Vol.36 No.2

$3.00

This issue has two editors. Wabush mines swing into full operation. There was fiddle music as far as Louie Montague can remember. Rose Pamack collected songs from her mom. Inuit receptivity to Europeans music was noted from the earliest years of the Moravian Missions. Photo of Nain choir in 1880. Jerry is an Okak organist. In music matters they maintain a high standard. Mary Dicker was in the Nain choir. Julius Ikkusek was in the choir when he was 27 or 28 year’s old. Zipora Hunter And Leah Ford miss the music played in the church for fesitivals. Karrie Obed played the fiddle at the Moravian Church in Nain, NL.

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Description

These Days at Them Days – Aimee Chaulk

Musical Roundup – Gordie Rendell
Labrador #1 in Rock ‘n’ Roll – Greg Dodd
Music, Fiddle Playing and Fiddlers – Louie Montague
Who What When Where Why?
Four Innu Lullabies – Robin McGrath
I Taught Myself – Alton Best
Inuit Songs – Rose Pamack
Labrador Gallery
“The Soil was in the People, and the Seed of Music has Taken Root:” Moravian Music in Labrador – Tom Gordon & Nigel Markham
A Communion and Festival Sunday at Hopedale, 1888
Jeremias
Sweet Voices, Delightful and Affecting
Singing in the Huts
Eskimo Choir to Sing Here
When I Went Upstairs – Karrie Obed
I’d Just Sing Along With My Mom – Mary Andersen
It Goes Right Through You – Mary Dicker
I Can’t Sing Alto! – Julius Ikkusek
It Came Naturally to Them – Bertha Holeiter
We Always Held the Choir in Awe – Rose Pamack
They Really Sang…. – Zipora Hunter & Leah Ford
The Fiddle – Karrie Obed
Then and Now

Front cover: Alton Best playing the fiddle at the cabin in Mud Lake. Courtesy of Carol Best.

Back cover: Violin in Nain belfry. Tom Gordon photo.

Additional information

Weight .12 kg
Dimensions 23 × 15.5 × .5 cm
Magazine Type

Digital, Physical