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Un concert au féminin avec Joséphine Bacon pour l OSM

Offert gratuitement en webdiffusion jusqu’au 22 juin, le concert Voix de femmes  : ode à la vie, de l’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (OSM), met à l’honneur de la musique composée et interprétée par des femmes et qui se mêle aux poèmes de Joséphine Bacon lus par cette poète innue. Ce concert, donné sous la direction de la cheffe Dina Gilbert, est dédié à toutes ces femmes victimes de violences, dont les voix ne peuvent plus être entendues, a expliqué mardi matin Eugénie Lépine-Blondeau, la chroniqueuse culturelle de l’émission Tout un matin. 

Throat Singing - Arctic Journal

Arctic Journal Lynda Brown’s three-year-old daughter Papatsie Johnson and Kendall Ford throat singing at the Early Years graduation ceremony at the Ottawa Inuit Children’s Centre in June 2010. Papatsie and Kendall are still throat singing partners 14 years later the next generation carrying on the nearly lost tradition. © Lynda Brown Reviving a cultural heritage Throat singing is distinctively Inuit and a musical genre all its own. In 2014, Quebec recognized throat singing as its first example of intangible cultural heritage something you can only hear.  Throat singing is a traditional game involving two women. The whole point of the game is to make the other person laugh. “Throat singing was a form of entertainment especially during harsh times, or when they couldn’t go out,” says Evie Mark, a throat singer from Ivujivik, Nunavik, who teaches at Nunavik Sivunitsavut, the college program in Montreal for students from Nunavik. Throat singing was often sung during c

BBC - Travel - A revival of indigenous throat singing

By Joel Balsam & Stephanie Foden 15 April 2021 Shina Novalinga locks eyes with her mother, Caroline, with an intimacy and closeness that feels that much more special during a pandemic. Caroline tilts to her other foot and exhales a guttural sound. Shina replicates and the two go back and forth, producing an infectious beat that s hard to resist bobbing to. 50 Reasons to Love the World - 2021 Why do you love the world? Because of all of our differences. We each have our culture, our identity, our story. To me being different is beautiful and I embrace my Indigenous identity more and more everyday.

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