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Encyclopedia > Dene music
Native American/First Nation music
Music of the United States Music of Canada
Pan-tribal genres
Chicken scratch Ghost Dance
Hip hop Native American flute
Peyote song Powwow
Tribal sounds
Apache Arapaho
Blackfoot Dene
Inuit Iroquois
Kiowa Navajo
Omaha Pueblo (Hopi, Zuni)
Sioux (Lakota, Dakota) Yuman

The Dene live in northern Canada. Their music includes modern rock and country songs, jigs and reels, work songs, community dances, numerous kinds of religious songs and lullabies. There are hundreds of tribes of Native Americans (called the First Nations in Canada), each with diverse musical practices, spread across the United States and Canada (excluding Hawaiian music). ... Stephen Foster, the first popular American songwriter The music of the United States includes a number of kinds of distinct folk and popular music, including some of the most widely-recognized styles in the world. ... Canadian music includes pop and folk genres; the latter includes forms derived from England, France (particularly in Quebec), Ireland, Scotland, and various Inuit and Native American ethnic groups. ... Chicken scratch (waila music) is a kind of dance music developed by the Tohono Oodham people. ... This article deals with the Native American spiritual movement Ghost Dance. ... Native American hip hop is popular among natives in the United States and the First Nations of Canada. ... Peyote songs are a form of Native American music, performed as part of the Native American Church. ... Blackfoot music (best translated in the Blackfoot language as nitsínixki - I sing, from nínixksini - song) is primarily a vocal kind of music, using few instruments (called ninixkiátsis, derived from the word for song and associated primarily with European-American instruments), only percussion and voice, and few words. ... The Inuit live across the northern sections of Canada, especially in Yukon, Nunavat and Northwest Territories, as well as in Alaska and Greenland. ... The Dene are a group of indigenous peoples that live in the Arctic regions of Canada. ... Canada is a sovereign state in northern North America, the northern-most country in the world, and the second largest in total area. ... This article is about the folk dance jig, for other meanings, see Jig (disambiguation). ... A reel may also refer to a type of dance and its accompanying music. ... A work song is a typically acoustic rhythmic song sung by persons who are working in likely mundane conditions. ... This page is for lullaby, the song. ...


Dene folk music uses melodies similar to European scales with the coloration of blues notes. Syncopation is common, as are pulsating vocal styles. Melodies generally follow a descending pattern. Many songs, especially Drum Dances, ended with a vocal glissando and percussion break, along with a spoken thank you (mahsi). Vocables are very common. Look up Melody in Wiktionary, the free dictionary In music, a melody is a series of linear events or a succession, not a simultaneity as in a chord. ... In music, syncopation is the stressing of a normally unstressed beat in a bar or the failure to sound a tone on an accented beat. ... Glissando (plural: glissandi) is a musical term that refers to either a continuous sliding from one pitch to another (a true glissando), or an incidental scale played while moving from one melodic note to another (an effective glissando). ... A vocable is a word used without meaning. ...


Songs are typically composed anonymously, though there are no taboos on anyone writing most songs. Only two composers are well remember, Chief Victor (Fort Franklin on Bear Lake) and Yatsule (born at Fort Norman in 1879). Bear Lake may refer to: Several lakes named Bear Lake in Alaska in the United States Several lakes named Bear Lake in Michigan in the United States Bear Lake along the Idaho-Utah border in the United States. ... 1879 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Native American music: Information from Answers.com (3688 words)
The music of the Pima and Papago is intermediary between the Plains-Pueblo and the California-Yuman music areas, with melodic movement of the Yuman, though including the rise, and the form and rhythm of the Pueblo.
This area's music is characterized by extreme vocal tension, pulsation, melodic preference for perfect fourths and a range averring a tenth, rhythmic complexity, and increased frequence of tetratonic scales.
Music of the Great Basin is simple, discrete and ornate, characterized by short melodies with a range smaller than an octave, moderately-blended monophony, relaxed and open vocals and, most uniquely, paired-phrase structure, in which a melodic phrases, repeated twice, is alternated with one to two additional phrases.
CMT.com : Terry Dene & Dene Aces : Biography (395 words)
Dene's potential for success was severely damaged, however, by a series of self-imposed mishaps.
Arrested for public drunkenness and vandalism in 1958, Dene was cited by the British media as an example of the "evil" of rock & roll.
A native of London, Dene was heavily influenced by the early recordings of Elvis Presley and Gene Vincent.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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