4.3 • 2.6K Ratings
🗓️ 16 November 2016
⏱️ 27 minutes
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Country music is commonly associated with downtrodden, lovelorn, white inhabitants of America’s rural south, but it has also long been a significant form of expression for Australia’s Aboriginal peoples. Country music became popular 'down under' during the first half of the 20th Century. Thanks to gramophone recordings, wind-up radios and touring bands, it even reached the bush where most Aboriginals lived, often more or less imprisoned on missions and government-controlled reserves. At a time when their own cultural heritage was being systematically erased, country music became a medium through which they could maintain their practice of sharing stories via the oral tradition. Its resonance was enhanced by melodies which tended towards the melancholic. As one musician put it “country music was all about loss, and we’d lost everything”. Through country music, Aboriginal people were able to give voice to their personal experiences and ongoing struggles for justice. Songs describe, for example, how babies and land were stolen, incidents of racism, poor living conditions, and high levels of incarceration. Country music, far from its origins, has thus become a deeply moving and powerful Aboriginal activism art form. With contributions from Auriel Andrew, Kev Carmody, Roger Knox, Sue Ray, Glenn Skuthorpe and Clinton Walker.
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0:00.0 | My name is Glenn Scutoff. I'm a nobar-akuma-moorawary man and I'm chutheme my girlfriend, Cage Sines. |
0:15.0 | And we in Guduga, down on the Guduga Reserve where I grew up. |
0:19.0 | And we out the Bekara River. |
0:21.0 | This is the deepest part of the river right in there. |
0:25.0 | The river is pretty much part of my music because you know it's growing up as a kid. |
0:32.0 | We would come down and sit and I like to sing about a lot of stuff that I grew up with. |
0:37.0 | It becomes a part of. |
0:38.0 | Yeah, it's a part of you. |
0:39.0 | You know, you carry this with you. |
0:41.0 | This is a memory that never leaves. |
0:43.0 | Mother's in the kitchen, Dad's at the pub. |
0:46.0 | Country Down Under. |
0:48.0 | Little Johnny's line on an old skin... |
0:51.0 | A music of Australia's Aboriginal people. |
0:54.0 | I don't want to sit around here no more. |
0:59.0 | Go see Dollyhood next door. So I'm okay, we live on. |
1:05.0 | There's nothing like rain on an old... |
1:10.0 | That's a salt bush. |
1:12.0 | Nothing like rain on an old tin. |
1:14.0 | But that's a native tomato. |
1:16.0 | Nothing like rain on an old... |
1:20.0 | This is a house where I grew up in. |
... |
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