Folk Arts - Spirit of the First People

The book Spirit of the First People: Native American Music Traditions of Washington State and accompanying compact disk offer a rare glimpse into Native American sacred traditions of song and dance.

 

Cover image from the book Spirit of the First PeopleArising from a unique exhibit and live performance at the Northwest Folklife Festival, Spirit of the First People is a collection of personal narratives, stories, and essays on the music of the First People in the region that now encompasses Washington State. From tribe to tribe and reservation to reservation across the state, a wide range of musical genres and individual styles have developed including social dance songs, game songs, and hymns.

 

Skagit elder Vi [taqeblu] Hilbert, a principal adviser on the community council and the one who gave the book its name, introduces the collection. Contributors include Bruce-subiyay Miller (Skokomish), Cliff Sijohn (Spokane, Coeur d'Alene), JeanetteTimentwa (Okanagan) and Rebecca Chamberlain, Virginia Beavert-Martin (Yakama), Brycene Neaman (Yakama), Linda Goodman and Helma Swan (Makah), Loran Olsen, and Willie Smyth. Their narratives provide rich detail about tribal music and its significance, past and present. Robert Haines (Wenatchee) establishes the historical and political background, noting how spiritual traditions were nurtured by dance and song under conditions of government suppression. Song traditions in the Indian Shaker Church are explored by Pamela Amoss and James Everett Cunningham. Appendixes by Laurel Sercombe, Juith Gray, and William Seaburg outline the work of past ethnographers and describe current efforts to preserve and disseminate the music.

 

The book and disk are the result of a multi-year collaboration among the members of Washington State's tribes, Jack Straw Productions, Northwest Folklife, and the Washington State Arts Commission.

 

Edited by Willie Smyth and Esme Ryan, with an Introduction by Vi Hilbert. The book and disk sell for $29.95 and be ordered from the University Washington Press.