8 OCTOBER 15, 2003 Smoke Signals First NW Indian Music Festival Marks National Indian Day D Tribal member Jan Michael Reibach's Cederfeather Productions brings the music of flutes and drums to the Casino's big Bingo room. By Ron Karten If you were lucky on National In dian Day, you arrived at the Spirit Mountain Casino during the five or so minutes when Jordan Pengraph, nephew of Tribal mem ber Dakota Whitecloud, sat down on a bench outside of the main en trance, carefully retrieved his flute from its protective cloth sleeve and played it with abandon in the open air. It was a beautiful day, inside the casino and out, but the special ad dition of this Amity ninth grader's spirit, filling the air in the form of flute notes, was something to be hold. Pengraph would have it the other way. "It's more the flute that plays you than you that plays the flute," he said. . And it's been playing him for six years, he said. He had a special reason for being excited on this day. He had finally learned some of the history of this flute that had been "a gift of a friend named Redhawk" six years ago. It was made, he learned from Warm Springs Tribal member and flute maker Charlie Littleleaf, at Stellar Flutes by an artisan named Tom Stewart. Stewart had used a 2,000-year-old Sequoia and yellow cedar to give this instrument its unique and beautiful sound. "It calls to me when it wants to be played," said Pengraph. "It's really a spiritual thing. When I first started playing, I was really de pressed. It heals you. It's about your heart. When you feel sad and down, the flute really helps. I've been carrying it around for four years looking for someone who could tell me something about it." The Tribal Council may not have had the Pengraph-Littleleaf connec tion in mind earlier this year when it asked the casino management for more of a focus on Tribal heritage, but it and many others took place during the day. "The energy of all of the different Tribes represented here is very spe cial," said Tribal member Jan Michael Reibach, whose company, CedarFeather Productions, pro duced the day-long show. CedarFeather Productions also has produced CDs for many of the per- K T i. V Ik. r"N w Celebrity Sighting Native American flutist Charles Littleleaf performs at the Northwest Indian Festival, held at Spirit Mountain Casino on Friday, September 26. Littleleaf, a Warm Springs Tribal member, is well known throughout Indian Country for his music and the beautiful Native flutes he makes. formers, including Buckley McWilliams, a Modoc Native. On stage, McWilliams presented Reibach with a feather from his drum "to show my appreciation," he said. To the audience, McWilliams said, "I've been gifted with the gift of song... Gifts from the creator are not to be kept inside but to be shared." Bruce "Snoball" Butler, a Siletz Tribal member, had mixed feelings about putting his music on a CD. "I should be using songs for heal ing, not for sale," he said, but his mix of traditional Indian music "with a hint of bluegrass," as the festival's promotional piece said, seemed to accomplish both. In the hallway just outside of the Bingo Hall where the music event took place, Tribal members Marie Schmidt and Connie Graves were busy weaving and selling their na tive baskets. Vendors were both top profes sional craftspeople in their fields and family crafters like Tribal mem bers CeCe Kneeland and her 7-year-old daughter, Nakoosa, who showed and sold some very excit ing bead and doll work. The Native flutes of Charles Littleleaf were one example of fine Indian craftsmanship. The carv ings of John Hawks, a Chiricahua Apache whose work has been col lected by the Smithsonian Institu tion, and whose list of clients in cludes John Wayne and Henry Fonda, was another. The Northwest Indian Veterans Association (NIVA) strutted its stuff Photos by Peta Tinda in two ways. Vets performed Grand Entry by leading musicians into and through the room and at a booth among the vendors, the group held raffles to raise funds and in terest in the organization. The program also included an in troduction by emcee Nick Sixkiller to different Indian dances, and two drum groups Eagle Beak Drum mers from Grand Ronde and Ante lope Spirit Drummers from Klamath that accompanied traditional and grass dancers dressed in regalia. "This is something well-needed around here," said Tribal Council member Bob Haller. Tribal member and Native Ameri can Studies Ph.D. candidate Elaine LaBonte presented a background on Native American music late in the afternoon. "There are many different kinds of drums," she said, "and different beliefs that go along with the drums." "The spirit," she said, "resides within that resource." And the same goes for people, ac cording to Tribal Council Chair woman Cheryle Kennedy. "When people are singing and dancing, it's from within," she said. "It's an ex pression of the soul." And from the audience side, she added, "We stop being human when we stop listen ing." In addition, the festival played a strategic role for the casino. "It's good exposure for the property," said Casino General Manager Doug Pattison. He pointed to ar ticles about the festival in McMinnville and Salem newspa pers. "You can't buy that kind of advertising," he said. And the performers also saw the day as the beginning of a bright fu ture. "We have six of these coming in Oregon and Washington," said Reibach. "It's all healing to me," said Grand Ronde Tribal member Mike Stand ing Elk Reibach from the stage, be fore he and Jan Michael Reibach together played "Sacred Rain," a contemporary song honoring the people of Grand Ronde and the his toric Trail of Tears that was the be ginning of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. u , pn J tin II 1 J . . . i "Tffr r. -vl 4 r H ; III ; l .iff l'A W -A , . I L i L y .,imrf gSgfiAH J y- f f Basket Maker Tribal Elder Marie Schmidt was at the NW Indian Music Festival with examples of her traditional Native baskets. Schmidt, shown here preparing cedar bark, explained her techniques to the many curious casino-goers who stopped by during the festival. Artist To The Stars Native artist John Hawks, a Chiricahua Apache, shows one of the finely carved pieces that he is known for. Hawks has artwork in the Smithsonian Institution, and has commissioned pieces for such celebrities as John Wayne and Henry Fonda.