Lost and Found - Sultans of String feat. Shannon Thunderbird
Автор: Sultans of String
Загружено: 2024-05-10
Просмотров: 4639
Описание:
Single released May 10, 2024
Stream/buy Album: https://sultansofstring.lnk.to/Walkin...
Physical CD order: https://merchmrkt.com/collections/sul...
Walking Through the Fire 2025 Dates!
Feb 22 - MONTREAL: Film - Folk Alliance International
Mar 7 - BURLINGTON: Film - Burlington Performing Arts Centre
Apr 5 - OTTAWA: Film at Mayfair - CFMAs
Apr 12 - TORONTO - LIVE Concert
Apr 26 - COLLINGWOOD - LIVE concert - Simcoe Street Theatre
May 2 - WATERLOO - Film screening - Parkminster United Church
Jun 5 - AURORA - Film - Aurora Town Square
JUL 13 - BRAMPTON - Film - Carabram Festival
SEP 27 - HAMILTON - Film - LIVELAb
OCT 5 - PARIS - LIVE Concert
OCT 16 - PEMBROKE - LIVE Concert
All tix at Sultans of String: https://sultansofstring.com
Please click here to learn more, including how we are including cultural safeguards in our work on this project: https://sultansofstring.com/2023/08/w...
This song is written and sung by Ts'msyen Singer-Songwriter SHANNON THUNDERBIRD, arranged with Sultans of String and recorded by John 'Beetle' Bailey.
It is one of the songs from Walking Through the Fire, our most ambitious and essential project of our career, a beautiful collection of collaborations with First Nations, Metis, and Inuit artists across Turtle Island.
We’re making this album in the spirit of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s 94 calls to action, and final report that asks for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people to work together as an opportunity to show a path forward.
We know that as a society we can’t move ahead without acknowledging and reflecting on the past. Before reconciliation can occur, the full truth of the Indigenous experience in this country needs to be told, so we’ve been calling on Indigenous artists to share with us their stories, their experience, and their lives, so we settler Canadians can continue our learning about the history of residential schools, of genocide, and of intergenerational impacts of colonization.
"The very fact that you're doing this tells me that you believe in the validity of our language, you believe in the validity of our art and our music and that you want to help to bring it out. And that's really what's important, is for people to have faith that we can do this... That's really good”
Honourable Murray Sinclair - Ojibwe Elder - former chair of the Truth & Reconciliation Commission
Many thanks for the support of non-Indigenous funding streams of the Ontario Arts Council and the Government of Ontario, and Canada Council for the Arts for their support of this project.
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