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2006 November/December On the Wind (News)

New Migrations for Redcrow


Though he is best known as an actor, activist and frank spokesman for

Indian people (see July/Aug. 2005 issue), Floyd Redcrow Westerman

(Dakota) continues to fly in new directions, most recently with the

release of the first works in a series of bronze busts of well-known

Indian leaders of the past, and his first new recording in many

years—at 71 years of age!






Actor and activist Westerman is

also a talented musician and budding sculptor—his bronze bust of

Sitting Bull rests behind him. right: The new Berlin Gallery at the

Heard Museum in Phoenix, AZ. Photo:Kitty Leaken

 





 “I guess I may never get to do a film series about all these great

leaders as I’d hoped, but I’m trying to honor them with these

sculptures,” Westerman says. “I want people to know that they were the

defenders of this land and their people against the aggressive

European-Americans, who labeled them ‘red skin savages.’ They sought to

protect the soul of their people against overwhelming odds and never

faltered, even though, as I’ve tried to show, there was a sadness in

their eyes at the end, seeing what was coming.”





So far, he has completed busts of Sitting Bull, Chief Joseph and

Geronimo, and begun another series that will reflect typical scenes in

Indian life—in this case a man holding the sacred pipe.





Though he began his musical career in the 1960s—his early albums Custer Died for Your Sins and The Land Is Your Mother have just been re-released on a single 22-track CD titled Going Back—in recent years music has taken a backseat to his acting (Dances with Wolves, Renegade, The Doors, Hidalgo,

etc. and numerous television roles). However, with his deep bass voice

and musical sensibilities honed on Hank Williams and other country

greats, his newest CD, A Tribute to Johnny Cash

(Hen House Studios) is a perfect match for the artist as heard on such

songs as “Ring of Fire,” “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down,” “Busted” and

“Folsom Prison Blues.”





As his friend and fellow performer Kris Kristofferson says, “I think

Johnny would be especially proud of this tribute album. Not just

because of his high regard for Floyd or his own lifelong identification

with Native Americans, but because it is such a respectful, loving

portrayal of the man’s work.” Details: Box 10464, Marina del Rey, CA

90295, 310/827-3604 or floydredcrowwesterman.com.