SOMA057 / Onimikìg Timothy Archambault
Purchase
Details
Tracklisting
01. *
01. *
02. CG I
03. CG II
04. Claps
05. Inversions
06. Peals
07. Rolls
08. Rumbles I
09. Rumbles II
10. Rumbles III
11. Din Of Silence for The Indigenous Children
Credits:
Unaccompanied Indigenous Flute: Timothy Archambault
All songs digitally recorded 4 November 2023, Criteria Recording Studios, Studio C, Miami, FL.
Recording Engineer: Carlos Alvarez
Assistant Engineers: James Dunn and Luis Duran
Mixing & Mastering: Timothy Archambault
Cover, portrait & birch bark photography; CYJO
Cover, portrait & birch bark photography; CYJO
Biography
Timothy Archambault is an Indigenous flute player, composer, and architect. His repertoire includes traditional Canadian Algonquin flute songs (recorded for the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian Archives in 2007), early 20th-century Indigenous flute music, and contemporary music by Indigenous composers. He has recorded extensively and received commissions from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Agnes Etherington Art Centre, National Gallery of Art East Building, and the Winterville Mounds Association. He is a Hereditary Senator of the Kichesipirini Algonquin First Nation, a member of the Métis Nation of Quebec, First Nations Composer Initiative, and co-founder of thecreativedestruction
:::::
Onimikìg [Algonquin]:
(n. an.)- thunder
Timothy Archambault’s unaccompanied flute pieces for this album have been inspired by Indigenous brontomancy (divination by thunder). Each piece highlights a different extended flute technique metaphorically related to types of thunder sounds: claps, peals, rolls, rumbles, inversions, and CG (cloud-to-ground).
The Indigenous flute used in this recording is made of cedar respective to the traditional woods used by the Kichesipirini and other tribes who live along the Ottawa & Saint Lawrence Rivers.
To the Algonquin the flute (Pibigwan) is the wind maker or essence of the wind. Unlike other tribal nations whom the majority used the flute as a courting instrument, the Algonquin generally utilized the flute for more contemplative singular usage to mimic the sounds of nature or as a signaling device during times of conflict. When love songs were required, they were usually more plaintive in character expressing. sadness, loneliness, or concerning the departure of a lover.
The album intro begins with the shaking of a necklace of otter penis bone, fish spine, bear claw, elk teeth and deer hide, gifted from Algonquin Elder Ajawajawesi. It is meant to focus the listener’s attention before the flute pieces begin. The warble or multi-phonic oscillation prevalent in all the pieces traditionally represented the “throat rattling” vocalization of the tonic note, sometimes known as the horizon of which the melody floats from. Due to the repetition of multi-phonic oscillation the performer will breathe erratically creating an altered state correlating with similar traditional ceremonial practices.
Limited edition of 300 LPs with 12 page full sized booklet with amazing photography of the birch wood scores of the pieces performed on this recording.
Limited edition of 300 LPs with 12 page full sized booklet with amazing photography of the birch wood scores of the pieces performed on this recording.