Nimki and the Niniis |
That makes some sense because there are never late night
showcases in the ballrooms, and it also makes sense because, before I left that
room, my friend Mike Warren and I were dancing in a great circle with magnificent
Turtle Island traditional dancers and virtually everyone else in the ballroom.
Those dancers provided kaleidoscopic percussion with their moves, but the
driving sound came from the song and drum group, Nimki and the Niniis from
Wiikwemkoong, Ontario.
Mikhail Laxton |
We got there just in time to see a poignant, acoustic set by
Mikhail Laxton. His country-soul songs cut close with thoughts on family
relationships, love lost, and love cherished, sometimes all at the same time. https://mikhaillaxton.com/
Barker and backing vocalist Nalam went someplace even more
akin to straight soul music, Barker probing with her electric guitar and vocals,
extending the heartaches to fundamental questions of self-worth. Nalam backed
Barker’s vocals in her own unique way, occasionally offering trills that worked
like bubbling punctuation. Barker mentioned newer musicians coming to her about
their insecurities and uncertainty whether they should continue. She exclaimed,
“Congratulations, you’re an artist,” before launching into “Intuition,” a song
about trusting your gut. https://www.ilabarker.com/
Hera Nalam and Ila Barker |
Nimki and the Niniis brought that part of the evening to an out-of-body crescendo, sometimes standing and singing with their drums and other times sitting in a drum circle to accompany the dancing. Nimki explained that the center drum in the circle was called the heart drum, drawing parallels between that sound and the heartbeat of our mothers—before we are born, our first teacher. He also acknowledged the full moon, which couldn’t have been more appropriate considering the energy in every room of the house last night. https://nimkiiandtheniniis.bandcamp.com/album/nimkii-the-niniis
We soon found ourselves upstairs in the British Underground acoustic room, catching the end of a set by Lady Nade. Her silky soprano warmed the room and demanded we catch a full set before this is all over. https://ladynade.co.uk/
Lady Nade |
The following set by instrumental duo, Hildaland (Scottish
fiddler Louise Bichan and Indiana mandolinist Ethan Setiawan) brought a
tapestry of wild, reeling rhythms and songs dedicated to silver wedding
anniversaries, the sound of sleet, and the pleasures of sleeping in (which will
be something to look forward to sometime near the end of these four days). https://www.hildaland.com/
Hildaland |
Mike and I caught only three songs in what we decided would
be the final set for the evening, Shakura S’Aida accompanied by Brooke
Blackburn (of 2023 Juno award-winning The Blackburn Brothers). Blackburn generally
sat and played the guitar, although sometimes his enthusiasm brought him out of
his seat. He provided hard-driving rhythms to serve S’Aida’s commanding vocals.
And I mean commanding quite literally because, late to the room, we learned what it meant to take the front row. S’Aida wasted no time directing us to face off and illustrate that first song’s pledge to have each other’s backs. It was the ultimate ice breaker. S’Aida handled that room like a gracious host, greeting another late comer with all the information she needed to get settled, find a beverage and feel at home.
Shakura S'Aida |
The last song S’Aida did was “Clap Yo Hands and Moan.” She
credited her old songwriting partner Keb Mo with part of the inspiration. She quoted
him saying, “The devil can’t hear you when you moan,” and launched into a song
with the powerful refrain, “If you need to call up heaven, and you’ve got the
devil on the phone, stomp your feet…, clap your hands…, and moan.” Starting
soft, the song built to one blues-shout and moan crescendo after another, the
crowd clapping on point. https://www.shakurasaida.com/
Bimiwizh: Listen, Carry, Dance with Nimki and the Niniis
Thanks for great report. Sorry I missed all that, but not sorry for catching other discoveries.
ReplyDeleteOh, that's the whole thing, isn't it? There's no way to be everywhere, but where ever you go is probably wonderful.
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks, Steve!