National Post

Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World

- Chris Knight

Rumble feels like a pair of documentar­ies stitched together. The first tells the story of how Indigenous peoples influenced the developmen­t of rock ‘ n’ roll. Foremost in this category is Link Wray, a Shawnee who died in 2005 and whose 1958 hit Rumble gives the film its name.

A huge ly influentia­l guitarist, Wray influenced such acts as Iggy Pop and the Ramones. Pete Townshend said the man basically invented the power chord.

Co- directors Catherine Bainbridge ( Reel Injun) and Alfonso Maiorana even make a case that Native music helped give birth to rock. And before you point out that African- Americans had a huge role as well, the directors note that many blacks and Natives actually have shared ancestry, thanks early Americans’ habit of enslaving anyone who wasn’t white.

Native pride gives us the second half of Rumble, in which various Indigenous ( or part Indigenous) musicians discuss their culture and music. Toronto- born Mohawk Robbie Robertson of The Band talks about learning about music from his cousins on the Six Nations Reserve, and recalls being told: “Be proud you’re an Indian, but be careful who you tell.” And we hear from Redbone, a ’ 70s Native American rock group who “did the Indian thing” on stage and whose single Come and Get Your Love received renewed attention when it kicked off 2014’s Guardians of the Galaxy.

The links to Native ancestry sometimes get a little thin. Jimi Hendrix’s is in the film because his paternal grandmothe­r was onequarter Cherokee, while blues legend Charley Patton, who died in 1934, “may have been Choctaw.” Closer to the source is jazz singer Mildred Bailey, who grew up on the Coeur d’Alene reservatio­n in Idaho, and was a huge influence on a young Tony Bennett. Here we’re out of the realm of rock, but firmly in that of Indigenous people’s contributi­ons to musical history — which, any way you slice it, is vast. 

 ??  ?? Toronto-born Mohawk Robbie Robertson of The Band talks about learning about music from his cousins on the Six Nations Reserve.
Toronto-born Mohawk Robbie Robertson of The Band talks about learning about music from his cousins on the Six Nations Reserve.

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