4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 19 January 2018
⏱️ 24 minutes
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The story of an aging pile of forgotten reel-to-reel tapes discovered on the shelf of a tribal elder on the Fort Mojave Reservation. Recorded by an amateur ethnographer in the 1960s, these tapes of the last Creation Song singer of the tribe recount the legends and origin of the Mojave people. They are oral maps of the desert region that were instrumental in helping to save the Ward Valley from becoming a nuclear waste dump site.
In the 1960s, a CBS radio engineer out of Los Angeles, drove out to the Colorado River Indian Reservation in Parker, Arizona with his portable reel-to-reel tape recorder with the idea of recording the Mojave Indians. There he met Emmett Van Fleet, an elder of the tribe and the last of the Creation Song singers. Over the course of several years, Guy Tyler made his weekend pilgrimages, and slowly and meticulously the two men recorded the 525 song cycle that recounts the legend of the creation and origin of the Mojave people, their traditions, and their oral maps that describe historical journeys, sacred sites, and directions about how to safely cross the Mojave Desert. Emmett Van Fleet left the tapes to his nephew Llewllyn Barrackman. As years went by and technology changed, the tapes were unplayed and forgotten until Philip Klasky and the Storyscape Project worked to get the the tapes transferred and preserved.
In 1995, when action was taken to turn Ward Valley into a nuclear waste dump, traditional Mojave songs and song cycles helped save the endangered Ward Valley and Colorado River by proving the historic connection the Mojave have with this sacred land.
In 1999 The Kitchen Sisters travelled to the Mojave Reservation with writer and environmentalist Phil Klasky, to meet with Llewllyn Barrackman and other Mojave the elders, birdsong singers and activists in the Ward Valley struggle.
Produced with Philip Klasky, Director of the Storyscape Project.
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0:00.0 | Radio Tophia, Welcome to the Kitchen Sisters Presently. |
0:04.0 | We're the Kitchen Sisters, Davia Nelson and Nicki Silva. |
0:09.0 | Before we get going, I want to tell you about a show I really like, our fellow radiotopia show, |
0:14.6 | this day in esoteric political history. |
0:17.9 | As you may have noticed, this is an election year, a very, very strange election year. |
0:23.0 | Luckily, history can help provide some context. |
0:27.0 | This day is doing a number of special election-related series all alongside their regular collection of fascinating and informative stories |
0:35.6 | from the past. |
0:37.2 | This day is hosted by Jody Avergan, formerly of 30 for 30, and two actual historians, Kelly Carter Jackson of Wellesley and Nicole |
0:46.3 | Hammer of Vanderbilt. Stories are serious, silly, from recent history and from |
0:51.7 | way in the past. |
0:53.2 | Check out this day in esoteric political history, |
0:56.6 | wherever you get your podcasts. |
0:58.6 | Call from the kitchen, |
1:04.0 | Davias in San Francisco. I'm in Santa Cruz and this is how we work most of the time. |
1:09.0 | By telephone. |
1:10.0 | Hi, Dick's. |
1:11.0 | Right now we're working on a new series called The Keepers. It's about activist |
1:15.5 | archivists and rogue librarians, collectors, historians, curators, and the |
1:21.0 | collections and cultures they keep. |
1:23.0 | This idea dates way back to the Lost and Found Sound |
1:27.0 | series we did with Jay Allison |
... |
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