Q+A with Kev Carmody: Oral history storytelling through song and language

Wed Dec 14 2022 at 09:30 am to 10:30 am

ANU School of Music | Canberra

ANU Drill Hall Gallery
Publisher/HostANU Drill Hall Gallery
Q+A with Kev Carmody: Oral history storytelling through song and language
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Join Dr Kev Carmody in conversation with Cathie Craigie, Brenda Gifford, Cheryl Davidson and Will Kepa.
About this Event

As part of the symposium - Murrudha: Sovereign Walks/Still in my mind and in conjunction with Kev Carmody being awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the Australian National University, we welcome you to join Cathie Craigie (facilitator), and First Nations musicians , composers, performers Brenda Gifford, Cheryl Davidson and Will Kepa, for a panel discussion on oral history through song and language.

Venue: ANU School of Music, Level 5. Lecture RM 3.

Panel members:

Cathy Craigie (Facilitator)

Cathy Craigie is a Gamilaraay and Anaiwon woman from northern NSW and has worked in media and the arts for over 20 years. Cathy has also worked in Aboriginal Affairs for over thirty years. One of the original founders of Koori Radio and former Director of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts Board of the Australia Council, Craigie was also Deputy Director-General of the NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs. Cathy’s experience ranges across disciplines and she has worked in health, housing, environmental, legal, media and the arts. She is particularly interested in First Nations’ stories and their relevance today, and is currently developing a play transforming the Gamilaroi traditional story of the Seven Sisters constellation. She has written several plays and essays and has worked part time as an Aboriginal arts consultant. Further: https://writingnsw.org.au/people/cathy-craigie/; https://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A34276;

Dr Kev Carmody

Dr Kev Carmody is one of Australia’s pre-eminent singer songwriters, a wordsmith whose often politically charged and socially aware lyrics early in his career found him described as “Australia’s black Bob Dylan”. Of Aboriginal and Irish heritage, both cultures famous for oral histories in song, Kev was born to be a story-teller. Arguably his best known composition (with Paul Kelly) is ‘From Little Things Big Things Grow’, based on the story of The Gurindji Strike and Vincent Lingiari as part of the struggle for indigenous land rights and reconciliation. This song won Heritage Song of the Year at the 1994 Country Music Awards of Australia. Kev began writing songs in the mid 1960s. He released his first album ‘Pillars of Society’ in December 1987, one of the most powerful protest albums, from Australia or anywhere else, fuelled by anger at injustice and hypocrisy. Rolling Stone magazine described the album as “The best album ever released by an Aboriginal musician and arguably the best protest album ever made in Australia”. His 2007 album ‘Cannot Buy My Soul’ was refreshed in 2020, a double album of original Carmody songs and those same songs reinterpreted by some of this country’s most respected performers: Paul Kelly, Courtney Barnett, Archie Roach, Bernard Fanning, John Butler, Steve ¬Kilbey, Kate Miller- Heidke, Alice Skye, Kasey Chambers, Jimmy Barnes, Troy Cassar-Daley, Missy Higgins, Augie March, Electric Fields and others. The Australian described it as “not just a simpletribute album. It is a showcase of Kev’s enduring power as a songwriter and performer, and in the great ¬tradition of Indigenous storytelling, a passing on of his songs to younger generations and beyond.” John O’Donnell, Head of EMI Music, which produced the album said, “I do think this work, and Kev’s words, his songs, need to be spread as far as they can be spread, these are history lessons… that sounds a little corny but they are living histories that need to be retold and not forgotten… Many of the stories around black deaths in custody, around the Stolen Generations, these things all happened in my lifetime and it’s quite gobsmacking to think that not that long ago Indigenous children were taken away from their parents, that we’re still living in an era when black deaths in custody is still an issue, is still a problem.” Kev has received numerous significant awards and acknowledgements throughout his distinguished career. In 2022 Kev will receive an Honorary Doctorate from the ANU for his For exceptional contribution to the creative arts and his advocacy and promotion of First Nations Knowledges, Storywork and Rights through Storytelling, Oral History and Music. Further: https://www.kevcarmody.com.au/about-kev; https://uqres.com/kev-carmody-house/who-is-kevcarmody/; https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-28/kev-carmodyopens-up-on-secret-stolen-childhood/101182426

Brenda Gifford, Ngarra Burria: First Peoples, Composers Alumnus, independent composer/musician.

Brenda Gifford is a First Nations, Yuin woman originallyfrom the Wreck Bay area. Her country, community and culture are the basis of her arts practice. She is a contemporary classical composer and creates music for ensembles, orchestras, choirs, dance and theatre performances, and festivals. She works collaboratively and is a classically trained saxophonist and pianist. Her music has been performed at venues such as the Sydney Opera House and internationally, and is available through ABC Classical & Jazz Music. As a composer and classically trained saxophonist and pianist Brenda has performed solo and with other jazz, classical and rock musicians at a wide variety of Australian and international venues. This includes the Bart Willoughby Band, the Kevin Hunt Trio, Black Arm Band, events and concerts such as the Byron Bay Blues Festival, Enlighten, Yabun and NAIDOC Weekevents. In 1980–90, as a saxophonist and member of the band Mixed Relations (Bart Willoughby), Brenda toured extensively through Aboriginal communities, Australian cities and towns, NZ and the Pacific Islands, USA, Europe and HongKong.

Original commissioned compositions (recent) include: 2022– Moriyawa/Whale Melbourne International Jazz Festival / Australian Art Orchestra; Dundun/Firestick, ABC Jazz NAIDOC, Sandy Evans group, ABC Best of Jazz 22 Album; 2021 - ‘Minga Bagan (Mother Earth)’, Cycles Concert, Sydney Chamber Choir, Sydney Festival; Yawa, (Talk)’, developed as part of Brenda’s Ensemble Offspring Inaugural First Nations Composer in Residence; 2020 – Djiribawal. including ‘Bagan’, ‘Miriwa’, ‘Ngadjung’ and ‘Ganji’ for the Australian Art Orchestra and the 2021 Canberra International Music Festival; ‘Wagan (Crow)’ with Wiradjuri dancer, Joel Bray for the Sydney Dance Company; Sydney Symphony Orchestra 50 Fanfares project; 2019 - ‘Mungala (Clouds)’ performed by Prof.Claire Chase, National Sawdust Season, New York, CWP;11 2018 – ‘Gamabambarawaraga (Seasons)’ redeveloped with ‘Rompy Stompy Crab,; ‘Plover Bird’, and ‘Ghadu (Sea)’ for Music for the Dreaming album for CD, podcast and concert series, Sydney Opera House with Ensemble Offspring, ABC KIDS Listen and ABC Classic Music. Nominated for an ARIA in 2019; ‘Gamabambarawaraga (Seasons)’ suite for the Canberra International Music Festival. The world premiere performance of the work opened the festival in 2018. The suite includes ‘Bardju (Footprints)’, ‘Galaa (Summer)’; ‘Dhugarwara (Winter)’; ‘Gambambara (Spring)’; ‘Dhawara (Moon)’, which have all been recorded and released as separate pieces. Music residencies and music programs (recent): 2022 - Peggy Glanville Hicks Residency; 2020-21 - Masters in Composition with Professor Liza Lim, Women in Composition Program, Sydney Conservatorium of Music; Ensemble Offspring Inaugural First Nations Composer in Residence. Brenda worked and toured with the ensemble’s virtuosic instrumentalists and is created a new commissioned work to be premiered by Ensemble Offspring in 2021; 2019 - Bundanoon Trust First Peoples Residency, NSW; 2017-18 – Participant, Ngarra-burria: First Peoples Composers program with Christopher Sainsbury, through the Australian National University, Australian Music Centre, Moogahlin Performing Arts and Eora College.

Further: https://www.musicaviva.com.au/newsstories/2022/mar/getting-to-know-composers-brendagifford-jessica-wells/

Cheryl Davison, Iris White, Djinama Yilaga representatives.

Cheryl is a Dhurga/Ngarigo/Walbunga visual artist andperformer. The Djinama Yilaga Choir is an intergenerational Yuin choir, establish in 2019 and led by renowned Walbunga/Ngarigo artist, Cheryl Davison. Djinama Yilaga perform songs in Dhurga language. Yuin people were often multi-lingual, speaking and understanding languages of neighbouring and visiting groups. Dhurga was spoken and understood by many within the 13 tribes of the Yuin Nation. It was the dominant tongue of the Walbunga people of the Broulee region and the Brindja Yuin people of Moruya. The choir emerged as a mechanism to revitalise language through song, following a unique pedagogy established by Westpac scholar, Dr Lou Bennett AM. The community led project, supported by Dr Lou Bennett was initially funded by the National Museum of Australia and Four Winds,Bermagui. The choir has gone from strength to strength and is continually requested to perform at local and national events. In 2021 they performed at the Easter Four Winds Festival to great acclaim, and to a sold-out show at the National Museum of Australia. Further: https://www.nma.gov.au/about/culturalconnections-program/partners/four-winds-festivals/cheryldavison; https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/australiawide/djinama/12230096

Will Kepa , Manager, Yil Lull Studio, ANU School of Music, musician/producer

Will Kepa is a proud Iamalaig man from the Kulkalgau Clan of Iama (Yam Island) and the Kulkalgal Nation of Central Zenadth Kes (Torres Strait Islands). A multi-instrumentalist, session musician, music producer and sound engineer, is currently studying a Bachelor of Music – Composition for Film and Video Games. He has spent his career recording and producing more than twenty albums of traditional, sacred, and secular music from remote Indigenous communities throughout Cape York and the Torres Strait Islands - in addition to countless mainstream contemporary recording projects; written jingles for T.V. and Radio, score and design film music; toured abroad with national and international performing artists, and also maintains a parallel career in the live Audio-Visual industry. He established and is currently leading Yil Lull Studio at the ANU School of Music while carrying out his part-time study commitments. Further: https://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/artist/kepa-will; https://nitro.edu.au/articles/2022/10/11/in-conversation-with-will-kepa-director-of-the-yil-lullindigenous-recording-studio; https://www.anu.edu.au/news/all-news/anu-launchesindigenous-music-studio-to-%E2%80%9Ckeep-fireburning%E2%80%9D

We encourage you to also join us for ‘Gather Round People’ , a celebration of esteemed First Nations Songman Kev Carmody. In celebration of his achievements, this free concert features First Nations musicians, headlined by award-winning duo Electric Fields and featuring Alinta Barlow, Jye Cole Hopkins, Dale Huddleston and Djinama Yilaga. 7:30pm, Wed 14 December, Manning Clark Hall, Kambri Cultural Precinct Register here

Photo: Kev Carmody & Paul Kelly, Gurindji Freedom Day Celebrations, Kalkaringi, August 2011. Photograph © & courtesy Karyn Cameron 2011.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

ANU School of Music, William Herbert Place, Canberra, Australia

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