Seminole music
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Indigenous music of North America: Topics |
|
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Native American/First Nations | Inuit and Metis |
Chicken scratch | Ghost Dance |
Hip hop | Native American flute |
Peyote song | Powwow |
Tribal music | |
Arapaho | Blackfoot |
Dene | Innu |
Iroquois | Kiowa |
Navajo | Ojibwe |
Omaha | Kwakiutl |
Pueblo (Hopi, Zuni) | Seminole |
Sioux (Lakota, Dakota) | Yuman |
Related topics | |
Music of the United States - Music of Canada |
The Seminole are an indigenous people of the Americas, living in the U.S. state of Florida. Their traditional music includes extensive use of rattles and flutes.
Seminole folk songs include those used to treat the sick and injured, and to encourage animals to be easily hunted. Hunting songs were a cappella and call-and-response.
The two major ritual dances were the Corn Dance, held in June, and the Hunting Dance, held in October; other informal dances were held throughout the year, with some specific dances only performed in either summer or winter. Many dances were connected with an animal spirit, such as the Snake Dance, the Crawfish Dance and the very important Alligator Dance.
[edit] Reference
- Densmore, Francis (1956). Seminole Music. Florida Heritage Collection.