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A Inuit live across a northern sections of Canada, especially in Yukon, Nunavut and Northwest Territories, when well as within Alaska and Greenland. Traditional Inuit music has been depending around drums used in danceroom music when far back when may be known, & the vocal style known as katajjaq has become of interest inside Canada & overseas.

Inside Inuit no word for even what a European-influenced hearer or ethnomusicologist's understanding of music, "and ethnographic investigation seems to suggest that the concept of music as such is also absent from their culture." A nighest word, nipi, includes music, a healthy of speech, & noise. (Nattiez 1990:56) Until a advent of commercial recording technology, Inuit music was unremarkably utilized around spiritual ceremonies to ask a spirits (view Inuit mythology) for good luck inside hunting or gambling, when well as elementary lullabies. Inuit music has hanker been noted for the stoical want of work or love songs. These musical beginnings were modified by owning a arrival of European sailors, especially from Scotland and Ireland. Instruments such as a accordion were popularized, and dances rather a jig or reel became common. Scotch-Irish derived American country music has been especially popular among Inuits in the 20th century.

Nettl (1956, p.107) names the as a consequence characteristics of Inuit music: recitative-such as singing, complex rhythmical organization, comparatively little melodic range averging just about a sixth, prominance of major thirds & minor seconds melodically, by having undulating melodic movement.

A Canadian Broadcasting Service has been broadcasting music in Inuit communities since 1961, when the station was opened within Iqaluit, Northwest Territories. Charlie Panigoniak was the right-known of the early Inuit recording stars, & he remains the popular accordion-player. A best known Inuit performing artist, notwithstanding, come Susan Aglukark (b. 1967) and Tanya Tagaq Gillis. Inside Greenland, there exists an Inuit hip hop crew called Nuuk Posse, which formed in 1985 and raps in the Kalaallisut language.[http://www.milkycat.com/reviews/nuukrvw.html]

Katajjaq

Katajjaq (also pirkusirtuk & nipaquhiit) occurs as nature and severity of traditional competitory song, considered the game, normally held between deuce women. These are one of the world's couple of examples of throat-singing, a unique method of producing sounds that is otherwise right-known inside Tuvan throat-singing. spell competing, deuce women could have face-to-face & sing applying the complex method of as punishment both more, so that the individual voice hits the heavy accent while the more hits a feeble, melding them voices into a about undistinguishable single healthy. It repeat brief motifs at staggered intervals, typically imitating a sounds of geese, caribou or even other wildlife, until a single diarrhea panting, trips on top her have tongue, or begins laughing, & a contest is so terminated. "The old woman who teaches the children corrects sloppy intonation of contours, poorly meshed phase displacements, and vague rhythms exactly like a Western vocal coach." (Nattiez 1990:57)

Source
Nattiez, Jean-Jacques (1987). Music & Discourse: Toward the Semiology of Music (Musicologie générale et sémiologue, 1987). Translated by Carolyn Abbate (1990). ISBN 0691027145. Nettl, Bruno (1956). Music around Primitive Culture. Harvard University Click.

Inuit Music
Article covering drum dancing, personal songs, and throat singing.

Inuit Throat-Singing
Includes an interview with Evie Mark, suggested CDs, and references.

Inukshuk Productions
Nunavik based record company specializing in contemporary and traditional Inuit music. Includes studio equipment and rates and a CD catalog with artist profiles, audio samples, and ordering. [English/French]

CJTM: Charlie Panigoniak: Eskimo Music in Transition
Lynn Whidden examines the influences the music styles of different generations have on each other.

Inuit Thoat Singing
Two audio samples.

Tudjaat
Photograph and brief profile of the throat-singing duo, Madeleine Allakariallak and Pheobe Atagotaaluk.

Nunatsiaq News: Kattajjatiit From Generation to Generation
Alison Blackduck's interview of throat-singers Minnie and Madeleine Allakariallak.

AANA: Drumdancers
Includes cultural uses of drumdancing and a photograph.

Drum Dancing
Account of the tradition, with lyrics.

CBC Musical Memories: Drum Dance of the Copper Inuit
Report on Diamond Jenness' recording of hundreds of Inuit drum dance songs on wax cylinders. Links.


Regional: North America: United States: Alaska: Arts and Entertainment: Cultural
Society: Ethnicity: The Americas: Indigenous: Inuit





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