Ts'msyen musician set to release album in Sm'algyax after years of studying endangered language - Action News
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British Columbia

Ts'msyen musician set to release album in Sm'algyax after years of studying endangered language

Jeremy Pahl has been telling stories through song since he was a teenager,and most recently has been releasing English-language music under the name Saltwater Hank. He says his new album is a significant milestone for himas a musician and aSm'algyax language-learner.

It's taken years for Jeremy Pahl to get the words, grammar and pronunciation right on all nine songs

A man stands by the mouth of a river wearing a cedar hat, holding an electric guitar.
Jeremy Pahl has most recently written and performed music as Saltwater Hank. (J. Joshua Diltz/Submitted)

Jeremy Pahl recommitted to learning his ancestral language after moving home to Kxeen, also known as Prince Rupert, B.C. Five years later,he says he catches himself thinking, and dreaming, in Sm'algyax.

The Ts'msyen musician says it's become his first language when he's writing. He's now set to release his first album recorded entirely in Sm'algyaxthis summer,with the first single dropping on May 31.

Pahl,34, has been telling stories through song since he was a teenager,whenhe first sung in Sm'algyax in the Prince George-based death metal bandGyibaaw.He's since switched genre to folk and country, and most recently has been releasing English-language music under the name Saltwater Hank.

He calls this album a "full-circle moment,"and a significant milestone for himas a musician and aSm'algyax language-learner.

Pahl, whosegiven Ts'msyen name isWil Uks Batsga Galaaw, says the album isa form of resistance "to the further erasure of our people, our cultureand our language."

For decades, official government policies attempted to stamp out Indigenous language, storiesand cultural practices through programs like federally funded residential and day schools, and policies like the potlatch ban. These were often violently enacted, as outlined by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

According to the First Peoples' Cultural Council (FPCC), about 17,000 people in B.C. are learning their First Nations language, an increase of about 3,000 since 2018.

Pahl says there are currently just 65 speakers considered to be fluent in Sm'algyax. Twenty years ago, he says the community estimated there were closer to 400 fluent speakers, mostly of the older generation.

Man stands in a cedar hat outside
Jeremy Pahl filters country and folk music through the lens of Ts'msyen stories, knowledge, and language revitalization on his latest album, Galnx wil lu Holtga Liimi, which was written in the Sm'algyax language. (J.Joshua Diltz/Submitted)

One of Pahl's language mentors, Theresa Lowther, 72, says after 30 years of working to stemthe tide of language loss, his new album is cause for hope.

"Years ago, we were really afraid our language was going to die," said Lowther, a fluent Sm'algyax speaker whoseTs'msyenname is Huhu uk.

" I can see the light at the end of the tunnel now, and Jeremy, I believe, is a leader in doing that."

Bentwood box full of songs

The intention behind the album can be read in its title,Gal'nx wil lu Holtga Liimi, which translates to"bentwood box full of songs."

"A bentwood box was where things were kept safe,"from regalia to dried berries and oolichan grease, Pahl says, adding thatsinging and songs have always been held sacred by Ts'msyen society.

He says it's taken years to get hisSm'algyaxsongs right, ensuring grammatical accuracy and pronunciation.

Black, red, and white image in northwest coast First Nations style, with text along the bottom.
The album's title, Galnx wil lu Holtga Liimi, translates to 'bentwood box full of songs,' a nod to the sacred place songs and stories hold in Ts'msyen society, Pahl says. (Submitted)

Adziksm Gyipaayk(Kelli Clifton), 34,is learning Sm'algyax alongside Pahl andalso the artist behind the album's cover.The bentwood box design featuresa human figure in the middle, which, she says,represents the songwriter, speaker, or language learner.

As soon as Pahl brought the idea to her, she says she knew this album was significant.

"It was one of those conversations that almost felt electric and I knew this project as a whole was going to be special," she said.

"It's very emotional because my father, when he was a young child, grew up speaking Sm'algyax fluently," she added."And then he attended Indian Day School," where he was forced to speak English.

Canada Day release

The album will be released in full on July 1, a date Pahl chose intentionally.

While many will be celebrating Canada Day, Pahl says he'll be celebrating the elders and language mentors who helped him make the album, and the deepening ties to his language.

"It's not so much a celebratory day, especially for Indigenous people, whose land has been compromised, whose genocide has occurred,"says Pahl, noting that other nations, like the Heiltsuk, are working to reclaim that day for their own celebrations as well.

Lowther says the enthusiasm of the younger generation is helping heal the damage done through colonial practices like residential schools.

"One thing that really makes me happy is the amount of young people really taking the baton and going forward with it, making a stand and saying we are going to bring [Sm'algyax] back."

Jeremy Pahl ('Saltwater Hank') speaks on National Indigenous Peoples' Day

5 years ago
Duration 7:44
CBC News Network's Andrew Nichols speaks with Jeremy Pahl, a folk artist known as 'Saltwater Hank' about the celebrations - and reminders - of National Indigenous Peoples' Day.