiritual healing.

Today the Rezz Dogg rides a stationary bike. A what? A damn stationary bike! It’s well, it’s 30? below zero wind chill outside and it’s snowing overtop a layer of ice. What bike rider in his right mind would ride on a day like this. Well, I’ve done it. You could say that I was not cohesive with myself at the time. But, today I feel a little older and wiser. It’s just that there’s no motion. No scenery. No feel. Very little inspiration. I drop an Italian travelogue tape about Italian villas along each coast into the VCR and flick it on. I smudge and start up the I-pod so I can listen to the latest assignment High Noon/The Way It All Began and I jump on the stationary to go for my morning constitutional.

There are no titles to any of the songs. The notion that everything needs a title is only just a little pretentious in a sense since the song is an entity of itself that in a spiritual realm identity would not be necessary only just being. To breathe the song into life and leave it to speak on its’ own. A really truly four directions type of thought. This was a lesson that I learned only just recently from a participant at a writer’s workshop at Shakopee Women’s Correctional Facility who happens to be a particularly gifted writer. It was a tremendously fascinating experience but we can discuss that more later.

High Noon is a collection of several Intertribal songs, contest songs and a great grass dance song. There is something so tradish about this CD it makes me tingle all over. The intertribal songs are for intertribal dancing meaning these are songs to be sung during a dance where participants from various tribes may be dancing together within the dance circle. Contest songs are songs sung specifically for the fabulously colorful and strenuous dance contests that are now very common among our people. Grass dance is a northern Plains style of dance. The Grass Dance assumed its contemporary form in the mid and late 1950’s. Modern grass dance outfits are heavily fringed with yarn, which emphasizes a flowing dance style. Resembles the blowing wind through the prairie grass.

It is important to any drum circle for the drumming and singing to be strong and on. Not just ordinary on but on all the time. The voices and the drumming must sound as one. The sound of the men and women singing together should sound like a harmony of sorts. High Noon delivers at all levels in every regard. I am lifted up through the fog into another realm where the grief don’t hurt so bad and your memories are only fond ones, where death can’t touch ya, and you feel no pain. I’m gonna miss you Dave.

One of these days I’m goin’ to that pow wow in Naples, I understand the Italians can really sing and dance and dance and the countryside is very ancient and beautiful but on the whole, I’d rather be in Tucson.

Thank you for your attention to this.  I think it ties more of the previous elements together, Uncle Jams.


Reporter
Jamison Mahto
jamison@iicoc.com
www.iicoc.com
Currently listening:
Way It All Began
By High Noon
Release date: 2007-01-08