Saturday, June 18, 2011

Within My Excursion Today - I Kid You Not.

Picture 047

 

Buffy Sainte-Marie (thank you Colin) was a graduating college senior in 1962 and hit the ground running in the early Sixties, after the beatniks and before the hippies. All alone, she toured North America's colleges, reservations and concert halls, meeting both huge acclaim and huge misperception from audiences and record companies who expected Pocahontas in fringes, and instead were both entertained and educated with their initial dose of Native American reality in the first person.

By age 24, Buffy Sainte-Marie had appeared all over Europe, Canada, Australia and Asia, receiving honors, medals and awards, which continue to this day. Her song "Until It's Time for You to Go” was recorded by Elvis and Barbra and Cher, and her Universal Soldier became the anthem of the peace movement. For her very first album, she was voted Billboard's Best New Artist.

She disappeared suddenly from the mainstream American airwaves during the Lyndon Johnson years. Unknown to her, as part of a blacklist which affected Eartha Kitt, Taj Mahal and a host of other outspoken performers, her name was included on White House stationery as among those whose music "deserved to be suppressed", and radio airplay disappeared. Invited onto television talk shows because of her success with Until It's Time for You to Go, she was told that Native issues and the peace movement had become unfashionable and to limit her comments to celebrity chat. The next presidential administration, that of Richard Nixon, also came down hard on her, as this was the time of Wounded Knee.

In Indian country and abroad, however, her fame only grew. Denied an adult television audience in the U.S., in 1975 she joined the cast of Sesame Street for five years. She continued to appear at countless grassroots concerts, AIM (American Indian Movement) events and other activist benefits in Canada and the U.S. She made 18 albums of her music, three of her own television specials, scored movies, garnered international acclaim, helped to found Canada's Music of Aboriginal Canada JUNO category, raised a son, earned a Ph.D. in Fine Arts, taught Digital Music as adjunct professor at several colleges, and won an Academy Award Oscar and a Golden Globe Award for the song,"Up Where We Belong".

Ironically, within part of my day I met her, here today as she was while she was doing a guest speaking engagement.  Which I truly didn’t know what was happening within at the university and I caught her right at the tail end. I caught the tail end of her talk and it was something as I new she was an activist of sorts and upon seeing her. Rather neat it was and least expected.

 

"Until it's Time To Go"

http://youtu.be/qXumW8pRCio?hd=1

 

9 comments:

  1. Until it's time for you/me to go i've heard a countless times. A kind of song that would really captured the heart and soul of the listener. Just liked 'In the arms of an Angel' for me the two songs belongs to the same category.

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  2. Paul McCartney is reconsidering coming here next month - my fingers are crossed Susan.
    He was and then she changed his mind. Thereafter now he is reconsidering coming here.

    Go Go Jo Jo :)

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  3. I remember hearing her years ago and then nothing. But I didn't think anything about it.

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  4. I never knew anything other than that she was an advocate and when I was told who
    she was it was all to neat.

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