Brule
Indigenous in the News Featured Artist ReviewThe Collection
In
Glorious Day Us/We/Them, such a day, sunlit salvation on the seat of a
Giant GTX and the songs of Brule on the I-pod. Oh Glory, Glory, Glory,
the glitz and glammer of the star hammer on the head of the love of my
life, the air and ambience of down town Minneapolis. The Collection, a
greatest hits CD produced by Tom Bee and SOAR is nuage but it??™s
Native American nuage, which means to me that it is therefore somehow
authentic in a way that most nuage is not.
The song All My
Relations starts with a voice over prayer on top of the nuage synth
stuff. It contains a very recognizable piano melody. The title should
have been mitakuye oyasin but it consists of a very Native American
nuage coloring and tone quality that is very peaceful and includes
traditional vocal over top. This song most certainly relates to the
adopted child scenario of Paul??™s life, the beauty and wonder of a
life that has gone full circle with the rediscovery of his biological
and traditional Lakota family. It is a grand melody for a grand story.
The
second track Spirit Horses starts with the spirit calling song of a
sweat lodge ceremony in a voice over top an up-tempo rock beat with the
melody played by a flute/synth. It includes the edgy guitar that I look
for in music, as well as a rain stick and a traditional vocal with the
light space air synth behind it all.
And Justice For All is a
pledge of allegiance native style. The vocal melody is majestic and
beautiful, like the Rockies or the Black Hills and the medicine rattle
percussion really sets the sound apart giving the song space.
The
song Celebration Of The Heart reminds me I have one of these every time
I get on my bike and ride the Minneapolis streets. Once again this song
has a very beautiful and colorful melody on synth as I scoot down the
street in joyful hot dish potpourri celebration of time and memory and
blood.
The song Stomp Dance??™ title is another name for a grass
dance and this one swings, up-tempo with some beautiful traditional
vocables over top with birdcalls. It evokes in me the hit Superstition
by S. Wonder. It compels me to dance down the pedestrian bridge north
of the Walker across the freeway through Loring Park to the Espresso
Royale where I stop for my coffee.
The song The Chosen One begs
the question is it Jesus or Wovoka? This song features some tender
romantic acoustic piano intro riffing and I have to admit Paul LaRoche
has a talent for the beautiful and melconcholy. He can somehow embody
the grief of entire nations in a song and it is the nature of grief to
seek healing which is the foundation on which this music is built.
The
world is a village and it takes an entire village to raise a child. It
is played in an up-tempo World music beat that has elements of a
Caribbean flavor to it. We must never forget that the first contact
between the cultures was with the arrival of Columbus not on the
continent proper but in the Caribbean islands and the Taino and Carribe
peoples that were massacred indiscriminately should most certainly
never be forgotten. It feels like a multicultural chanting group hug.
The airy Peruvian flute really puts this one over the top and it
definitely swings.
Track fourteen Fast Horse reminds me of
rollin??™ with the fast horse down the ave in a ??™70 merc Monterey
with the slant roof, back window down, just smokin??™ and jokin??™, the
rock n roll blastin??™ my heart into the dawn because we only as free
as we want to be. This is something that Marcus would have dug as it
rocks and swings with the traditional vocable over the top and it jams
with passion with a hand clapping chorus. He has kept it simple and
easy if anyone cares to sing along.
We end The Collection with
the track Star People as I pull up in front of the house on Park
Avenue. There is a theory that the stuff that began life on earth
actually came here by way of a comet or meteor. This is a very cool way
of ending the CD. This is almost house/dance music with flutes over a
heavy rhythmic structure just made for dancing. The end brings it full
circle by ending with a prayer as I end this review with mitakuye
oyasin. All my relations people. All Of My Relations!
ReporterJamison Mahtojamison@iicoc.comwww.iicoc.com