January 18, 2002
Fiddler on fire
Colin Adjun is the "fiddler of the Arctic," and the pride of Kugluktuk
OTTAWA Colin Adjun
takes up his fiddle and the crowd lights up. The "fiddler of the Arctic,"
as hes known, Adjun is the pride of Kugluktuk and one of the main entertainers
at the Inuit Tapiriiksat Kanatami gala in Ottawa this night.
He interprets old favourites
and his own compositions with the same seamless skill and its not
long before the dance floor fills up.
Adjun, 57, showed promise
as a musician at a young age. He says he was born "with music in my head"
and first learned to play when he was a young boy living out on the land.
"My two uncles [Charlie
Avakana and John Kuneyuk] played the fiddle, and they taught me when we were
living in the outpost camp," Adjun says.
He recalls fondly how the
family would gather on Saturday nights around a big, old radio and listen to
a country music broadcast from Edmonton.
"Thats how I
learned the tunes," Adjun says. "Once you have the tune in your head,
you remember it."
By the age of 12, he was
already playing at square dances. He admits, however, that it took a while for
him to feel comfortable performing in front of large groups. "When I started,
I was really shaky," Adjun says.
Since those early days,
Adjun has overcome his stage fright, performing with confidence and style. Over
the years, hes played at many community celebrations, special events and
music festivals from coast to coast.
As a fiddler and performer,
Adjun is easily on par with the new stars of Canadian fiddle music. But despite
the growing fame of fiddlers from Cape Breton, and the increasing popularity
of fiddle music in general, Adjun isnt interested in turning professional.
"Im not that
kind of person. I dont think Id want to do it as a living,"
said Adjun, who has been a territorial wildlife officer for more than 20 years.
He has, however, made three
recordings of his fiddle music, which are widely played on northern radio shows.
Adjuns latest CD,
produced in 1995, featured original compositions including the dreamy "Beluga
Waters," the lively "Gustins Reel" for his son and "When
you look into my eyes," which he wrote for his wife, Mavis Elias.
Adjun has also written
a tune called the "Politicians Jig" which he describes as fast,
and, no doubt, playful.
While he doesnt read
music, Adjun says he can learn a new melody merely by listening to it, and he
knows hundreds of different ones. Sometimes when he is playing with fellow fiddlers,
tunes he thought hed forgotten come back into his head.
Like the tunes he plays,
each of Adjuns fiddles tells a story. When he and his family went to the
DEW-line site at Hall Beach in 1958, Adjun met a man with a fiddle to sell.
"I really wanted that
fiddle. He wanted $15 for it, so I sold my sealskin jacket. It was a fancy jacket
made by my mother," Adjun says. "But I badly wanted that fiddle."
Adjun laughs as he tells
the story. He now owns four fiddles.
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