Tag Archive for: Native American

Q&A with Grant-Lee Phillips on Life After The Gilmore Girls, Walking In the Green Corn and Performing Solo

This Friday, March 29, The Miners Foundry Cultural Center is proud to announce a special evening with acclaimed Americana singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, Grant-Lee Phillips.  Best known for his versatile voice, intense lyrical narratives and dexterity on the acoustic twelve-string guitar, he has been called “one of the most gifted songwriters of his generation” by ABC News and in 1995 named “Male vocalist of the year” by Rolling Stone.  We had a moment to speak with the talented musician from his home in Los Angeles.

MF:  Tell us about the documentary film that is being made about you.

GLP: I was approached by a group of documentarians out of Utah that have created a number of mini docs, including one on Sara Watkins from Nickel Creek.  They were interested in following me around; getting a feel of what I’m all about, and I suggested they come to Stockton and then up to Nevada City for the show.

MF:  What do you hope the documentary will show? 

GLP:  I think it will be interesting to show folks what it was like growing up in the Delta. (GLP grew up in Stockton, CA)  I always find that I’m writing about the water, maybe because of the time I spent out on it with my dad.  I had somewhat of a Huckleberry Finn youth.

MF:  Your new album, “Walking In the Green Corn”, was inspired by your personal past and ancestry.

GLP:  It was inspired by my ancestral connection (GLP is Muskogee (Creek), and the Native American myths I was told growing up.  It has always been salt and peppered in my work, and I wanted to bring the stories to the forefront.  It is very much a solo album with just vocals, guitars and a fiddle; it is the kind of album that is fun to take out and play live.  There is nothing to hide behind.

MF:  Is it more difficult to perform solo or with a band?

GLP:  I’ve embraced the freedom of playing on my own.  It allows me to go to places on my own.  Performing with Grant Lee Buffalo there was never that pressure to play.  When everything is stripped away, and you have the whole night on your own, it really reconnected me to those roots of performing on stage as child.  I know what it is like to be on stage without a guitar and it is a lot scarier.

MF:  Have you always been interested in your Native American heritage or was it a renewed interest after the birth of your first child?

GLP:  It has been a growing curiosity.  I was aware of my heritage growing up.  For my mother and grandmother it is a big part of their identity.  And once I became a father five years ago, I became more and more interested with the culture and history.  It is an ongoing pursuit.

MF:  What does it mean to walk in the green corn?

GLP:  The title is from the green corn dance, a tradition unique to tribes of the southeast.  It is during late summer, a time of renewal and purification.  I liked that idea, given the trials of the nation, the idea of looking forward to better times, a way to tap into something in keeping with this theme in a subtle way.

MF:  Many people know you as the beloved troubadour on The Gilmore Girls.  How did that ever come about?

GLP:  It was pure serendipity.   The Gilmore Girls approached me in 2001.  They were fans of Grant Lee Buffalo, and mine, and in keeping with their sense of humor, producers wanted to throw a curve to their audience.  Afterwards folks like Sonic Youth and Sparks played on the show.  I was very fortunate they asked me to do that that time in my career.  It led to more openings then ever to try new things.  When I first came to LA I enrolled in film school, and wanted to be a director.  I quickly found that I was more comfortable performing than being behind the camera.

Doors open at 7:00 p.m. and the show begins at 8:00 p.m. on Friday, March 29, 2013.  Food and beverages will be available for purchase.  Tickets are $18.00 in Advance and $22.00 at the door.  Tickets are available online, in person, or by phone at the  Nevada City Box Office (530) 265-5462, or in person at Briar Patch Co-Op.  Click here to purchase your tickets. 

“Painting is Medicine” ~ Art Exhibit by Debora Iyall ~ Nevada City Box Office ~ Wednesday through Saturday ~ 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. ~ October 2 – October 29, 2012 ~ Free & Open to the Public

Glowy Landscape

The Nevada City Box Office at the Miners Foundry Cultural Center is pleased to host “Painting is Medicine”, an art exhibit by Debora Iyall.

Horse Grrrl Landscape

Debora Iyall is best known as the lead singer and lyricist of Romeo Void, a San Francisco Band that mined the sexy veins of new wave music.  Iyall started Romeo Void in 1979 with fellow San Francisco Art Institute student and bass player Frank Zincavage.

 

Winter Spirit

Iyall was born in 1954 in Soap Lake, Washington and was raised in Fresno, CA.  She is a member of the Cowlitz tribe of Washington State.  Iyall has been teaching art since the 1990’s and earned a Master’s Degree in teaching in 2007, most recently teaching at Silver Springs High School in Grass Valley, CA.

Places

An avid printmaker for many years, Iyall turned her skills toward painting in her recent series, entitled “Painting is Medicine.”  The collection features paintings, prints, and watercolors.

 

Waiting to Heal

This exhibit is in conjunction with the celebration of October as Indigenous Peoples Month.

The Nevada City Box Office is open to the public Wednesday through Saturday, from 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. and during select events.  The exhibition will hang from October 2 – October 29, 2012.  Admission is free.

Fins and Fur

 

 

 

 

The Mission of the Miners Foundry Cultural Center is to preserve, enhance and utilize the historic Miners Foundry for cultural, educational and social activities.

Nisenan Heritage Day ~ Saturday, October 13, 2012 ~ 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 p.m.

The Nisenan people of the Nevada City Rancheria, along with the California Heritage: Indigenous Research Project (C.H.I.R.P.), welcome to the public to celebrate Nisenan Heritage Day on Saturday, October 13, 2012 at the Miners Foundry Cultural Center.  The day program will be filled with panel discussions, performances, and a symposium, while the evening program includes a rock concert featuring two bands.  The event will be packed with local American Indian talent and artisans, as well as specially invited guests from neighboring Tribal groups.  The day and afternoon programs are free of charge.  The concert begins at 5:30 p.m. and is $10.00 per person.  A no host bar will be available during the evening program.  Tickets are available online, by person or by phone at the Nevada City Box Office (530) 265-5462, or in person at Briar Patch Co-Op.

 

 

 Admission is free for Nisenan Heritage Day.  Admission to the Evening Concert is $10.00 per person.  Please see below for a full schedule of activities.

Waiting to Heal

8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. ~ The Nevada County Historical Society will host an artifact symposium.  A panel of experts will gather to answer questions regarding laws governing mining, railroads, and Native American artifacts.

10:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. ~ Traditional Native American Dancers (including descendants of Chief Louis Kelly), Basket weaving demonstrations, and an informal salon hosted by Native American Artisans and “Painting is Medicine” artist Debora Iyall.

12:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. ~ Presentations (order to be announced)
Judith Lowery – discussions on Native American Contemporary Art
Dr Tanis Thorne & Hank Meals – California Indian Treaties of 1851
Dr. Sherri Tatsch – discussion about the Nisenan language and its many dialects
Marcos Guerrero – indigenous archeology and the cosmos
Nevada City Rancheria – history of the Nisenan, recognition and termination
Richard Hurley & T.J. Meekins – American California and the Fate of the Nisenan
Adela Morris, Institute of Canine Forensics – discussion about how dogs help with Tribal burials

Debora Iyall

5:30 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. ~ The Debora Iyall Band

7:15 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. ~ Shelly Covert & UnderCover

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 The Mission of the Miners Foundry Cultural Center is to preserve, enhance and utilize the historic Miners Foundry for cultural, educational and social activities.  


The Foundry is a non profit organization, proud to support other area non profits such as the California Heritage: Indigenous Research Project.