The South Dakota Symphony Orchestra's Lakota Music Project was spearheaded by the orchestra's conductor, Delta David Gier, and leaders of the Lakota and Dakota Native American communities. The goal was to build artistic and cultural bridges between the two communities. The process of getting the project off the ground was complex, but it has been in existence since the mid-2000s decade and has spawned concerts of various kinds, including some by groups other than the symphony. Here, the South Dakota Symphony performs works ...
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The South Dakota Symphony Orchestra's Lakota Music Project was spearheaded by the orchestra's conductor, Delta David Gier, and leaders of the Lakota and Dakota Native American communities. The goal was to build artistic and cultural bridges between the two communities. The process of getting the project off the ground was complex, but it has been in existence since the mid-2000s decade and has spawned concerts of various kinds, including some by groups other than the symphony. Here, the South Dakota Symphony performs works commissioned as part of the project by both Native American and non-Native composers; the latter are represented by the symphony's oboist, Jeffrey Paul, who added parts for Lakota flute and song to earlier compositions. All of the music mixes the two traditions but, more importantly, does so in different ways. Two of the pieces involve Lakota choirs singing in traditional style, and these are riveting. Brent Michael Davids' Black Hills Olowan juxtaposes modernist orchestral passages with a traditional song from the Creekside Singers, and the song is also mixed with an orchestral rendition in a fascinating kind of simultaneous dialogue. Equally absorbing is the arrangement by Ted Wiprud of Amazing Grace, in the Lakota language, for Native American flute and singers. Wiprud was the successor as the orchestra's resident composer to Chickasaw composer Jerod Impichchaachaaha' Tate, represented himself here by the orchestral song cycle Waktégli Olówa? ("Victory Songs"), with linked songs that build to a powerful climax. The Lakota Music Project is unlike anything else attempted by an American orchestra, and it has generated music that deserves multiple hearings and, indeed, further performances. ~ James Manheim, Rovi
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