Jerry Alfred

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Nendaa-Go Back 00:00 Tools
Generation Hand Down 00:00 Tools
The Warrior Song 00:00 Tools
Towhata Lake 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song 00:00 Tools
Salaw 00:00 Tools
The Watchmen 00:00 Tools
Beginner Gambling Song 00:00 Tools
Caribou Stick Gambling Song 00:00 Tools
Etsi Shon - The Grandfather Song 00:00 Tools
Taan Mun - Lake Laberge 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song (2) 00:00 Tools
Haven't I Told You 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song (1) 00:00 Tools
A Love Song 00:00 Tools
Etsi shon 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Song 00:00 Tools
Beware 00:00 Tools
Pelly Song 00:00 Tools
Nendaä - Go Back 00:00 Tools
Taan Mun/Lake Laberge 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song -1- 00:00 Tools
Old Ways 00:00 Tools
Another Love Song 00:00 Tools
Homeless 00:00 Tools
Residential School 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song -2- 00:00 Tools
Etsi Shon-The Grandfather Song 00:00 Tools
The Grandfather Song/Etsi Shon 00:00 Tools
Taan Mun-Lake Laberge 00:00 Tools
Denë Kazhe 00:00 Tools
The Other Side 00:00 Tools
Cat Tails & Wild Rice 00:00 Tools
Haven't I Told You? 00:00 Tools
Solzhee -1- 00:00 Tools
Solzhee 00:00 Tools
Ne-a-Na 00:00 Tools
Haven´t I Told You 00:00 Tools
Stick Gambling Rock 00:00 Tools
Polly Song 00:00 Tools
MacMillan River Love Song (Индейский современный фолк) 00:00 Tools
Nendaa - Go Back 00:00 Tools
McQeston River Stick Gambling Song 00:00 Tools
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Jerry Alfred (born 1955) is a Northern Tutchone musician living in Pelly Crossing, Yukon. He was named "Keeper of the Songs" at birth, an honorary title which he has made into a career, updating traditional Tutchone music by adding twentieth century Western influences. Alfred was born in the community of Mayo, Yukon in September 1955 into traditional life and speaking the Northern Tutchone language, a skill which he kept alive in spite of having been sent to residential English speaking schools at the age of five. Alfred was born into the Crow Clan and inherited the title of "Keeper of the Songs" from his father. This position gave him the responsibility of collecting traditional songs and performing at ceremonial events of his people, the Selkirk First Nation. Alfred's position also involved his representing the clan at potlatches, or meetings with the broader Yukon Aboriginal community. Alfred's musical training began when he was placed in a choir while at the residential schools. His parents bought him his first guitar when he was seven, and he began learning in earnest in his teens, probably due to the influence of Bob Dylan, an influence which still lives in Alfred's music today. In the 1980s and early 1990s, Alfred played a large role in negotiations with the Canadian government over the Selkirk people's Land Claim, which culminated in an agreement in 1995. In 1995, he won the Juno Award for Aboriginal Recording of the Year. In 1994, Alfred's father made a special effort to engage Alfred in his people's songs again, and when his father died, Alfred was inspired to release a record, 1994's "Etsi Shon", or "Grandfather Song", which served the dual purpose of keeping alive the music and the language of the Selkirk people. Alfred has since released two other albums, "Nendaa" (Go Back) in 1996, and Kehlonn in 1998, with his band, Medicine Beat. Today, Alfred hopes to pass the position of Song Keeper to his eldest daughter, Cenjeya ("Cute one"), who along with his youngest daughter, Saanuwa ("precious one"), he is teaching the traditions and music. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.