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The Evolution of Pow-wow
Singing
Growing up on the drum in the late
1960s provided me a valuable opportunity to witness and learn from
legends of pow-wow singers throughout Southwestern Oklahoma. Never
did I know as a young man that there were other pow-wow songs other
than Comanche and Kiowa music. It wasn't until my relatives brought
their friends to the drum that I first became aware of so much
intertribalism in pow-wow singing. They were Cheyenne, Arapahoe,
Caddo, Wichita, and Kiowa-Apache. It was a site to see all the
blending of many singers sit down at the big drum all in one large
circle in the middle of the pow-wow arena. I remember those singers
had distinct styles of singing and drumming. Many singers had
drumsticks made of dogwood. Today, we use fiberglass drumsticks. You
see, this was the beginnings of my training and knowledge of
Southern style pow-wow singing. I was so proud to be among such
accomplished singer-so many that prohibits mentioning them all.
It was an honor to sing with many
elders of the drum, those that preserved and even composed many of
the Southern pow-wow songs we sing today in 1997. I don't remember
back in the early '70s that anybody was recording any pow-wow songs
as frequent as they do today. I was told by older singers that you
should learn the songs at the drum, so I didn't bother buying a tape
player to record songs while singing at the drum. Traditional
singing was learned from rote memory, by listening to singers who
had remarkable memories. Many singers are able to learn new songs,
even from different tribes, by hearing it sung over and over. Lead
singers can have as many as one-to-two hundred pow-wow songs in
their musical repertoire of Indian music. Singers are truly gifted
and talented in their musical ability to compose songs and to sing
all as one.
Indian singing comes from the heart
and it interweaves the spiritual realm with their everyday world and
broadens them in many special ways. Pow-wow singing is a fusion of
modern American and tribal life into music and dance. It is part of
the oral tradition with inner meanings that depend upon cultural
memory and preservation. Music, like sound itself, is one of the
ancient natural forces given to Native peoples by the Creator.
Sounds, including music, are apart of space which is also a part of
nature. Music is clearly the sound of the natural mind and natural
world. The entire sound of music, with its movement and rhythmical
reality, is traditional. Most pow-wow singing is close communion
with nature and a singer maybe inspired by a song heard only in a
vision or dream. This event or process is natural instead of
rational.
Pow-wow songs in Oklahoma prior to
1970 were mostly old recordings on small commercial recording labels
or companies. They were large "48s" albums manufactured in different
colors schemes. The only location that I could by commercial Indian
music in those times were in Indian stores like Snoopy's and at
Indian City near Anadarko, Oklahoma or anywhere else that stocked
them. This period introduced pow-wow songs on 8-track tape
recordings. Most of the early first half-century musical recordings
were initiated by ethno-musicologist or those non-Indian people
working for museums.
In the mid '70s I moved on to college
at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Oklahoma where I
began learning many of the pow-wow songs of the Ponca, Osage,
Pawnee, Oto, Sac/Fox, and Shawnees. Their songs also were taught to
them by their elder singers. Once I began to understand the basic
meaning of their songs in their tribal languages, they became so
meaningful and beautiful to sing. Their songs were similar to the
songs of the Comanche and Kiowa. They had family songs, veteran
songs, memorial songs, flag songs, trot songs, snake dance songs,
two-step songs and of course, 49 songs. Additionally, I began to
understand the significance and concept of the "closed drum." This
was only when invited signers could sit at the drum, usually family
and ceremonial songs were sung throughout the session. Many of these
songs later became commercially available on cassette tape at the
Lyons' and Supernaws' Indian Stores in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Contest pow-wows started to get
strong in the early 1980s all over the country. More commercial
pow-wow songs were being recorded by popular Northern and Southern
drum groups. The recording companies were both Indian and non-Indian
owned by now. Contest pow-wow songs started a evolution as new
compositions were being brought out at the larger pow-wows
throughout the United States and Canada. Song composers were young
and older Indian singers. I started to see the beginning of live
recordings of pow-wow singing during this era. From albums, to
8-tracks, to cassette tapes and now to CDs, pow-wow songs have truly
transformed itself into a new technological era.
The 1990s exploded with commercial
pow-wow songs from all over the country, both Northern and Southern
style singing. Many drum groups travel the contest pow-wow trail
across the country registering their drum group hoping to win enough
money to pay their expenses for travel, food, housing and sometimes
entertainment. The better known drum usually got invited to the more
elaborate pow-wows that announced top prize money that showcased
outstanding drum groups. Tribal casinos started to sponsor giant
contest pow-wows offering record-breaking amounts of prize money.
Competition to win the drum contest at these big-money pow-wows
became fierce. They usually invited only the most popular drum
groups across the United States and Canada. Drum groups started
marketing their commercial recordings through regional distribution
outlets and through personal contacts. The evolution of pow-wow
songs by now had come a long way since the beginnings of just coming
together and enjoying the pleasure of singing and dancing. Pow-wow
singing now in the 1990s is big business and as in many cases it's
the only profession and income for those singers that do this full
time, year-after-year.
I'm very familiar with the human side
of traveling to pow-wows and all that it entails. Fifteen years of
traveling across the country with our own drum group, the
Alliance West Singers, we shared many of the same experiences of
being on the road going and coming, weekend-after-weekend from
contest pow-wows: making travel plans with your group, questions
about how many singers can we bring, where will they all stay, will
they feed us all, how much expenses will the host organization going
to pay, will they allow a blanket dance song for the host drum, will
we be able to sell our own commercial tapes, will we sing only the
contest songs, what about the flag song or grand entry song, etc. We
can't dismiss the reality of personal problems that occur among
group members like intertribal racism that occurs within singers and
pow-wow committees, ethnocentrism within regional dances, tribal
jealousies and feuds, break up of drum groups, as well as
confronting cultural challenges like allowing women to sit at the
drum with men, singing with other tribes' songs, song compositions
coming from non-traditional pow-wow cultures, and so forth. There
are so many unforeseen elements of culture that one sometimes gets
blinded by all that goes on at pow-wows. Of course, everybody wants
to feel good and have a good time, but unfortunately, contest
pow-wows today have to be operated like any other business or
enterprise, especially given the thousands of dollars handled out as
prize money.
I also see an evolution of the world
"traditional". For a while back in the 1970s and 1980s I began to
witness similar contest standards displayed across the country when
a pow-wow announcer said, "give us a traditional song." Today in
many part of this country, traditional song could be any pow-wows
song a drum group could think of at that moment in time. The
introduction of technology has also played an important role in the
evolution of today's songs. What is common today is to have
microphones assigned to each drum at large pow-wows, huge
loud-speakers standing tall--towering in front of the drums,
electricity hook ups necessary for amplifier connections, and even
cordless microphones rotating around the arena.
The evolution of pow-wow songs is
also the reflection of who we are as Native people-an evolving, ever
changing human beings. Whether the high pitched vocals of Northern
style singing to the low monotone voice of Southern style singing,
pow-wow singing slowly changes over time to fit the need of a
changing Indian society. while tribal society changes, so does the
people of their culture. However, some of the ancient tribal values
still remain the same. These traits are what reflect and reminds us
of who we are as tribal people. Without music there can be no dances
or pow-wows, therefore, there must be singers committed to carrying
out this rich tradition for another generation of Native people to
enjoy. It's about who we are as tribal people. It's about our Indian
identity. So as we venture into the 21st century, the challenge of
singing at pow-wows is to remind each other of the songs and respect
for the people who have created these beautiful songs. Can our
time-tested tribal values be able to preserve pow-wow songs in the
future? That is my hope for the next millennium for I have hope for
younger generations of Indian singers. Today, we still continue to
compose new songs yet sing traditional songs at pow-wows for the
Seventh Generation.
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