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Red Leaf Takoja: Song of the Heartbeat
A
music performance video featuring a singer's eye view of Red
Leaf Takoja, one the most popular Lakota drum groups of the
80s and early 90s. Extensive footage of contemporary Native
American song and dance performance. Get a peek inside this
singing tradition in interviews with singers, elders and spectators.
A soundtrack CD and a full color 16 page booklet are included
with the DVD. Words to each song in Lakota and English are also
found in the booklet.
The Red Leaf Takoja Singers, now known as The Heart
Beat Singers, were drawn from reservation communities in South Dakota,
from Denver, from Oklahoma and from the Taos Pueblo in New Mexico.
In portions of this video they are joined by other talented singers
from several other locations in New Mexico, South Dakota and Oklahoma.
The
original Red Leaf singers and their younger offshoot, Red Leaf
Takoja, were known as traditional song keepers for the Sicangu
Lakota (the Rosebud Sioux Tribe), several group members were
also widely recognized for their skill at composing appropriate
songs for any occasion upon request. Several such songs are
included in this video. Also included is the most extensive
known video recording of Lakota Victory Songs.
Recorded
at the Taos Pueblo Powwow and Rosebud (South Dakota) Fair in
1990 and at Denver March Powwow in 1990 and 1991, this music
performance video documents an aspect of contemporary Lakota
culture poorly understood by the general public -- the celebration
of life in song and dance, and the central part played by these
musical expressions in virtually all of contemporary Native
American society. The producers invite you to relax and allow
yourself to sink into the melodies and become saturated by the
color and movement of the dancers and experience first hand,
the compelling, life-affirming feelings engendered by this musical
way of life.
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