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Joanne
Shenandoah is a Wolf Clan member of the Oneida Nation --
Iroquois Confederacy. She is the daughter of Maisie
Shenandoah, a Clanmother, and the late Clifford Shenandoah,
an Onondaga chief and jazz guitarist. Her parents had a deep
love for music, encouraging Joanne to study voice, flute,
piano, clarinet, guitar and cello. Joanne's talent combined
with her beautiful, clear voice enable her to embellish the
ancients' songs of the Iroquois using a blend of traditional
and contemporary instrumentation. After spending 14 years as
a computer programmer and consultant in Washington, DC,
Shenandoah became close with the tribal elders and her
extended family who reacquainted her with the stories and
songs of her people, which prompted a personal artistic
reawakening in 1989. Since then Joanne Shenandoah has won
several musical achievement awards, most recently she
received "Best Female Artist" at both the 1999 AND 1998
Native American Music Awards and in 1997 she was recognized
as a "Native American Woman of Hope."
Ms. Shenandoah
has drawn upon her rich heritage in establishing a
reputation as one of America's foremost native recording
artists. Her music reflects the indigenous philosophy and
culture which continues to have a profound effect on the
world today. She has performed and recorded with many
accomplished musicians in Europe and America, most recently
Neil Young. From traditional chants to contemporary ballads
of Native ways, her music has been described as an emotional
experience, a "Native American trance." |