Mary
Sivuaraapik and Audia throat singing
14 x 11 inches, oil on canvas, 2019 |
The track Katajjait on "Hamma"
features three examples of katajjait, traditional game songs of the Inuit. The
word "hamma" is a syllable of the Inuktitut language, the songs
represented have no words but play on the sound of hamma. The songs appear on Canada: Inuit Games and Songs on UNESCO.
The performers, in order of appearance: Elijah Pudloo Mageeta, Tamegeak
Pitaulassie, Marie Apaqaq, Soria Eyituk, and Napache Semaejuk Pootoogook.
Recorded in Baffin Land at Cape Dorset and Sanikiluaq between 1973 and 1975 by
Nicole Beaudry and Claude Charron. Katajjait are secular song but were banned by encroaching Christianity for a hundred years. Many cultural traditions Inuit have disappeared and exist only in museums and literature but katajjaq vocal games somehow survived and are now practiced widely in Nunavut, the semi-autonomous state under Inuit rule in Northern Canada.
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