'Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies: The Willie Dunn Anthology' (out March 19th on Light In The Attic Records)

 

Definitive, Landmark Anthology for the Late,
Great Canadian Poet, Folk Singer, and Award-winning Filmmaker
Willie Dunn

Back in Print for First Time in Nearly 10 Years:
Grammy®-nominated Collection Native North America (Vol. 1) Feat. Willie Dunn
Available March 19th in Deluxe Vinyl and CD Packages

“I Pity the Country, I Pity the State, and the Mind of a Man Who Thrives on Hate…” – Willie Dunn

Cover art for Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies_The Willie Dunn Anthology.jpg

Cover art for Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies: The Willie Dunn Anthology

Click here to pre-order The Willie Dunn Anthology
Click here to pre-order Native North America (Vol. 1)
Click here for cover art/product shots and artist photos

 

Los Angeles, CA (February 10, 2021) ─ Celebrated archival reissue label Light in the Attic Records (LITA) is humbled to announce the next chapter in their ongoing Native North America series, Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies: The Willie Dunn Anthology, which highlights the songs, poetry, and stories of an artist as every bit essential as Gordon Lightfoot, Leonard Cohen, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Bob Dylan, and Neil Young, but without the industry backing required to become a mainstream pop culture household name. Though artistically and creatively a peer, Dunn was also a grassroots activist and direct-action radical with no interest in the showbiz game, yet whose art, poetry and awareness has continued to inspire, influence, and inform generations without widespread commercial acclaim.

Available to pre-order beginning today (2/10), Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies: The Willie Dunn Anthology will be released on 2-LP gatefold vinyl and across all digital platforms on March 19th. This definitive set honors the trailblazing life and music of the late, great Willie Dunn. Remastered by GRAMMY®-nominated engineer, John Baldwin, the vinyl version is complemented by a 24-page newspaper insert, titled WILLIE DUNN NOTES, featuring extensively researched liner notes by GRAMMY®-nominated, Willie Dunn Anthology producer Kevin Howes (Voluntary In Nature), and includes insightful interviews with Dunn, his family, collaborators, and a long list of peers including Bob Robb, Jerry Saddleback Sr., Jeannette Corbiere Lavell (OC), and Métis rights leader Tony Belcourt (OC). Also included in the package are letters from the Dunn family, a poem by Alanis Obomsawin (OC), poetry transcriptions, rarely seen archival images, art contributions from Christi Belcourt and Alanna Edwards, and graphic design/typography by Chris Gergley (NNA series). Musically, The Willie Dunn Anthology contains songs previously commercially unavailable from the vaults of the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), including the quintessential 1968 NFB recording of “The Ballad of Crowfoot, plus a career spanning overview of Willie’s songbook. All songs and compositions are officially licensed and approved by the Dunn estate.

The 2-LP version of The Willie Dunn Anthology is available in three editions: Standard Edition (pressed on black wax), Online Color Edition (pressed on opaque red wax and available exclusively at LightInTheAttic.net), and Indie Retail Color Edition (pressed on translucent red wax and available exclusively at record stores).

Coinciding with The Willie Dunn Anthology release, Light in the Attic announces a much needed and long overdue repress of the GRAMMY®-nominated compilation, Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985, also available on March 19th in standard black and colored vinyl editions, along with a newly redesigned CD edition that comes in a stylish hardbound book edition. Nominated for a GRAMMY® for “Best Historical Album” in 2016, Native North America (Vol. 1) features 24 Indigenous artists and groups from across the northern half of Turtle Island, including: John Angaiak, Willy Mitchell, Eric Landry, Willie Thrasher, Duke Redbird, Sugluk, and the late, great Willie Dunn. This seminal Light in the Attic title raised the bar for archival releases upon its release in 2014, placing it alongside the Anthology of American Folk Music and the influential Nuggets collection as a lasting musical and cultural influence. 

Taking five years to produce, NNAV1 remains an enduring love letter to the Indigenous artists who helped inspire their people and many others through ceremony and song, a revelation and instant classic to music lovers the world over. The compilation has received praise from Rolling Stone, The Guardian, Pitchfork, NPR, CBC, MOJO, The Wire, VICE, and Record Collector Magazine; as well as Indigenous news/music outlets such as APTN, The Nation, Nuxalk Radio, and NCI. With the support of NNA series producer/compiler Kevin Howes, over fifteen Native North America Gatherings were held from coast-to-coast and into the northern/Arctic regions of Canada, with many of the compilation’s veteran artists sharing their monumental songs, poetry, films, and art with Native and non-Native audiences, all coming together to listen, learn, and care. The 2017 gathering at Trinity-St. Paul’s in Toronto was nationally broadcast by the CBC and reviewed by The Guardian, with a who’s who of the Canadian music scene in attendance. Considering the financially motivated destruction of our environment, the conservative political landscape, and corporate bottom-line dominance, it’s bittersweet to report that the revolutionary songs featured on NNAV1 still hold as much meaning today as when they were originally recorded. It’s an indispensable addition to any record collection. Native North America (Vol. 2), featuring Native American artists from the US region, is currently in production.

Available atLightInTheAttic.net and independent record stores around the globe (on 3/19), this repressing of Native North America (Vol. 1) includes three physical editions: deluxe3-LP set on black wax and limited-edition clear wax (featuring a 60-page book housed in a “Tip-On” slipcase with three “Tip-On” jackets), plus a deluxe2-CD set (housed in a custom 7”x7” hardbound book with 84-pages). Both editions include comprehensive liner notes by Kevin Howes, artist interviews, unseen archival photos, and lyrics (with translations). Additionally, the acclaimed anthology is available at all digital retailers.

More about Willie Dunn:
Along with Buffy Sainte-Marie, A. Paul Ortega, and Floyd Red Crow Westerman, Willie Dunn is the most important singer-songwriter to emerge from the Indigenous communities of Turtle Island in the turbulent 1960s. With a full, strong, and beautiful voice, Dunn honored personal heroes such as Crowfoot, Crazy Horse, and Louis Riel through song, as well as William Shakespeare, Samuel Johnson, and T.S. Eliot, expressing the multiplicity of his deep-seated passions, interests, and understandings. Born in Montreal in 1941 to Mi’gmaq and English/Cornish parents, Dunn was his own man, connected to both the city and the land, a poet, troubadour, filmmaker, artist, environmentalist, and grassroots activist/direct action radical who strived to connect with his people and did just that, affecting generations of Indigenous artists and musicians to the present day and anyone else lucky enough to have heard him. Dunn’s first film, The Ballad of Crowfoot, produced for the National Film Board of Canada in 1968, utilized a selection of hand-picked photographs from the National Archives of Canada paired with a powerful song, colonialism from the Indigenous perspective, not to mention a celluloid “music video” offering well before their prominence in the 1980s, revolution from within the system. Crowfoot, emulated by the likes of notable US filmmaker Ken Burns and still screened in classrooms across Canada is simply unforgettable. In “Charlie,” Willie Dunn set the harrowing story of residential school genocide victim Chanie Wenjack to music, almost 50 years prior to The Tragically Hip’s Gord Downie and his much acclaimed Secret Path, but with little-to-no radio play or media support. This must change. Willie Dunn Anthology associate producer and son Lawrence Dunn said this to The Guardian newspaper about his father in 2017: “The longer he’s gone the louder his words get...” Anyone who has heard “I Pity the Country” will understand, a song as profound as any in existence. “It’s like the reason you are supposed to make music,” enthused Kurt Vile about the tune to MOJO magazine. Sideman, friend, and guitar picker Bob Robb puts his old pal into focus: “If you want to know who Willie Dunn was, listen to his songs.” And don’t forget to share. Unfortunately, Dunn passed on to the spirit world a year before the release of the GRAMMY®-nominated Native North America (Vol. 1), but his open support, encouragement, and blessing, made both of these projects possible. All we can do now is to help keep his music alive, a great responsibility that we don’t hold lightly. Thank you, Willie.

 

Tracklist - Creation Never Sleeps, Creation Never Dies: The Willie Dunn Anthology:

Side One
1.      The Ballad of Crowfoot
2.      Peruvian Dream (Part 1)
3.      Charlie
4.      Broker
5.      I Pity the Country

Side Two
1.      Crazy Horse
2.      Louis Riel 
3.      School Days
4.      The Carver
5.      O Canada!
6.      Down by the Stream (Starlight Maiden)
7.      Rattling Along the Freight Train (To the Spirit Land)

Side Three
1.      Pontiac
2.      The Pacific
3.      Nova Scotia
4.      The Dreamer
5.      Sonnet 33 and 55/Friendship Dance

Side Four
1.      Wounded Lake
2.      Métis Red River Song
3.      Son of the Sun
4.      The Lovenant Chain
5.      Bear and Fish

 

Tracklist - Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985:

Side One 
1.      Willie Dunn - I Pity The Country        
2.      John Angaiak - I'll Rock You To The Rhythm Of The Ocean             
3.      Sugluk - Fall Away 
4.      Sikumiut - Sikumiut 
5.      Willie Thrasher - Spirit Child
6.      Willy Mitchell - Call Of The Moose    

Side Two
1.      Lloyd Cheechoo - James Bay           
2.      Alexis Utatnaq - Maqaivvigivalauqtavut         
3.      Brian Davey - Dreams Of Ways        
4.      Morley Loon - N'Doheeno    
5.      Peter Frank - Little Feather  
6.      Ernest Monias - Tormented Soul      

Side Three
1.      Eric Landry - Out Of The Blue           
2.      David Campbell - Sky-Man And The Moon   
3.      Willie Dunn - Son Of The Sky            
4.      Shingoose (poetry by Duke Redbird) - Silver River
5.      Willy Mitchell And Desert River Band - Kill'n Your Mind             

Side Four
1.      Phillippe McKenzie - Mistashipu       
2.      Willie Thrasher - Old Man Carver     
3.      Lloyd Cheechoo - Winds Of Change
4.      The Chieftones - I Shouldn't Have Did What I Done  
5.      Sugluk - I Didn't Know          
6.      Lawrence Martin - I Got My Music    

Side Five
1.      Gordon Dick - Siwash Rock
2.      Willy Mitchell And Desert River Band - Birchbark Letter             
3.      William Tagoona - Anaanaga            
4.      Leland Bell - Messenger      
5.      Saddle Lake Drifting Cowboys - Modern Rock           
6.      Willie Thrasher - We Go To Take You Higher             

Side Six
1.      Sikumiut - Utirumavunga      
2.      Sugluk - Ajuinnarasuarsunga            
3.      John Angaiak - Hey, Hey, Hey, Brother         
4.      Groupe Folklorique Montagnais - Tshekuan Mak Tshetutamak     
5.      Willie Dunn featuring Jerry Saddleback - Peruvian Dream (Part 2)

 

About Light In The Attic:
Known for their grassroots success with Rodriguez, the reclusive singer-songwriter whose unlikely story of personal triumph received long-overdue worldwide acclaim in the Academy Award®-winning documentary SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN, Light In The Attic Records has gone on to garner nominations for multiple GRAMMY® Awards, including one for “Best Historical Album” (2016) for Native North America (Vol. 1). Their exuberance and dedication to spreading joy through music has propelled them through the release of 200+ titles worldwide, setting the pace for reissue labels and the archival process. From D’Angelo to Donnie & Joe Emerson, Sixto Rodriguez to Serge Gainsbourg, Betty Davis to Karen Dalton, Lewis to Lifetones, the list goes on and on.

Light In The Attic is co-owned and operated by co-founders and high school friends Matt Sullivan and Josh Wright. In addition to the label’s acclaimed output, the company also distributes for nearly 150 record labels. In 2010, LITA expanded from their native Seattle by opening offices in Los Angeles, including a successful music house focused on licensing for film, television and advertisements, along with music supervision. Light In The Attic also operates a thriving physical brick and mortar record store in the KEXP Gathering Space in Seattle. For more info, visit LightInTheAttic.net and follow on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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