The Post

Aussie documentar­y on song as women take tunes ‘back home’

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The Song Keepers (E, 84 mins) Directed by Naina Sen Reviewed by James Croot ★★★1⁄2

Fans of documentar­ies like Young@Heart and Hip Hoperation should check out this warm and fascinatin­g look at the Central Australian Aboriginal Women’s Choir.

Naina Sen’s tale charmed many an audience during this year’s New Zealand Internatio­nal Film Festival and it’s easy to see why as this eclectic group of singers from the back-of-beyond embark on their ‘‘boomerang’’ trip to Germany. For most of the mainly mature, morethan-30-strong group, it’s their first time outside Australia, but the rebounding moniker they’ve dubbed their three-‘‘state’’, threeand-a-half-week tour with is because they are taking the tunes they are singing ‘‘back home’’.

Their programme consists of Western Arrernte and Pitjantjat­jara-language versions of the hymns and other choral works taught to their ancestors by German Lutherian missionari­es 140 years ago. Their joy in singing them is palpable and the women’s affections for those sometimes much-maligned church representa­tives is clear. Some speak of their kindness and another claims one minister helped prevent her family becoming part of the ‘‘stolen generation’’.

While the film does become a little bit of a travelogue and victory lap in its latter stages, it shines in its first half, as we meet genial Guyana-born choirmaste­r Morris Stuart and see the efforts required to bring the widely scattered choir together for practice (there’s a 10-hour trip by bush bus for some, not to mention the competing interests of dancing or cooking kangaroo tails).

Stuart is a delight, whether it’s throwing himself into his work, or mock-lamenting that ‘‘they all behave like they are my mothers even though I’m older than them’’.

A spirit-lifting treat.

 ??  ?? The Song Keepers is spirit-lifting.
The Song Keepers is spirit-lifting.

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