Native American Music Shoshone

Shoshone native tribe

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  2. Some of my greatest conversations and inspirations,have occurred around a fire. Is it the smell, the warmth, or the glow and abstract images in the flames.
  3. The Shoshone Indians were far-ranging people. Different bands of Shoshoni Indians lived in what is now Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, and even parts of California. Most Shoshone people still live in these areas today. How is the Shoshone Indian nation organized?

This is a list of Native American musicians and singers. They are notable musicians and singers, who are from Peoples indigenous to the contemporary United States, including Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and Native Americans in the United States.[1][2]Native American identity is a complex and contested issue. The Bureau of Indian Affairs defines Native American as having American Indian or Alaska Native ancestry. Legally, being Native American is defined as being enrolled in a federally recognized tribe or Alaskan village. Ethnologically, factors such as culture, history, language, religion, and familial kinships can influence Native American identity.[3]

All individuals on this list should have Native American ancestry. Historical figures might predate tribal enrollment practices and would be included based on ethnological tribal membership, while any contemporary individuals should either be enrolled members of federally recognized tribes or have cited Native American ancestry and be recognized as being Native American by their respective tribes(s). Contemporary unenrolled individuals are listed as being of descent from a tribe.

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Classical[edit]

  • Steven Alvarez (composer, percussionist, film & stage producer)(Yaqui/Mescalero Apache/Upper Tanana Athabascan)[4]
  • Timothy Archambault (composer and flutist)(KichesipiriniAlgonquin First Nation)[4]
  • Dawn Avery (composer, cellist, vocalist, educator)(Mohawk)[4]
  • Louis W. Ballard (Quapaw/Cherokee), 'known as the father of Native American composition[4]
  • John Kim Bell (conductor, pianist, composer)(Kahnawake Mohawk)[4]
  • Raven Chacon (composer and visual artist)(Navajo)[4]

Native American Music Artists

Country and folk[edit]

  • Pura Fé (Tuscarora)
  • Marvin Rainwater (self-identified Cherokee descent)
  • Marty Robbins (Paiute descent)
  • Buffy Sainte-Marie (Piapot Cree)
  • Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida)
  • Buddy Red Bow (Lakota)
  • Billy ThunderKloud (Gitksan)
  • Joanelle Romero [[Apache people]Apache]]

Gospel[edit]

  • Johnny P. Curtis (San Carlos Apache)

Blues[edit]

  • Charley Patton (Cherokee descent)
  • Martha Redbone, Choctaw-Shawnee-descent musician
  • Joanelle Romero, Apache

Jazz[edit]

  • Mildred Bailey (jazz singer) (Coeur d'Alene)
  • Carl T. Fischer (Cherokee descent)
  • Jim Pepper (Muscogee Creek-Kaw)
  • Oscar Pettiford (Choctaw-Cherokee)
  • Big Chief Russell Moore (Pima, 1912–1983)
  • Kalil Wilson (jazz singer)(Carib)

Native American flute[edit]

  • Timothy Archambault (Kichesipirini)
  • Robert Tree Cody (Hunkpapa/Maricopa)
  • Brent Michael Davids, (Stockbridge Mohican) composer and flutist
  • Joseph FireCrow (Cheyenne)
  • Hawk Littlejohn (Eastern Band Cherokee)
  • Charles Littleleaf (Warm Springs/Blackfoot)
  • Kevin Locke (Lakota)
  • Tom Mauchahty-Ware (Kiowa-Comanche)
  • Bill Miller (Mahican)
  • Robert Mirabal (Taos Pueblo)
  • R. Carlos Nakai (Navajo/Ute)
  • Sonny Nevaquaya (Comanche)
  • Jay Red Eagle (Cherokee Nation)
  • Andrew Vasquez (Kiowa Apache)
  • Tommy Wildcat (Cherokee Nation-Muscogee Creek-Natchez)
  • Mary Youngblood (Aleut-Seminole)

Native American protest singers[edit]

  • Pura Fé (Tuscarora)
  • Floyd Red Crow Westerman (Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate)
  • Buffy Sainte-Marie (Cree)
AmericanNative american music shoshone tribe

New age and world music[edit]

  • Brulé (Sioux)
  • Joanne Shenandoah (Oneida)
  • Verdell Primeaux and Johnny Mike (Oglala/Yankton/Ponca/Navajo)
  • Ulali (Tuscarora/Apache/Yaqui)

Pop and rock[edit]

  • Chuck Billy of Testament (Pomo)
  • Jimmy Carl Black (Cheyenne)
  • Blackfire (Navajo)
  • Jim Boyd (Colville)[5]
  • Todd Tamanend Clark (Seneca and Lenape)[6]
  • Rita Coolidge (self-identified Cherokee descent)
  • Jesse Ed Davis (Comanche-Kiowa-Muscogee-Seminole)
  • Willy DeVille (Pequot)
  • Champion Jack Dupree (Cherokee descent)
  • Gary Duncan of Quicksilver Messenger Service (Skidi Pawnee)
  • Jimi Hendrix (Cherokee descent)
  • Nokie Edwards (Cherokee)
  • Mark Farner (self-identified Cherokee descent)
  • Joy Harjo and Poetic Justice (Muscogee/Cherokee)
  • Indigenous (Nakota)
  • Debora Iyall of Romeo Void (Cowlitz)
  • Jana (Lumbee)
  • Wayne Newton (self-identified Cherokee/Powhatan descent[7])
  • Grant-Lee Phillips (Muscogee (Creek)), Red Earth
  • Redbone, members are mostly Yaqui-Shoshone
  • Robbie Robertson (Mohawk)
  • Keith Secola (Ojibwa)
  • John Trudell (Santee Dakota)[8]
  • Link Wray (self-identified Shawnee descent)
  • XIT, members are Colville, Isleta Pueblo, Diné, and Muscogee Creek
  • Spencer Battiest (Choctaw)
  • Joey Belladonna (self-identified Iroquois descent[9])
  • Rickey Medlocke (Lakota Sioux and Cherokee)
  • Greg T. Walker (Muscogee Creek)
  • Sky Ferreira (Chippewa Cree)

Rap and hip hop[edit]

  • Angel Haze (Cherokee)
  • Julian B. (Muscogee Creek)
  • Litefoot (Cherokee Nation-Chichimeca)
  • Taboo (Shoshone)
  • Frank Waln (Sicangu Lakota)

Powwow music[edit]

Native american music mp3
  • Black Lodge Singers (Blackfeet)
  • Cozad Singers (Kiowa)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Notable American Indians
  2. ^Famous Native Americans
  3. ^'IV. Our Nation’s American Indian and Alaska Native Citizens.'US Department of the Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
  4. ^ abcdefHirschfelder, Arlene B. and Molin, Paulette Fairbanks (2012). The Extraordinary Book of Native American Lists, p.376-7. Scarecrow Press. ISBN9780810877092.
  5. ^'The Jim Boyd Band'. Jim Boyd. Archived from the original on 2008-03-22. Retrieved 2008-03-04.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  6. ^Mayor, Adrienne (2013). Fossil Legends of the First Americans. Princeton University Press. p. 350. ISBN978-1400849314.
  7. ^https://indiancountrynews.net/index.php/283-culture/reviews/1479-wayne-newton-dances-with-the-stars
  8. ^'John Trudell'. Biography. Archived from the original on 2008-02-22. Retrieved 2008-03-04.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  9. ^Patrello, Christopher (14 Apr 2014). ''Run to the Hills?' – Representations of Native Americans in Heavy Metal'. InVisible Culture. Retrieved 13 November 2018.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Native_American_musicians&oldid=1022675777'

The Shoshone Indians on the East and West of the Rocky Mountains were one in the same, but they were very different in the ways of life. They covered parts of California, California, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. The northern group of the Shoshone Indians were the Shoshoni. They had settled along the Snake River in Utah. The Western group, sometimes called the Panamint, lived in central Idaho, northwestern Utah, central Nevada, and in California around the Death and Panamint Valleys. The Eastern Shoshone's lived in northern Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana but had conflicts with the neighboring tribes. Around 1750, the eastern Shoshone Indian conflicts with the Lakota, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Arapahos, and Crow tribes shoved them southwest.

The introduction of the horse to the western Shoshone Indians in the 1700'smade life much easier for the tribe. They were able to hunt larger prey and starttrading. Although they were not afraid to fight, they stayed clear of their fierceenemies, the Pocatello and Crow Indians. The Treaty of Ruby Valley was a peacetreaty that was signed in 1863 granting the U.S. to establish permanent reservationsfor the western Shoshone Indians on their territory. It also allowed the governmentrights of way and mining rights with in the land.
Since Sacajawea's contact with Lewis and Clark the eastern Shoshone Indianswere friendly towards the Americans. They signed many treaties starting withthe commonly know Five State Treaty.
As the white settlers began moving up to the Great Salt Lake in 1862, they hadtaken over the Cache Valley. The Shoshone Indians of the north fought back byattacking the mining parties going to and from Montana and raiding the herds. Their aggression came to an end when Colonel Patrick Edward Connor leadthe attack known as the Bear River Massacre in late January 1863. At least 250Shoshone Indians were killed, leaving the rest to sign the Treaty of Box elderin order to bring peace to the nation.

Native American Music Shoshone Indians


Native American Music Shoshone

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