ON THE COVER
Jana—Powerful Pop With a Native Soul
We lead off our annual Native music issue with an insightful portrait
of this powerful young Lumbee performer, whose brief career already
includes a Billboard Magazine Single of the Week, a Grammy co-nomination and a Nammy for Best Pop Artist.
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ON THE COVER
Jana, the Lumbee sensation, leads off our annual Native music issue.
Photo by Carter M. James. Digital imaging by Yukari Toshinomiya.
Jewelry by David Saity.
FEATURES
Special Music Section
Our annual tribute to the diverse range of Native musicians, bands and
recording companies ushering in a sonic boom from traditional to
cutting-edge music of the First Americans.
Jana: Powerful Pop with a Native Soul
An insightful portrait of this powerful young Lumbee performer, Jana
Sampson, whose brief career already includes a Billboard Magazine
Single of the Week, a Grammy co-nomination and a Nammy for Best Pop
Artist. By RoseMary Diaz (Santa Clara Pueblo).
Indigenous: Incendiary Blues, Nakota-Style
Open up your bleeding ears to the fiery passions of this bad, bad band
from South Dakota and its guitar wizard, Mato Nanji—perhaps the next
Stevie Ray Vaughan. By Bruce Hucko. Photography by Dan Coogan.
Brulé: The Long Road Home
Explore the long and winding path that has taken Paul LaRoche (Brule
Sioux) from a bar band to a leading position within the Native music
realm, with numerous hit CDs. By j. poet. Photography by Kathy Summers
LaRoche.
Canyon Strikes Gold with Native Recordings
A look backward and forward with this groundbreaking Arizona-based
recording company that has played such a prominent role in the rising
crescendo of Native music. By Andrew Means.
Vignettes: 11 Leading Bands and Musicians
Brief profiles on prominent Native musicians and bands, from
traditional powwow groups to avant-garde sonic experimenters: Black
Lodge Singers, Chester Knight & the Wind, Bill Miller, Robert
Mirabal, R. Carlos Nakai, Redbone, Robbie Robertson, Keith Secola,
Joanne Shenandoah, John Trudell and Ulali. Written by an illustrious
group of Native and non-Native authors immersed in the music scene.
Who’s Who in Native Music
A provocative list of our other favorite Native groups and musicians,
with notes on each one, from the obscure to the well-known, reggae to
rap, country-western to jazz. By Daniel Gibson.
Eiteljorg Museum Section
Connecting Cultures: The Eiteljorg Museum Bridges Native America and the West
An in-depth tour of this extraordinary Indianapolis institution, the
Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art. By Julie Pratt
McQuiston.
The Sky’s the Limit: Keeping Culture Alive at the Eiteljorg’s Indian Market
Join us for an armchair excursion to the 10th annual Indian Market at
the Eiteljorg Museum in Indianapolis, which includes the largest juried
show of Native arts in the Midwest. By Julie Pratt McQuiston.
Woodlands Cultures
Get
to know a bit about the history and cultural wealth of some of the many
Woodlands peoples, who once inhabited, in great force, the nation’s
heartland in and around Indiana. By Rita Kohn.
DEPARTMENTS
On The Wind
Native lands are returning to Native hands through a unique program; a
major new Indian culture center rises in Oklahoma City. Plus, other
important news in the art world, public service, education, politics
and other realms of life—and death—in Indian Country. By Daniel Gibson.
Happening
Head on out to Oklahoma City for the annual gathering of artists,
powwow dancers and others at the Red Earth Festival in early June.
Also, details on many other special events of Native importance across
North America. By Daniel Gibson.
Spirit of the Harvest
Take a peek into the color, customs and food traditions of Carnival, as celebrated in Bolivia. By Beverly Cox and Martin Jacobs.
Pathways
Come along on a tour of the Native cultural and historic sites, museums
and events associated with the proud heritage of the Native cultures of
the greater Ohio River Valley region, including Indiana and parts of
Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois and Michigan. By Kathleen Schuckel.
Focus on Education
Training the next generation of leaders in Indian Country is a priority
in the nation’s Indian colleges. By Suzette Brewer (Cherokee).
Museums
New York City’s prestigious American Craft Museum lays to
rest—hopefully forever—the question “Is it art?” regarding Native
creative works with a huge exhibition of work by some 90 Southwestern
Native artists titled Changing Hands: Art Without Reservation. Also,
previews of other exhibitions opening at museums coast to coast. By
Wendy Weston (Navajo).
Galleries
Go West to immerse yourself in the art of the Arctic at Images of the
North gallery in San Francisco. Also, brief looks at other openings and
ongoing exhibitions at leading Native-oriented galleries throughout the
nation. By Russ Tall Chief (Osage).