Description: The cd is brand new, sealed. Check out my other items! for more Newfoundland cd's. Be sure to add me to your favorites list! I combine postage on multiple wins to reduce the shipping cost and only charge the actual cost to ship. Winner pays postage which is $3.99 Canadian within Canada and $12.40 to the US. If you prefer I can further reduce the shipping cost on multiple wins by inserting the inserts and disc from one cd inside the jewel case of another, this way the discs won't get scratched or the inserts wrinkled. • 24 tracks showcasing the vibrant musical life of the Mi’kmaw people in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, and Québec • traditional Mi’kmaw songs; songs by the first Mi’kmaw powwow drum group; fiddle tunes and folksongs; hymns and anthems; a lullaby; and the story of Mi’kmwesu, the flute-playing trickster• important archival recordings from institutions across Canada and field recordings from private research collections• artwork by Mi’kmaw artist Jerry Evans• 60-page accompanying booklet with textual and musical transcriptions of the songs; translations of Mi’kmaw texts; extensive notes contextualizing each selection; and discussion of Mi’kmaw musical instruments and dance styles In 2004, the Research Centre for the Study of Music, Media and Place (MMaP) commenced production of an archival CD series. This initiative aims to recover historically and culturally significant documents for public use, to augment cultural content in the schools, to promote and disseminate the province’s culture to both Newfoundland citizens and beyond, to stimulate new artistic work that builds on earlier traditions, and to contribute to policy development relating to cultural diversity. Welta’q – ‘It Sounds Good’: Historic Recordings of the Mi'kmaq is a research and CD production project designed to contribute to scholarly discussions of indigenous expressive culture while mobilizing cultural material for use by Mi’kmaw communities and educators. This research involves a historical study of archival recordings held in institutions throughout Canada, the analysis Mi’kmaw music and musical genres, and the comparison of past and present repertoires in an effort to illuminate the changes that have occurred over the past 150 years. As the Mi’kmaw language does not have a word for “music,” I hope to work with Mi’kmaw community members to enrich interpretations of archival materials through Mi’kmaw understandings of welta’q (often used in place of the word “music”) which means “it sounds good” (Rosen 1998b). However, because welta’q may also refer to story-telling and other forms of expressive culture that “sound good,” music will not be studied in isolation. In collaboration with Mi’kmaw communities and Mi’kmaw Ethics Watch, the materials produced through this research will be released to the public via a compilation CD of archival and field recordings with extensive documentation, linking songs to contextual information, interpretive materials, and related expressive culture (such as legends or stories). In this way an ethnographic and “ethnosonic” (Getter 1996) resource will be made available for community and educational use, as well as use by the general public. Improved access to previously obscure music will impact cultural revitalization in Mi’kmaw communities, particularly those in Newfoundland, whose cultural renaissance over the past two decades has largely focused on intertribal rather than Mi’kmaq-specific traditions. The proposed research and associated archival CD project will serve to disseminate, promote, and recognize Mi’kmaw culture within Newfoundland and Labrador and the Atlantic Provinces. With more than two dozen tracks, the CDs could serve as instructional aids or provide content for use in the development of curriculum, recognizing the many cultures of Newfoundland. The use of a regional approach rather than a provincial one, however, ensures that the project does not further contribute to the isolation of Newfoundland and Labrador, but instead fosters an understanding of interaction, networking, and exchange between communities. The production of an audio recording with extensive accompanying documentary materials fosters both rural and urban heritage development, as such resources are both inexpensive and easily accessible by anyone on the island. It is hoped that, in the near future, teacher interfaces will be developed for the MMaP archival CD series to better facilitate their use in relation to the revised outcomes recently published by the Ministry of Education.
Price: 15.75 CAD
Location: St. John's, Newfoundland
End Time: 2024-12-07T16:42:20.000Z
Shipping Cost: 8.87 CAD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
Returns Accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Artist: Various
Format: CD
Release Title: HISTORIC RECORDINGS OF THE MI'KMAQ