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Showing posts with label john angaiak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john angaiak. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
Friday, April 1, 2022
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Sunday, June 7, 2020
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
I'm Lost in the City (Thinking of John Angaiak)
Ever so often, I'll receive a phone call from Alaska. The caller is always the same, Mr. John Angaiak. John is a singer-songwriter, artist, and family man of Yup'ik descent. In 1971, he combined his love of song and language into a unique long player called I'm Lost in the City, originally released through the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, in 1971. Featuring voice and guitar, I'm Lost in the City has two distinctive sides, one sung in English, and the other, in his native Yup'ik language. Up until that point, Yup'ik was primarily an oral language. The album was an initiative to assist in and help preserve his people's voice in the written form for future generations. I'm Lost in the City has a deeply emotional core, reflected in the haunting black and white cover. It speaks of community, history, change, nature, and love. The results will touch your heart and soul.
I found my first copy of I'm Lost in the City in Peterborough, Ontario, many moons ago at Blue Streak Records and it immediately took a special place in my collection. I'd never heard anything quite like it. Of all the songs, "I'll Rock You to the Rhythm of the Ocean" and "Hey, Hey, Hey Brother" resonated something fierce with me and I was eventually able to share them as part of the Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985 compilation in 2014. Later the following year, I was able to help get John back on stage again at NACC in Yellowknife as part of a NNA V1 event, a very rare treat. He played us new songs that evening (which I will share in the future) as well as his classics and had the audience with him all of the way... Laughing, thinking, and feeling. Subsequently, we were able to re-release I'm Lost in the City as a full length LP/CD/Digital reissue on Light in the Attic Records, replete with a beautiful original painting by John on the inside of the gatefold sleeve.
John has been very kind to me over the years as a supporter of his music and I'm extremely honoured to have met and worked with him for the love of music, spurred on by an album that he recorded before I was even born. I look forward to our next conversation and learning more about his incredible life.
The opening lyrics of "I'll Rock You to the Rhythm of the Ocean" are as follows:
"If you ever want to travel, come to my home. I know how it feels to see something different, the time is now..."
For those who have yet to hear the music of John Angaiak, please dig in. Whether you're in Tokyo, London, Austin, Los Angeles, Halifax, or Melbourne, John's voice and guitar will be there to welcome you to his reality. I know that the seekers, heads, and travellers world-wide will resonate with his timeless vibrations...
I found my first copy of I'm Lost in the City in Peterborough, Ontario, many moons ago at Blue Streak Records and it immediately took a special place in my collection. I'd never heard anything quite like it. Of all the songs, "I'll Rock You to the Rhythm of the Ocean" and "Hey, Hey, Hey Brother" resonated something fierce with me and I was eventually able to share them as part of the Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985 compilation in 2014. Later the following year, I was able to help get John back on stage again at NACC in Yellowknife as part of a NNA V1 event, a very rare treat. He played us new songs that evening (which I will share in the future) as well as his classics and had the audience with him all of the way... Laughing, thinking, and feeling. Subsequently, we were able to re-release I'm Lost in the City as a full length LP/CD/Digital reissue on Light in the Attic Records, replete with a beautiful original painting by John on the inside of the gatefold sleeve.
John has been very kind to me over the years as a supporter of his music and I'm extremely honoured to have met and worked with him for the love of music, spurred on by an album that he recorded before I was even born. I look forward to our next conversation and learning more about his incredible life.
The opening lyrics of "I'll Rock You to the Rhythm of the Ocean" are as follows:
"If you ever want to travel, come to my home. I know how it feels to see something different, the time is now..."
For those who have yet to hear the music of John Angaiak, please dig in. Whether you're in Tokyo, London, Austin, Los Angeles, Halifax, or Melbourne, John's voice and guitar will be there to welcome you to his reality. I know that the seekers, heads, and travellers world-wide will resonate with his timeless vibrations...
Thursday, April 7, 2016
John Angaiak - I'm Lost in the City (1971)
Available: May 6th, 2016
I’m Lost in the City (1971) is the sole vinyl LP offering from Yup’ik singer-songwriter, John Angaiak. Born in Nightmute, Alaska, in 1941, Angaiak began playing guitar at a young age, quickly learning the basics before serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. Stationed in Vietnam and far away from home, Angaiak forged an astute outlook on his region, his country, and the world itself. Upon his return, Angaiak enrolled in the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, where he became active in the preservation of his native language as part of the school’s Eskimo Language Workshop.
Inspired by the program’s work and a friendship with music student Stephen Halbern, Angaiak recorded I’m Lost in the City, a project that helped to document and promote the previously oral Yup’ik language into a written one through a series of songs. Each side of the album, which showcases John’s intimate vocal and guitar style, shares a part of Angaiak’s culture and history: Side One is sung in Yup’ik, while the material on Side Two is delivered in English. Both are equally emotional, deeply personal and extremely affecting.
Over 13 songs, Angaiak speaks to his community and also to the world. “Ak’a Tamaani,” for one, became a regional hit in Alaska and reached as far as Greenland where Angaiak later performed in concert. Though I’m Lost in the City garnered a small mention in industry bible Billboard, regardless of the album’s cultural value, it sold poorly outside of Alaska and other northern communities, never finding a broader audience. In addition to his work as a painter and author, Angaiak is a proud family man and a source of great knowledge of his people and the changes they have faced over the years, shifting from a subsistence hunting, fishing, and sharing lifestyle to an increasingly urban influenced cash-based existence. An important statement on indigenous life and the human condition, I’m Lost in the City showcases Angaiak’s first hand perspective on this challenging transition, something that we can all learn a great deal from.
Pre-order link: http://lightintheattic.net/releases/2253-i-m-lost-in-the-city
Saturday, October 3, 2015
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Native North America (NACC Season Launch)
NATIVE NORTH AMERICA
Opening
the season with aboriginal folk, rock, and country
Native
North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985
(NNA V1) is an archival music collection featuring 23 trailblazing
First Nations, Métis and Inuit artists and groups. Released to international
acclaim in November, 2014, NNA V1 has been profiled by CBC, NPR, The
Guardian and Rolling Stone who ranked the album #12 in its list of
the 40 Best Country Albums of 2014. Musically, the compilation showcases a
selection of dynamic Indigenous talent that combines personal, community,
spiritual, political and environmental thoughts, feelings and concerns with the
global pop explosion of the time. The stories behind the songs are equally
moving. In celebration of this decisive, yet still pertinent era, NACC is
thrilled to present NNA V1’s Willie Thrasher, with partner Linda
Saddleback, and John Angaiak for an evening of music, stories and images. NNA
V1 producer Kevin Howes will also present a slide show of images
documenting some of the lost treasures from this remarkable compilation.
Born
in Aklavik, NWT, Willie Thrasher has been performing since the 1960s,
initially as a drummer for early northern rock group the Cordells and then on
his own across Canada and the USA. Based in Nanaimo, BC, Thrasher now performs
alongside his partner, Linda Saddleback.
John
Angaiak is a Yup’ik singer-songwriter born in Nightmute, Alaska. He
began playing guitar at a young age before enlisting in the U.S. Armed Forces.
Upon return from service in Vietnam, John attended the University of Alaska,
Fairbanks, where he became active in Native language preservation as part of
the Eskimo Language Workshop. In 1971 he released the full-length album I’m
Lost in the City, which helped transform the once oral traditions of the
Yup’ik language into writing.
Kevin
“Sipreano” Howes is a Canadian music historian,
producer, artist, DJ and record collector based out of Vancouver, BC. For the
last 12 years he has worked in collaboration with Seattle/Los Angeles-based
Light in the Attic Records.
Show
is approximately 90-mins in length, with a 15-min intermission.
Re-post from http://www.naccnt.ca/events/nacc-season-shows/native-north-america-season-launch
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