A Tribe Called Red pulls out of Mwte sound and light show - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:50 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

A Tribe Called Red pulls out of Mwte sound and light show

Ottawa-based A Tribe Called Red has pulled out of a sound and light show to mark Canada's 150th anniversary celebrations amid concerns the event disrespects Indigenous culture.

'We respect their decision,' says Ottawa 2017 spokesperson

Mwte premiered Friday, Oct. 6, 2017, on Albert Island. (@2017Ottawa/Twitter)

Ottawa-based A Tribe Called Red has pulled out of a sound and light showto mark Canada's 150th anniversary celebrations amid concerns the eventdisrespects Indigenous culture.

In an email to CBC News, Ottawa 2017 confirmed the electronic music trio's music will no longer be part of Mwte, which premiered on Albert Island last Friday. Two of their songs,Indian CityandSuplex,were part of the 10-minute soundtrack of the show.

"A Tribe Called Red has requested to have their music withdrawn from the project,"said Ottawa 2017 spokesperson Denise Leblanc.

The group's management said they would prefer not to be involved in Canada'ssesquicentennial, she said.The group did not respond to a request for comment from Radio-Canada Friday.

"We respect their decision and are honouring their request to make a change to the soundtrack. In collaboration with Moment Factory, we are in the process of adapting content that will be equally extraordinary and fitting for the Mwte experience," Leblanc said.

Leblanc said she expects there to be "a seamless transition" over the next two weeks.

Elder Albert Dumont, a spiritual adviser from the Kitigan Zibi First Nation, criticized the entire production for taking place on sacred land.

Elder Albert Dumont says the sound and light show is a 'mockery" of Indigenous culture. (CBC)

"It's mockery that Canadians some people at least ... mock our spiritual beliefs with glitz and lights and that kind of thing," Dumont said.

"They would never do that with anybody else's spiritual beliefs. Nobody would ever allow that, whether it's the holy people of a synagogue, mosque, or church. They would never allow that to occur at a sacred place of theirs."

Ottawa 2017 executive director Guy LaFlamme said in an interview with CBC Radio last week Mwte talks about the "dark side" of Canada's history, and that organizers consulted withmembers of the Algonquins of Pikwkanagn First Nation, as well as local Mtis and Inuit communities.