A full run of Alcheringa can be found at http://ethnopoetics.com/ and http://jacket2.org/reissues/alcheringa-archive-journal-ethnopoetics-1970-1980. (J.R.)]
NOTE. Richard Johnny John was one of the leading singers & makers-of-songs at the Allegany (Seneca) Reservation in westernNew York State ,
descended from singers, some of them, like the two grandfathers he mentions,
very important in their own time. The narrative is a piecing together of bits
from a series of interviews between us in August 1968. I asked him to speak about his life as a
songmaker (poet too in the use of both words & word-like sounds) & about the practice of his art as
carried on within the heh-non-deh-not-ha or traditional Iroquois Singing
Society.
NOTE. Richard Johnny John was one of the leading singers & makers-of-songs at the Allegany (Seneca) Reservation in western
The “woman's dance” songs mentioned
throughout are the most popular of the secular or social dances, also the most
interesting from my own point of view; i.e., they're the only ones still being made with any frequency & they often do have words to them, whereas most Seneca pop
songs (& many sacred ones as well) are “wordless.” Typical structure of the
contemporary woman's dance song is: intro sung by leader; repeat of intro plus
2nd part, by leader & chorus;
repeat of whole by leader & chorus. Instruments are horn rattles for
chorus, water-drum for lead singer. While I was at Allegany in 1968, the principal makers of woman's songs for the
Cold Spring Longhouse Singing Society were Herbert Dowdey (then absent in
Canada), Avery Jimerson & Richard Johnny John.
The Kinzua Dam is the flood control
project on the Allegany
River , backwater from
which was supposed to sweep over that part of the reservation on which most of
the Senecas were living. They put up a strong fight for an alternate plan, but
lost & are
now resettled on two sides of the proscribed land, still waiting for the waters
to come in. The Gaiwiyo (“code” or “good
message”) was brought by the Four Beings to the Seneca prophet, Handsome Lake , in the last decade of the 18th Century, & resulted in a fundamental reformation
of the native religion. Even so it retains many ancient
features, both in the public ceremonies (or “doings”) at the longhouse, &
in the rituals 0f the various medicine societies. It is today one of the
principal vehicles for retaining a
deeply-rooted Indian way-of-life among the Senecas.
My transcription of the interview follows.
How I really got started with songs was from the old-time Singing Society that they used to have amongst the oldtimers, amongst the older men. At that time there was a lot of older men that was in the Singing Society, and I kind of picked it off from them, the ways that they were singing. I guess everybody's got their own way of singing and how to make up songs.
There's
quite a few old men that I remember. I can't forget my two grandfathers - they
were both singers - and a lot of others besides. One of my grandfathers was
Chauncey Johnny John naturally, and the other was Howard Jimerson. Then that
goes all along through Amos Redeye (he used to do a lot of singing), Wesley White
and Willy Stevens, Clarence White, Sherman Redeye: there was quite a few of
them. And old John Jimerson used to do quite a bit of singing himself, made up
a lot of songs. In years back too you can't forget Ed Currey.
All
them oldtimers talked about even older men than they were, they called them
oldtimers themselves, and there were still some older ones than they were. Even up till today we sometimes talk about the
oldtimers, and we sing songs that's even older than what we are as of today. Sometimes we get in the mood to sing some of these
oldtimers' songs, and they're really, I wouldn't be afraid to say that there
may be some of the songs that we do sing today that are over a hundred years
old; I wouldn't be afraid to bet that they are older than a hundred years old,
some of them. Among the social dances too -like the old Moccasin Dance we have,
that's a real oldtimer, I don't know how long back that has started up. Some of
these dances and some of the songs that they do today have been danced from way
back when the Caiwiyo first came to Handsome
Lake . We used to have all of these different social dances,
and some of the songs are still sung as we remember them.
In
the old times, you know, when all these oldtimers used to get together, they'd
pick out a spot, they'd go to somebody's house. In them
days they didn't do like we do now: sometimes we
go right to the longhouse and sing at the longhouse, have the singing group
come to the longhouse; but in them days there was so many of them, that
sometimes on both ends of the reservation there was singing. There'd be maybe a
group down in Quaker
Bridge , and then there
would be another group singing in Cold Spring, all on the same night, there was
that many of us singers in the old days.
Now
we're so far apart and there's so few that really
can sing, but in the olden days they would mostly go on foot to these houses,
they were so close together. They all lived, I guess, in one big circle right
around Cold Spring and Quaker Bridge; that was right in the middle of the
reservation, and most of the longhouse believers were right in that circle. It was more or less handy for them to pick out a place
where they could meet and sing on this one night, and then
sometimes maybe if there wasn't any singing in Cold Spring, some of the Cold
Spring people would come down to Quaker Bridge. The two groups would come together
then: then you could really hear some good music.
They
went to different houses too. They didn't have a certain night where they were going to sing, but anybody could say well, tonight
we'll sing maybe at my place, and then maybe the followirlg night they'll say
well, we'll go down to Quaker Bridge and visit some of our friends down there.
This was a spur of the moment as I would say it. It wasn't like anything today.
Today now, you're lucky if you can get three or four singers together, cause
everybody else here is riding in cars, and there's so many things going on. Especially in the summertime: you can't get the singing
group together in the summertime too much. It's more
or less fall, winter and spring, I would say.
I've
belonged to the Singing Society ever since I was 14 or 15 years old; that was
in Cold Spring where we used to live. Old
Lindsey Dowdey was our president at that time, and that's been a good many
years ago, pretty close to, I wouldn't be afraid to say that was a good forty
years ago when I first started to pay any attention to these singers.
I
remember I used to sit over on the side. There was quite a few of us at that
time that was about my age: some were a little younger and some just a few
years older. They used to have us sit over on the
side and listen to the older men sing. I guess we were just a bunch of
listeners for the first time, the first three or four meetings we attended, and
then pretty soon they started to ask us to come and join the older men, and
that's how they told us what to do, how to play the rattle and the drum and
everything. They started teaching us how to keep the beat with the drummer. And
one thing that they didn't really
appreciate was anybody
fooling around when we were trying to learn. They always told us to take it
serious when we got there and to try to learn as quick as we can.
We
all started on the rattle, I guess. They taught us how to hold the rattle and
how to beat it and how to keep time. For my part it didn't take me too long to
learn it, because in myoid homestead where my grandfather used to stay, my
grandfather was always si
nging something; you
know, practicing some of those society
songs that they have, the ceremonial societies, different ones. He was always
trying to have us two - that's my brother and I - try to sing along with him. A
good many nights, especially in the winter, we used to sit and sing some of the
ceremonial songs that he used to sing. But at that time I didn't pay much
attention, so today I guess that's my misfortune. I
never did pay much attention to what he was singing; now I really am sorry that
I never did learn all that he used to sing.
I
guess about two or three years after I started going to these meetings, there
was someone I forget who it is) that asked if I knew the songs my grandfather
Howard used to sing. I said maybe I could remember. Well, at that time they put
me in amongst the older men and, well, I got kind of nervous the first time: I was
so used to the rattle that I tried to tell them that I would rather use the
rattle, and they said, no, you have to use the drum. They said you can never be
a singer, not unless you can play the drum right. So, there I had to, I just
had to learn.
They
were playing the woman's dance songs. That's what those singing societies were
always singing when they ever got together; they tried to outsing each other, I
guess, in making up these woman's dance
songs. So, they finally gave me the drum and they said to sit here; they said
well, we want to hear some of your grandfather's songs if you can remember them
all. They said at least one set anyway.
I
was pretty nervous at first, and when I started singing, my voice kind of got
shaky and I didn't know which way to go, or start crying or laughing. But after the first song, it was all right,
and then the older folks kind of encouraged me
to keep on and not to ...
well, in the first place
they said not to be bashful. They said, we can’t have you as a singer and you might as well forget it if
you're going to be bashful or anything in that way. And well, after they gave
me the drum, like I say, the first song I didn't know which way to go, either
start bawling or go on and laugh with them. Well, I started it off and I pulled
through pretty good.
It wasn't until, oh maybe when I was
in my twenties, I guess, when I ever started trying to make my own songs up.
And after I made up one and took it into the first meeting that we had and sang
it, the old folks said that was pretty good. They liked the song, and they said
to keep it up and just to keep on trying to fix up songs and make up songs; and
that's how. I happened to keep on going,
to keep making up songs. Some of the older men started passing away, and they
wanted some new songs made up, and that's the way I happened to: right up till today,
I can make up some of my own songs without any help from anybody else.
[to be continued]
2 comments:
Where is the continuation I want to know what happened next. have you finish writing the song? want to know more please upload the continuations.
Jer :
thanks.
This is .... priceless ....
I yet "heel-toe, toe-heel "it"
into my (own) paintings & poems...
Also (to me) The Ear/Mind hears "Song" = s
Psalm = s poem = s Community
"Well, I started it off and I pulled through pretty good>"
and
" (...), and that's the way I happened to: right up till today, I
can make up some of MY OWN songs without any help from
anybody else."
... & Grandfathers' Grandfathers' Great-Grandfathers'
continued Singing Songs of
the women doing their Round Dance....
( drums and rattles dance and song :
the Center of Community ?
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