Monday, November 30, 2009

Labrador Inuit diary - documentary broadcast

A new feature documentary from Battery Radio can be heard on CBC Radio IDEAS Monday Nov 30th and Tuesday Dec. 1st

Listen online at: http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/

ABRAHAM'S DIARY traces the tragic story of 2 Labrador Inuit families who travelled to Europe in 1880 to be exhibited in zoos.

The late 19th century saw the rise of scientific racism in Europe, and those who flocked to the zoo exhibit expected to gape at "exotics" from some "primitive race". What they found instead were Labradorimiut who spoke 3 languages, played German hymn tunes on violin, and who were keeping their own ethnographic notes on the "uncivilised" Europeans. Tragically, both families died of smallpox, but not before Abraham Ulrikab wrote his impressions of the trip in a remarkable diary.

The 2-hour special features the voices of Solomon Simeak, Robin McGrath, Tom Gordon, Rainer Baehre, Hans Rollman, Mary Simon, Aaju Peter, Aiden Flynn and others. Part One will be heard on Monday night, with Part Two the following evening.

You can find information and online audio at http://www.batteryradio.com/Pages/Abraham.html

Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage

Ms Reiko Yoshida, Assistant Programme Specialist. Intangible Heritage Section at UNESCO, elaborates on the relevancy of the Convention on the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage during the Mapping for Change Conference which took place in Nairobi, Kenya in September 2005.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7B4Cqzm-lWA

Friday, November 27, 2009

The Wren, The Wren, The King of the Birds - The Wren Song

The wren is just one of several Christmastime house-visiting traditions that continue in Newfoundland and Labrador. Typically, children and/or adults will visit homes within their community carrying around an effigy of a small bird—the wren. Upon entry into a home, they usually recite a poem about the wren and may offer some kind of performance, be it song, joke, or recitation. Often the host will offer up food, drink, or money for the visit. Unlike other house-visiting traditions, there are no disguises involved.

Recorded over one day in November of 2009, here are four slightly different versions sung and recited by five different people, all from the community of Colliers, Conception Bay.

  • Blair Phillips & Gay Phillips http://collections.mun.ca/u?/ich_xmas,6

  • Honora Skanes http://collections.mun.ca/u?/ich_xmas,1

  • John Ryan http://collections.mun.ca/u?/ich_xmas,3

  • Will Murphy http://collections.mun.ca/u?/ich_xmas,7
  • Thursday, November 26, 2009

    Granny! 'Tis Mummers!!


    The province's First Annual Folklife Festival kicks off tonight with an exhibition of fine art and craft dedicated to the history and culture of Mummering.

    “The Mummers Festival is a series of events taking place in late November and December which will culminate with the Mummers Parade on December 20th, ending on the grounds of The Rooms with a Christmas concert and Mummers Jam with music, dancing, and spaces for impromptu performances,” says the Province’s Intangible Cultural Heritage Officer, Dale Jarvis.

    Jarvis says “The folklife festival is an opportunity for cultural exchange - a place where audiences can feel free to engage with particular traditions and their respective tradition-bearers-within a 'museum without walls' context. The folklife festival is an invitation for audiences to participate, to learn, dance, dress, move, sing, and interact with tradition-bearers and each other.”

    Folklife Festival Organizer Ryan Davis says “Mummering in Newfoundland and Labrador takes on many different forms: it continues as a Christmastime house visit; it has become a type of performance for summertime Come Home Year celebrations; it’s the topic of a still-popular song; and it’s represented in art and craft.”

    The Mummers Festival is being organized by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador and our sponsors: The Rooms; The Historic Sites Association of Newfoundland and Labrador; Memorial University; MITACS; The Friends of Victoria Park Lantern Festival; Georgestown Neighbourhood Association; Mummer's The Word; and MacPherson Elementary School.

    For more information about how you can participate, volunteer and learn more about the Mummers Festival go to the festival website at www.mummersfestival.ca

    For Further Information
    Contact:
    Ryan Davis

    1-888-739-1892
    info@mummersfestival.ca

    ICH Update for November 2009

    In this month's ICH update: the creation of Dance NL, to safeguard dance traditions and contemporary dance in Newfoundland and Labrador; and our ICH intern Jed Baker sails off to the Wooden Boat Conference and reports back.

    Download the pdf at:
    http://tinyurl.com/yfz38mp

    Tuesday, November 24, 2009

    Traditional Dance Night, November 25


    Dust off your dancing shoes and let loose for a night of traditional jigs, reels and running the goat. Music will be provided by those darlings of Water Street (Tuesdays only) - The Auntie Crae Band (Stan Pickett, Andrew Lang, Doug Baggs and Rick West).

    Folk Night happens every Wednesday night at the SHIP PUB (formerly known as the SHIP INN) on Solomon's Lane (265 Duckworth). The music goes from 9:30 pm to 12:00 am. $5 at the door.

    Saturday, November 21, 2009

    People and Place: Realizing Potential

    A lecture on people and place, and the intangible cultural heritage strategy of Newfoundland and Labrador, given by folklorist Dale Gilbert Jarvis on Thursday, November 19th, 2009, at the Cultural Tourism Conference in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada.



    Download a copy of this video at:
    http://www.archive.org/details/PeopleAndPlace

    Monday, November 2, 2009

    The Annotated Jack: A tale of two characters, from Newfoundland, named Jack.


    A romp through a tale of two "Jacks": one the hero of traditional folktales; the other a retired fisherman passing the time in his fishing stage spinning tales of his youth.

    You'll find them both in Newfoundland -- like Ireland a big island anchored off a bigger continent -- populated with the descendents of Irish and English fishermen. Populated too with the stories and folktales that those settlers brought with them centuries ago, and handed down by word of mouth through the generations. In particular, you'll find folktales which usually begin like this:

    "Once there were 3 brothers: Tom, Bill, and Jack. Now Tom and Bill, they were handy, they were actually able to do something. But Jack, well, all Jack could do was sit by the fire, and.."

    .and we're off on a fantastical tale of derring-do starring Jack, the ne'er-do-well youngest brother. In the traditional tales, he slays giants, outwits witches, befriends every creature he meets, carries out magical feats by applying simple common sense and an innate naiveté, finds his Fortune and marries The Princess. This is Jack, the poor youngest son who unlocks the secrets of living and embraces magic as his kingdom, the unlikely big-hearted hero who undertakes impossible tasks and survives incredible adventures to ultimately live happily ever after.

    The other Jack in this documentary is not mythical at all, but a very real retired fisherman living by the harbour in St. John's city: Jack Wells. This Jack and his friends spend each day together sharing memories and telling stories in his twinestore - a fisherman's shed crammed with stored nets, rope, and fishing gear. Telling stories "makes the time go quicker" they say, remembering their own impossible tasks and incredible adventures.

    The stories told in Jack's twinestore are tales of fish, of falling overboard, of coiling more rope or splitting more fish than anyone, of days when the wind came up suddenly, of when the motor froze or the cod were scarce, tales of doing battle with the giants of weather and outwitting the witches of officialdom, and always in the end winning the Princess of Fish in the Kingdom of Memory. Adventures no more or less unlikely than those of the other told-about Jack who eventually finds his fortune, too.

    This documentary weaves together the real and the mythical Jack, and considers the role that stories play in accompanying us through life and into retirement. In the end, as the story goes: "if they don't live happily ever after, then may all of ye"
    Produced by Chris Brookes at Battery Radio in Newfoundland for RTE Radio 1's, Documentary on One.
    (Photo left to right) Charlie Riall, Jack Wells, Mike Walsh

    First broadcast Oct 31st 2009.
    http://www.rte.ie/radio1/doconone/jack.html
    Download the podcast at:
    http://www.rte.ie/podcasts/2009/pc/pod-v-310109-39m07s-annotated-doconone.mp3