July 14, 2006
Celtic music heartland
is alive with sound of throat singing
Transplanted Bay Chimo
native introduces Nova Scotians to traditional Inuit songs
JACKIE
WALLACE
Angela
Hovak Johnston and her husband moved their family from Kugluktuk to Nova Scotia
in 2002. (PHOTOS COURTESY OF ANGELA HOVAK JOHNSTON)
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Nova Scotia, the musical
home of Ashley MacIsaac, Rita McNeil and all things Celtic, has never heard
anything quite like Angela Hovak Johnston's recording session.
Johnston, a transplanted
native of Bay Chimo, spent the spring in a recording studio in Lunnenberg, N.S.
and emerged with an 11-track album with six songs in Inuinnaqtun, three throat
singing songs and two English songs.
"A lot of people in
Nova Scotia have never heard throat singing before," said Johnston. "They
are so appreciative because they don't know a lot about Inuit culture."
Her first CD, Nipiga (My
Voice), was released on June 29 and she has been making the rounds of the Nova
Scotia summer festival circuit, performing her songs and educating audiences
with bits of Inuit legends and history.
Born in Bay Chimo in 1975,
Johnston went to school in Cambridge Bay, and was living in Kugluktuk with her
husband and their young family when she made the tough decision to leave the
Arctic and move to her husband's hometown of Bridgewater, N.S.
Although she has come to
enjoy her new home, living outside of the Arctic without any real Inuit community
has caused some concern for Johnston.
As she started to lose
her fluency in Inuinnaqtun, she worried that her three young sons would be deprived
of that connection with their past. "It's hard to teach it to my boys now
that we aren't living in the Arctic," she said.
She was driven to make
an album in her mother tongue to record the language for her boys and to keep
the dialect, spoken only by a small number of people, alive.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Living
outside of the Arctic inspired Johnston to record an album of throat singing
and songs in Inuinnaqtun to help preserve her Inuit language and culture.
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Johnston has performed
her traditional songs at multi-cultural festivals, a powwow on National Aboriginal
Day and in a variety of venues with a wide-range of musicians.
"There are so many
musicians in Nova Scotia," she said. ' It gets you in the groove."
Although there are lots of musicians around, Johnston has yet to see another
Inuit performer in the province.
It was her unique talents
that helped get Johnston into a recording studio for the first time. A string
band called Drumlin, consisting of a cello, violin and guitar played by three
talented boys between the ages of seven and sixteen, invited Johnston to collaborate
with them and sing on their album.
After that Johnston was
bitten by the studio bug and started looking for a place to record an album
of her own. She was looking to work with someone familiar with Inuit language
and throat singing, but was worried that would be hard to find. "I didn't
want someone who was just going to enhance my voice," said Johnston.
Then she caught word of
James Shaw, owner of Red Fish Audio, a recording studio located inside an old
opera house, who had spent years in the Arctic working at the correctional facility
in Iqaluit. After they met, Johnston had no doubts that he was the right person
to help her make her record.
After another great recording
experience, Johnston was thrilled and proud to have produced a CD of her own
songs, many of which are very personal to her. Since writing her first song
seven years ago, after the birth of her first son, Johnston has used song writing
not only as a form of cultural preservation but also as a kind of personal therapy.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Johnston's
album, Nipiga (My Voice), is available at Arctic Closet in Cambridge Bay, Aurora
Gallery in Yellowknife and on her website at
www.angelahovak.com.
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A track on the album called
"Travel" is a song written for her parents about the sadness she experienced
when she moved away from the Arctic. Another track, called "Don't,"
was a way for her to deal with her experiences of sexual abuse while growing
up, and to help others with similar experiences.
"That song is for
people who have been abused," she said. "I wanted to get the message
out that it's not ok and we don't have to accept abuse."
Beyond her own personal
battles, Johnston wants to inspire people through her music, particularly aboriginal
women. "As aboriginal women we have a voice and we shouldn't be afraid
to use it," she said.
Since recording her own
CD, Johnston has been less afraid of using her own voice, particularly on stage.
"I love performing. I love the feedback I get," she said, admitting
that a few years ago this wasn't the case when any criticism would have sent
her running to lock herself in her room.
"I feel like I'm a
whole person now," she said. "I've learned that if you fall you just
get up again."
Nipiga is available in
Nova Scotia, as well as at Arctic Closet in Cambridge Bay, the Aurora Gallery
in Yellowknife and on Johnston's website at www.angelahovak.com.
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