First Nations Music for Land, Love, and Laughter

Celebrating the Music and Culture of Indigenous Peoples

Grades
K-12

First Nations Music

Instruments

Hand drums, powwow drums, log and box drums, water drums, and rattles/shakers are used in First Nations music across Canada. Animal skins from moose, deer, caribou, elk or buffalo are used in making hand drums, depending on which animals inhabit the region. The drum’s appearance and construction varies for each nation, but the common elements are animal hides, wooden frames of various wood types, and sinew or cut hide to make a long leather piece for tying the hide together over the frame or to bind the skin to the frame.

The stomach of the animal is sometimes used in making the rattles, as the skin is thinner. Rattles are filled with tiny pebbles, dried corn, rice, or beads to create the shaker sound once the skins are dried.

Traditional drum and rattle instruments are used when singing songs. They are also used for celebrations, games, ceremonies, and in prayer. To see various images of drums on the internet, type in “Cree hide drums,” “Iroquois water drums,” or “powwow drums” in the search box.

Song Varieties

The structure and use of the drums varies across the many First Nations groups across Canada. Coast Salish songs in the west are considerably different from M’ikmaq songs of the east; Cree songs are different from Blackfoot songs; northern songs are different from southern songs. Even within a single First Nation, traditional drum songs are different from contemporary drum songs; rattle songs are different from drum songs; sacred and ceremonial songs are different from social and dance songs; round dance songs are different from powwow songs; and hand game songs are different from stick game songs. It is important to know that the songs vary in the melodies, meanings, purposes, chants, and rhythms for each nation, but each song is very important to the nation, family, or individual.

Oral Tradition

Favourite and special songs can be shared over many tribes and nations. Songs can be passed down through the generations and to family members through the oral tradition. Some songs are even known to be over 400 years old! Modern technology allows social and traditional songs to be learned quickly, even across great distances. Sacred songs stay within the appropriate ceremonies and are rarely shared with outsiders or recorded.

When songs are sung, it is important to acknowledge where they come from and, if known, what is their history and background. Songs that are recorded on CD or written in musical notation are meant to be shared with others who want to sing them, but it is still respectful to acknowledge who or where the song each song comes from.

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Oral tradition is the passing on of traditional knowledge orally (without written language). Oral tradition has long been used to share songs, stories and legends, hunting practices, language, and knowledge of medicine gathering, traditional cooking, etc. The learner observes and listens to what is being said and taught and follows along in the learning process. Once the knowledge is learned, the learner has earned that knowledge and can pass it onto others through the same process.

Song Holders

Some people are known to be song holders and have had many old songs passed onto them by Elders and senior song holders. They are given the task of preserving, creating, and sharing songs with others, especially the younger generation. They know which social songs to share and which to keep sacred for special ceremonies. The song holders can pass them along at their own will. When others are interested in learning specific songs from the song keepers, they go to them and follow the protocol of requesting a song. Song holders can be as young as teenagers, as long as they have earned and have been given the right to that title by the community. The protocol varies within each tribe across Canada, and the request can be granted or denied. This decision is respected, and the reason behind each decision depends on the song holder. (See lesson plan on Song Holders).

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Protocol describes the appropriate and suggested procedure to follow when knowledge is requested from an Elder or another person who possesses a great deal of knowledge in the community. When someone requests the teaching (song, prayer, ceremony) from the Elder or knowledge keeper, gifts are given in thanks and in exchange for the teaching. Gifts can include a pouch of loose tobacco, a blanket, a meter of broadcloth, a braid of sweetgrass, something handmade, etc. It is important and respectful to ask the person directly beforehand what protocol should be followed and what gifts should be offered, as protocol items vary within and among First Nations groups

Song Types

Songs are classified into various categories. They can be sacred or social and can also be further classified as ceremonial, honouring, prayer, dance, celebration, flute, etc. Each song has a purpose and is important to the tribe, nation, family or individual. This is because when you are singing these songs, you are preserving the song – others can hear it and learn it – and the essence of the language or chant style with the drum or rattle is shared. It is said the spirit of the people’s history or family lines are within those songs. Some people can identify the general area where a traditional song comes from geographically, based on the characteristics of that song.

Flute Songs

The flute is a form of prayer through melody. When one plays the flute, it’s often an interpretation of how the player is feeling. For example, when a flute player is asked to play for an event, in the final song, the flute player will play a song for the people travelling home. He/she will think of the people on their journey, and the flute is played like a prayer so that people will arrive safe and sound.

Like the traditional hide drum, the flute is played to celebrate First Nations people and culture. Songs are played from the heart and can be improvised in the moment as well as composed. A flute player takes care of the flute as one takes care of the drum, as both flute and drum are more special than ordinary objects. The flute is treated with care, and the player is careful that it doesn’t get wet, dirty, cold, or damaged. It is often kept in a cloth bag or a wooden container.

— Amanda Lamote, Upper Nicola First Nation, BC

The Courting Flute Story

By Walter MacDonald White Bear

I was taught that the flute was a gift to a young warrior who could not speak. When he was initiated into manhood, he went on his vision quest as a rite of passage.

Fasting on the mountain for four days is a part of the process. The young man prayed and asked for guidance and, like all human beings, he wondered about his purpose.

On the third day of his fasting ceremony a bear came out of the woods and presented the young man with a flute and stated, “From this day forward, this will be your voice.”

He returned to his people as a newly born warrior. There was a young woman whom he always admired from afar, and he started to play a beautiful, haunting melody. It resembled the call of a loon, which some say is the sound of a warrior that lived long ago, expressing his longing at the door of the spirit world which he is not able to enter to be with his loved one.

Upon hearing the music, the young woman was enchanted and she accepted the young man as her husband. And that is how the flute received the name on The Courting Flute.