Verse in Cree makes Midnight Shine's cover of Neil Young classic unique - Action News
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SudburyLIVING LANGUAGES

Verse in Cree makes Midnight Shine's cover of Neil Young classic unique

Adrian Sutherland says his first memory of hearing his language was when he was four or five years old. "I remember my grandfather speaking with some other elders from the community," he recalled.

Midnight Shine's frontman says his language gives him an understanding of who he is and where he comes from

Adrian Sutherland is the frontman for the Attawapiskat roots-rock band, Midnight Shine. (Aaron Vincent Elkaim/Canadian Press)

Adrian Sutherland says his first memory of hearing his language was when he was four or five years old. "I remember my grandfather speaking with some other elders from the community," he recalled.

Sutherland, the lead vocalist and guitarist for the roots-rock band, Midnight Shine, is from the Mushkegowuk Cree community of Attawapiskat. With four brothers and two sisters, Sutherland says the first words he learned were "come here," "sleep" and "eat."

He says most of his siblings eventually ended up in foster care and they didn't come back together until they were in their teens.

"Some of my younger siblings had lost the language but they were still able to retain some of the language," said Sutherland. "But they're not fluent speakers. They can speak, though, if they need to," he added.

Sutherland says he was able to retain the language because he landed with some relatives on the reserve. Heexplains how the band's cover of the Neil Young classic, Heart of Gold, came about.

Midnight Shine's Stan Louttit, Adrian Sutherland, Charnelle Menow and Zach Tomatuk. (David McDonald)

"We were sitting in the studio one day arranging the song and trying to figure out how we were going to make the song unique," said Sutherland.

One of the ideas came from John-Angus MacDonald who had produced six of the songs on Midnight Shine's latest album why not sing a verse in Cree since no one else had probably ever done that? Sutherland says they did it and it turned out surprisingly well.

"There's just so much to know about the language," said Sutherland. "When you go out onto the land the vocabulary just opens up, there's so much about being out on the land and the water, the sky, the weather, the animals, tracking, the type of cloud, the birds and the sounds they make."

"I think our language is what makes us unique as Canadians," said Sutherland. "It really gives us purpose and understanding about who we are and where we come from," he added.

With files from Unreserved podcast First Words