How Indigenous-owned record labels are changing the music industry in Canada - Action News
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How Indigenous-owned record labels are changing the music industry in Canada

Indigenous musicians are building their own infrastructure within Canada's music industry after years of feeling excluded from or limited by the system's unspoken glass ceiling.

'It will light up a whole bunch of dark spaces when we get to hear all of those stories,' says artist

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Launched in 2021 by Amanda Rheaume and Shoshona Kish, Ishkd Records was born out of necessity during a time when the gap between Indigenous artists and their non-Indigenous counterparts was stark, the co-founders said. (Jean-Francois Benoit/CBC)

Shoshona Kish the Ojibwe-Anishnaabe artist who forms one half of the Indigenous musical duo Digging Roots remembers the moment that lit a fire in her.

While on tour with her bandmate and husband Raven Kanatakta, the musicians finished a set at the Glastonbury Festival in England with a traditional round dance.

Their son who'd been travelling around the world with them as they toured was in awe, having watched several thousand people participate in the custom.

"After the show he was so excited and he said, 'You know, I can see this happening with 40,000 people someday,'" Kish said.

That unwavering belief in Indigenous music and artists led Kish and her business partner and fellow musician Amanda Rheaume to found Ishkd Records, one of several Indigenous-owned record labels that have emerged across Canada in the last few years.

"That's what I have my eyes set on as a metaphor that [we're] going to continue to grow this," she added. "We're going to continue to find each other from all of our communities and support all of these gorgeous stories that are being told."

The music industry in Canada is more hospitable than ever to Indigenous artists, partly due to an emergence in recent years of Indigenous-owned infrastructure committed to managing and marketing people from the community, according to artists, label owners and industry leaders.

From Ishkd Records and Red Music Rising in Toronto, to Land Back Records in Vancouver plus Hitmakerz, a label specializing in Inuit musicians with offices in Iqaluit, Toronto and Ottawa Indigenous musicians are building their own foundation within Canada's music industry after years of feeling excluded from or limited by the system's unspoken glass ceiling.

Group stands with award
Digging Roots pose with an award for Contemporary Indigenous Artist of the Year during the Juno Awards in Edmonton on Saturday, March 11, 2023. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

Labels born out of necessity

Launched in June2021, Ishkd Records was born out of necessity:when Rheaume and Kish were up-and-coming musicians, they said thelack of supports for Indigenous artists compared to their non-Indigenous counterparts was stark.

"The journey of being an artist and moving in different music spaces, it was just so painfully obvious that there was such a big gap [between] the Indigenous artists and ... non-Indigenous artists," said Rheaume,a Mtis singer-songwriter.

"The goals are really to bridge that gap, to shatter glass ceilings and open up opportunities for Indigenous artists that have been systematically and routinely left out or shut out of spaces and conversations and career opportunities."

WATCH| Indigenous artists take control of their songs:

How Indigenous-owned record labels are changing Canadian music

1 year ago
Duration 2:27
Indigenous musicians in Canada are having a moment on festival stages, radio and streaming because of a new generation of Indigenous-owned record labels committed to managing and marketing artists on their own terms.

Ishkd Recordspartnered with Universal Music Canada in 2021 for a distribution deal meant to amplify Indigenous voices.

Kish, for her part, felt that the competitive nature of the music industry made it exceedingly difficult for Indigenous artists who were subject to quotas or tokenism when applying for opportunities.

"For Indigenous folks, there was often just the one spot at the festival or there was the one opportunity," she said. Once somebody got it, it meant that everyone else was back at square one and it's generally still the case that non-Indigenous people are deciding which Indigenous voices are heard in mainstream music, she added.

"I think that there are all of these sounds and all of these ideas that perhaps, you know, a major label doesn't know how to sell yet and perhaps mainstream radio doesn't trust that their listeners will want to hear it," Kish said.

"We all deserve to hear more and I think it will light up a whole bunch of dark spaces when we get to hear all of those stories and sounds."

Support rooted in community

Alan Greyeyes prefers to think of himself as a helper not a manager. Based in Winnipeg and a member of thePeguis First Nation, Greyeyes is the director of Skihiw festival, an annual Indigenous arts and music event. He also runs a talent management agency to support Indigenous artists.

"I think [that] a big part of what we do on the Indigenous side of the music industry is really figure out ways to best support the development of artists, but also the strengthening of their families. And sometimes the existing norms within the music industry kind of conflict with how we support Indigenous families," he said.

More recently, a steady stream of Indigenous artists have beenreceiving more exposure through music festivals, radio play, and institutional recognition like the Juno Awards or the Polaris Prize.

Oji-Cree singer Aysanabee sings onstage with his guitar.
Aysanabee performs at the Summer Solstice Indigenous Music Awards in Ottawa on June 6, 2023. He was the first act signed by Ishkd Records. (Courtesy of the SSIMAs)

Jeremy Dutcherhas won both the aforementioned prizes. Aysanabee, the first act signed by Ishkd, is on the 2023 Polaris longlist.Acts like The Halluci Nation and Snotty Nose Rez Kids are headlining festivals and nabbing nominations and wins at the Junos. Artists like these, whohave successfully transitioned from discovery acts to headliners,can sell tickets, Greyeyes said.

"I think there's still a long way to go in terms of just challenging stereotypes across the board," Greyeyes said. "We encounter racism in almost every part of the work that we do in the music industry."

"When the artists are in partnership [and] are working with people that understand their struggles and how far they've come, I think it just becomes a much healthier relationship," he said.

A man wearing a bandana and a t-shirt that says RESIST sits in a music studio.
'As Indigenous people, we have to go through crazy things, like people not believing our stories. There's large groups of people who don't believe our pain,' said Jeremiah Manitopyes, known by his stage name Drezus. (Julie Debeljak/CBC)

Jeremiah Manitopyes, known by his stage name Drezus, is a Plains Cree artist from Saskatchewan. He's released past records with his group Team Res Official through a label, but is now an independent solo artist. Nothing is more important to an artist's livelihood than community support, he said.

"As Indigenous people, we have to go through crazy things, like people not believing our stories. There's large groups of people who don't believe our pain," he added.

"We have to take care of each other in a different way," he said. "I feel like if there's Indigenous people involved at any level of industry that you're participating in as an Indigenous person, there's just more understanding about what we've been through and what it took to get there."

With files from Eli Glasner, Laura Thompson and Teghan Beaudette