Acclaimed Musician R. Carlos Nakai Speaks, Performs at SU
Thursday October 28, 2004
      SALISBURY, MD---Internationally-acclaimed Native 		American flutist and New Age Grammy finalist R. Carlos Nakai performs 		with his ensemble, the R. Carlos Nakai Quartet, during a three-day 		residency at ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥ Tuesday-Thursday, November 16-18.		Nakai, who performed in the inaugural gala of the 		National Museum of the American Indian this fall, is widely regarded as 		the world’s premier performer of the Native American flute.		He speaks on “Native American Religion and Beliefs” 		on Tuesday, November 16, and “Rites Rituals and Ceremonies,” Wednesday, 		November 17. The quartet then performs Thursday, November 18. All events 		are at 7 p.m. in Holloway Hall Auditorium. Tickets are not required.		Nakai said he was inspired to use the instrument in 		contemporary music by early Native American composers and performers.				Each flute, carved from cedar is fitted to the 		dimensions of player’s hands. The one-of-a-kind design creates a unique 		sound that cannot be replicated. Nakai has performed with jazz ensembles 		and in concert hall, piano and guitar collaborations.		Rounding out the quartet are Saami and Cherokee 		drummer Will Clipman, multi-instrumentalist “Amo” Chip Dabney and Navajo 		jazz vocalist Mary Redhouse. The quartet’s unique sound, a fusion of 		jazz and world-beat is a convergence of the group members’ expertise. 		Tucson Citizen music critic Dan Buckley said the music is, “… 		atmospheric and evocative, funky, rhythmically playful … exciting, never 		banal …. The improvisational impulse is always there … tempered by an 		egoless … camaraderie and collective vision.”		Clipman performs a solo show called “Global Village 		Musical Story Theatre,” which combines original masks and mythopoetic 		story-telling with the soundscape of indigenous instruments.		Dabney has performed with many African, world-beat, 		reggae, jazz and rhythm and blues bands. He has performed on more than 		21 recordings and has released two original albums: So Many Ways and 		Escape from Newark. He is a master of many instruments, including the 		saxophone and piano.		Redhouse incorporates bird calls, animal cries, 		multi-octave scat lines and native chants in her exploratory 		“eco-spiritual” sound.		Nakai’s lectures and performance are part of the Celebration of Native 		American Peoples Fall Cultural Series sponsored by the Office of 		Cultural Affairs and Museum Programs. Admission is free and the public 		is invited. For more information call 410-543-6271.                               
					