Kevin Locke - Ixtlan Artists Group
Transcription
Kevin Locke - Ixtlan Artists Group
Kevin Locke Kevin Locke Biography Program Description The Hoop Dance The Indigenous Flute Workshops Press Quotes Presenter Comments What Children Say Awards Appearances Discography The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Biography Kevin Locke Kevin Locke (Tokeya Inajin is his Lakota name, meaning “The First to Arise”) is known throughout the world as the preeminent player of the indigenous Northern Plains flute, as well as an inspiring hoop dancer, traditional storyteller, cultural ambassador and educator. Kevin is Lakota and Anishinabe. It was from his mother, Patricia Locke (1991 MacArthur Foundation grant winner), his uncle Abraham End-of-Horn, mentor Joe Rock Boy, and many other elders and relatives that Kevin received training in the values, traditions, and language of his native culture for which he works tirelessly. More than two-thirds of Kevin’s presentations and performances, which each year number in the hundreds, are shared with children in schools, community centers and festivals internationally. He is a musical hero and role model for youth around the world. His special joy is working with children on the reservations to ensure the survival and growth of indigenous culture. Kevin Locke is acknowledged to be the pivotal force in the now powerful revival of the indigenous flute tradition which teetered on the brink of extinction only twenty years ago. In 1990, Kevin was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), which recognized him as a “Master Traditional Artist who has contributed to the shaping of our artistic traditions and to preserving the cultural diversity of the United States.” Kevin’s goal is “to raise awareness of the oneness we share as human beings.” His belief in the unity of human kind is expressed dramatically in the traditional hoop dance, which illustrates “the roles and responsibilities that all human beings have within the hoops (or circles) of life.” Touring for over two decades, Kevin has performed and lectured in more than 80 countries worldwide, sharing his high vision of balance, joy and diversity. He has served as a cultural ambassador for the United States Information Service since 1980. Deeply committed to the conservation of Earth’s resources for future generations, Kevin was a delegate to the 1992 Earth Summit in Brazil and a featured performer and speaker at the 1996 United Nations Habitat II Conference in Turkey. “All of the people have the same impulses, spirits and goals,” reflects Kevin. “Through my music and dance, I want to create a positive awareness of the oneness of humanity.” Since 1982, Kevin has recorded 13 albums of music and stories, including Open Circle, Keepers of the Dream, The Flash in the Mirror, Dream Catcher, and Midnight Strong Heart. His 2000 release, The First Flute, won the Native American Music Award for best traditional recording. Kevin’s latest recording, Earth Gift, released in the fall of 2008. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Programs The Hoop of Life Kevin Locke is available for solo or ensemble concerts, school programs, museum and library programs, and residencies. Kevin’s performances, which may be tailored in length from 30 to 120 minutes, present virtuoso traditional flute, song, historical and cultural narratives, native sign language, hoop dancing, audience participation, and humor. A Kevin Locke concert consists of: Flute and vocals interspersed with entertaining, informative and inspirational stories of native culture, and interactive native sign language. The hoop dance, with introductory and concluding narrative explanations, and onstage, miniworkshop in hoop dancing in which Kevin invites 15-25 audience to join him to participate. If time permits, a traditional friendship round dance that brings people together in a heartwarming celebration of community. Music for dance is provided by recorded powwow drum and song ensembles, live drummers when available locally, or when additional musicians travel with Kevin. Additional performance programs may be added when Kevin is accompanied by one or more traditional artists. Duo performances may include singers/dancers/educators Edmond Nevaquaya, (Comanche/Choctaw); Thirza Defoe (Ojibwe/Oneida); Doug Good Feather (Lakota); and other guest dancers. The Spirit of Music and Dance Also available is The Kevin Locke Native Dance Ensemble, which consists of three, four, or five dancers and singers, including Kevin. Their program is called “The Spirit of Music and Dance” and features many types of Native dance in a full-length dance theater program. For a program description, please see notes in this document on The Kevin Locke Native Dance Ensemble. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Hoop Dance A Dance of Renewal The Hoop dance, a tradition among the Plains Indians, is a celebration of the annual rebirth of nature that occurs every springtime. The spiritual significance of the dance begins with the hoops themselves; these are made of either wood or reed and total 28 in number, each one of them representing a day in the lunar cycle. As noted by Kevin Locke in The Spirit World, published by Time-Life Books, the hoops are symbolic of the “great hoop of life, where they sky meets the earth, and all of the hoops that exist within that sphere.” ( 1 of 2 ) The hoop dance is a breathtaking expression of Kevin’s belief in the oneness of humankind. In the amazingly complex and acrobatic Lakota Hoop Dance, Kevin whirls within twirling hoops, explicating an indigenous view of the world as hoops intersect and grow into ever more revealing designs that show the way of life. Forming rapidly changing patterns with hoops while dancing to powwow drums and singing, Kevin depicts the natural yet visionary process of life emerging from the darkness of winter into the bright exuberance of spring. One after another, images of renewed creation appear as flowers, butterflies, stars, the moon and sun and eagle circles, calling forth the love, courage and intelligence of our hearts. The hoops represent unity, while the four colors of the hoops (black, red, yellow and white) represent the four directions, seasons, winds, and the four human races. All 28 hoops interlock to form an interdependent sphere in which all beings have vital and essential roles to play. Kevin learned the hoop dance, which had nearly died out, from Arlo Good Bear, a Mandan Hidatsa Indian from North Dakota. “We were doing a couple of performances in New York City and we were rooming together and he said, ‘I’m going to teach you the hoop dance. I’m going to give you four lessons. I will give you one lesson now and the rest later. After I give you these lessons, you are going to be on your own. And it is going to take you a long way.’ And then he got out his hoops and he made some designs and the whole thing took about 15 minutes. And the next day he took off and I took off. “A few days later, Arlo’s mom called and said he had died in an accident. So I went to his funeral. And after I returned home I had a very vivid dream – several vivid dreams – and I saw him, dancing with the hoops a very beautiful, a very powerful dance, making all of these designs, so fluid and spontaneous.” Kevin later came to believe that the dreams were the promised lessons, being communicated from the next world. “They were not mechanical lessons. The message I got was that this is a way that you can connect the past with the present, the present with the future, and the spiritual world with the material world.” He then began to teach himself the hoop dance in much the same way he taught himself the flute, by studying ancient dance forms and symbols, then gradually working out the footwork and the movements of the hoops. “There are certain standard designs that everybody does, and Arlo showed me those and made sure I knew them that first night,” he said. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Hoop Dance A Dance of Renewal Cont. Now Kevin is renowned as much for the hoop dance as for flute, and for his willingness to teach both arts. Performances end with the dramatic movement The Hoop of Many Hoops, symbolizing the sun, the moon, the earth – all light, all life, and the human spirit reaching toward realization that everything is interconnected. The Hoop of Many Hoops, savs Kevin, is also a depiction of the old Sioux prophecy that one day in the future all peoples, friends and enemies alike, shall sit down together in peace, united in a single great circle by the common bond of their humanity. ( 2 of 2 ) The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke The Indigenous Flute The Indigenous Flute Kevin Locke makes his music with the drum, the flute, and the rattle, along with his singing voice. In order to explain the underlying meaning of the music he is creating he describes the instruments as “counterpoints to the powerful, elemental forces of the thunderstorm.” The beat of the drum is the thunder that “shakes the human heart out of its slough of despondency.” The melodies of the flute (its six holes representing the four cardinal directions, along with the earth and the sky) are the “wind that purifies and breathes life into the heart.” The sound of the rattle represents refreshing rain, and the voice is the lighting whose jagged streaks, as described in The Spirit World, Time-Life Books, “illuminate the heart and charge it with energy and enlightenment.” To the Lakota/Dakota Nations, located on the northern plains of Maka Wita (Earth Island), the flute is the essence of the wind, especially Niya Awicableze, the Enlightening Breath, that first waft upon which the meadowlarks return to the northern prairies. Drawing upon a vast repertory of Lakota and Meskwaki courting songs and prayers, the flute sings the beauty of the land and echoes the wind as it rustles the grasses and leaves, scales the buttes and mountains, skims the surface of lakes and streams. The Lakota flute voices seven notes: four represent the directions, the fifth represents the heavens, the sixth represents the Earth and the seventh represents the place where the six come together: each person’s heart. Kevin performs with many handmade cedar wood flutes, including a rare instrument made nearly a hundred years ago by Poweshiek of the Mesquaki nation. On the northern plains, where no hollow plants sufficient in size and strength were available, indigenous flutes were made of red cedar wood. Cedar has great spiritual importance among native peoples, making it doubly significant that this soft wood is the medium of transcendent music (olowan). To fashion a flute (wi’ikijo), the craftsperson removes the red heart of the wood and is then obliged to put his/her own heart into the instrument. “It is so hard for people to relate one to another because we all come from different backgrounds. But no matter where we come from, we can all connect The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Workshops (1of 2) Kevin Locke’s workshops provide unique opportunities to explore contemporary challenges within a framework of traditional American Indian culture, history and values. Kevin draws upon his vast repertoire of native stories, flute and vocal songs, Indian sign language, humor and the inspiring Hoop Dance, as well as his experience as a world citizen (having performed in over 80 nations), to engage participants in insightful discussions and activities that are both entertaining and educational. He tailors workshops to meet the needs, interests and developmental level of students, whether they are children, teenagers, professionals, special interest groups or the general public. In-school presentations are available for pre-school through high school. Presentations are interactive and participatory, involving dancing, American Indian sign language and storytelling. Lectures focus on current issues, value and belief structures, and education and topics of general interest from Kevin’s perspective as a world citizen. Multimedia presentations on Plains Indian history and art may be arranged. Recommended study material for teachers and older students: Black Elk Speaks by John Neihardt, and Land of the Spotted Eagle by Luther Standing Bear. Also highly recommended for younger students: any books by Paul Goble. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Workshops WORKSHOP TOPICS Spiritual Traditions of the Lakota: Kevin’s interpretations of the teachings of the Lakota are profoundly relevant today because of their universality. This inclusive world view allows for positive discussion about our emerging world situation, and the social and humanitarian issues we face. Child Rearing Practices in the Lakota Tradition: Traditional Lakota society is dedicated to bringing out the nobility of every child. Child rearing is based on the concept of wakanayeja which means sacred child, and is focused on responsibility to the community, diversity, appreciation, and recognition of how we all contribute to the Hoop of Life and the interrelatedness of the human family and Creation. (2 of 2) Shared Values of Indigenous Peoples: Having traveled and performed in more than 70 countries, Kevin shares his understanding of the commonalty and vision of people around the world, with special focus on native peoples and their traditions. Sensitivity Workshop for Non-Native Teachers of Minority Students: Kevin has a unique ability to broach the challenging subjects of cross-cultural sensitivity and communication with gentleness and profound depth. Teachings of White Buffalo Calf Maiden: Kevin explores universal human values within the framework of the teachings of the ancient Lakota messenger Ptehincala Ska Win (White Buffalo Calf Woman). A fascinating topic. Music, Art, Dance, Storytelling: An exploration of these activities as tools ideally suited for communicating the Oneness of Humankind as we move toward global civilization in the spirit of “Unity Through Diversity.” Storytelling as a Means to Explore Universal Archetypes: Creating an appreciation and awareness of global connections through stories told around the world. Healthy Lifestyles - Anti-Substance Abuse and Self Esteem: An exploration into how higher self esteem and connection to the Earth can dissuade substance abuse, especially among the youth. A workshop about health and balance from the American Indian point of view. Education: A workshop on Kevin’s views concerning issues in contemporary education Walking the Good Red Road: A workshop applying traditional cultural values to modern times. Baha’i Workshops • Fundamental World Values and the concept of Justice • Social and Economic Development - Concepts of applying traditional cultural values to modern times. Prosperity and Interdependence The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Press “Music to sustain the heart.” Time-Life “The arts and humanities meet in Locke’s performance, nowhere more impressively than in the hoop dances, where he crafts rhythmically entrancing, visually astounding statements about the human condition with ever-shifting tableaux of twirling hoops.” Washington Post “When Locke, a Lakota flutist and dancer, brings a wooden instrument alive, time bends. Cultural barriers fall. People connect.” Fort Wayne News-Sentinel “With one hoop, Kevin Locke made it look easy. After slipping a hoop over his head, he then glided out – a leg through here, an arm through there. There was never a moment’s hesitation. It was all one fluid action. When he was done, he was enshrouded by the multicolored hoops, all of which somehow stayed suspended. It was an effortless performance, but it looked anything but easy.” The Seattle Times “… learning a hummed melody, listening to tales of how it felt to ride bareback around a sleeping village, playing love melodies to a sweetheart in the dark night…Kevin Locke has restored to the world a lovely sound. He is a leader of that movement in bringing back that sound… he is also a dancer of great distinction… a brilliant Lakota artist.” CBS News, Charles Kurault “Kevin Locke is a tradition-steeped artist on the Plains flute, and a skilled practitioner of the Native American hoop dance. But those accomplishments say nothing of his gifts as a communicator, nor of his ability to weave the thread of connection through audiences of disparate cultures.” Tucson Citizen “Mr. Locke has the rare ability to tell sophisticated tales in a way that children understand, but without condescension.” Dallas Morning News “Kevin Locke’s heartfelt call for self-esteem, racial harmony and spiritual wholeness is a genuinely uplifting statement in song, word and dance.” Calgary Herald “To Kevin Locke, the flute does so much more than make a pleasant sound. A Locke concert is a time to put away the negative thoughts and conflicts and just get along. That’s how a flute can make a difference.” The News Sentinel “His work was thought-provoking and dealt with many serious social and ecological issues yet was so gentle, with its message so intrinsically a part of the performance, and of such fine quality that the overall presentation engaged the audience on all levels.” Lincoln Center for Performing Arts The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Presenter Comments KEVIN LOCKE “It was a marvelous performance and both the children and the teachers came out of the hall very enthusiastic. This is the kind of experience we should have with every event.” Barbara Aldrich, Fine Arts Center, UMass-Amherst “His work was thought-provoking and dealt with many serious social and ecological issues yet was so gentle, with its message so intrinsically a part of the performance, and of such fine quality that the overall presentation engaged the audience on all levels.” Jenneth Webster, Lincoln Center for Performing Arts “The comments were those of awe. There were times when his performance gave goose bumps, shivers. It was very moving.” Nancy Freeman, Ethnic Festival 96 “ Kevin did a spectacular job… He is truly an extraordinary performer, and a sourceof great inspiration.” Busy Graham, Institute of Musical Traditions “The Fold Arts Program of the National Endowment for the Arts recognizes KevinLocke as a Master Traditional Artists who has contributed to the shaping of our artistic traditions and to preserving the cultural diversity of the United States” National Heritage Fellowship, NEA THE KEVIN LOCKE NATIVE DANCE ENSEMBLE The Spirit of Music and Dance “A wonderful performance sharing the beauty and meaning of Native American songs and dance… the audience was absolutely delighted.” Fabian Wyatt, Executive Director, WYO Theater, Sheridan, Wyoming “A very high-energy show. They were wonderful!” Ann Stool, Executive Director, Del Rio Council on the Arts. Del Rio, Texas “The grandeur of the native dress, the power, grace, and skill of the performers was compelling. And the beautiful message about the importance of family, friends, and the need to embrace all humanity in this day captivated the audience through the performance.” Gwen Massey, Dallas-Fort Worth concert presenter The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke What Children Say “I don’t really know how to explain how I felt. I think this assembly was different. Not a bad different, a good one. I was really taken away. I felt like I was in another world. I think I have a different point of view now. I think lots of people should get to see it.” Emma “I liked the hoop dancing. He’s got to be a talented person to do all that. (The message was) that there’s the spirit, and be thankful of yourself.” Meghan Marshall “I think the assembly was about being yourself, and respecting other people for who they are and not the color of their skin or the race they’re from. It was also about the new millennium and the responsibilities we will be taking up when we are grown ups. It was also about linking with other people, and making the web of life complete.” Nicole “Thank you for coming to our school to dance. It was really neat! I am glad you came even if I did miss some of my recess.” Elliot Simpson “My favorite part is where the hoops turned into a circle. I was chosen to go up and learn how to dance with hoops. I really enjoyed it.” Rebecca Clum “That was pretty cool the way you did that dance. It was also cool the way you sang those songs, and the way you played those flutes… You were awesome.” Rhett “Thank you Kevin for the great assembly yesterday. My favorite part was where you did all those cool things with the hula hoops. I know it took you a long time to practice that. You’re a very good dancer.” Roberta “I liked the things you did with the hoops. That was cool. Those Indian flutes were way different than American flutes. It sounded different. But I like those flutes. I’m in a band, I play clarinet. My friend plays flute. Thank you for coming to our school.” Erika Niefo “The assembly was great! How did you learn to play the flute like that?” Kelly Horton “Thank you. It was fun and inspiring. I’ll bet you are lots of kids’ idol.” Daniel McGraw “I liked all the hoop tricks. My favorite part was when you made the ladder. I could not do some of that stuff.” Kevin Stueber “I really enjoyed the hoop dancing and singing. I also liked the flute playing. It all taught me a lot about the world and myself.” Gabriel The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Awards National Heritage Fellowship in 1990 National Heritage Fellowships begin with nominations from ordinary citizens who put forward local folk and traditional artists that they feel are deserving of national recognition and who embody artistic excellence, authenticity, and significance within their tradition. Each year, a select group of these artists come to Washington to receive their award in a public ceremony and perform in a concert celebrating our nation of nations. New England Foundation for the Arts Reconstruction Grant 2008 The New England Foundation for the Arts American Masterpieces: Dance Reconstruction grant is the dance component of a major initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) to acquaint Americans with the best of their cultural and artistic legacy. The AMD project celebrates the extraordinary and rich evolution of dance and choreography in the United States. For the past three years through NEFA, AMD has sponsored 45 select projects and over 100 performances, tours, and educational programs that have reached large and small communities throughout the United States. In 2008, NEFA awarded Kevin Locke Native Dance Ensemble one of their prestigious grants. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Appearances (1 of 3) NORTH AMERICA A Center for the Arts, Fergus Falls, Minnesota Alaska Native Heritage Center, Anchorage, Alaska American Indian Service Northern Plains Arts, Sioux Falls, South Dakota Annenberg Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Area Power Conference, Bismarck, North Dakota Artfalls Fine Arts Festival, Sioux Falls, South Dakota Arts Council of NorthEast Tarrant County, Bedford, Texas Augsburg College, Minneapolis, Minnesota Austin Children’s Museum, Austin, Texas Bartlesville Community Center, Bartlesville, Oklahoma Black Hills State University, Spearfish, South Dakota Blair Academy, Blairstown, New Jersey Brandon University, Brandon, Manitoba Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming Calgary International Children’s Festival, Calgary, Alberta California Polytechnic Institute, San Luis Obispo, California California State University, Arcata, California Chamberlin-Oacom Chamber of Commerce, Chamberlain, South Dakota City of Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, Texas City of Lancaster, Lancaster, California Clyde Malone Community Center, Lincoln, Nebraska Convent of the Visitation School/St. Thomas Academy, South St. Paul, Minnesota Creative Arts Studio, Fargo, North Dakota Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire Del Rio Council on the Arts, Del Rio, Texas Department of Education and Cultural Affairs, Grand Forks, North Dakota Eight Northern Indian Pueblos Council, Santa Fe, New Mexico El Camino College, Torrance, California Flandreau Indian School, Flandreau, South Dakota Fort Abraham Lincoln Foundation, Mandan, North Dakota Fort Lewis College, Durango, Colorado Fort Peck Community College, Poplar, Montana Fort Totten Historic Site, Devils Lake, North Dakota Frontier Folklife Festival, St. Louis, Missouri Gustavus Adolphus College, Saint Peter, Minnesota High Plains Arts Council, Sidney, Nebraska Historic Arkansas Museum, Little Rock, Arkansas Ho-Chunk Nation, Black River Falls, Wisconsin Homestead National Monument of America, Beatrice, Nebraska Hopkins Center for the Arts, Hopkins, Minnesota Houston Baha’i Community and MLK Parade Foundation, Houston, Texas Humboldt State University, Arcata, California Huron Middle School, Huron, South Dakota Indian Center, Lincoln, Nebraska Indigenous Language Institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Appearances (2 of 3) L. Frank Baum Oz Festival, Aberdeen, South Dakota Lewis and Clark Bicentennial, Charlottesville, Virginia Life Skills Learning Center, Marshall, Minnesota LSA of the Bahai’s of Clatsop County, Astoria, Oregon Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, Santa Rosa, California Massey Hall, Toronto, Ontario MDU Resources Group, Bismarck, North Dakota Mendicino Area Park Association, Fort Bragg, California Millpond Music Festival, Bishop, California Monsanto Company, Muscatine, Iowa Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana Moorehead Community Education, Moorhead, Minnesota Multicultural Center of Northwest Arkansas, Springdale, Arkansas Museum of Natural History, New York, New York National Association of Extension 4-H Agents, Carson, North Dakota National Geographic Explorers Hall, Washington, DC Native American Inaugural Ball 1997, Washington, DC Non-Violence Task Force, Longville, Minnesota North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota North Dakota State Water Commission, Bismarck, North Dakota Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota Northwest Arkansas International Folk Festival, Springdale, Arkansas Oscar Micheaux Society, Gregory, South Dakota Ozark Foothills FilmFest, Locust Grove, Arkansas Peabody Museum, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts Pendelton School District, Pendleton, Oregon Performances to Grow On, Ojai, California Performing Arts Center, Washington, DC Philadelphia International Theater for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh International Children’s Festival, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Point Arena High School, Point Arena, California Prairie Island Indian Community Center, Welch, Minnesota Regents of the University of Minnesota, Morris, Minnesota Round Valley Unified School District, Covelo, California Ryan Middle School, Fairbanks, Alaska Saint Cloud State University, Saint Cloud, Minnesota Salt Lake Public Library, Salt Lake City, Utah San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco, California San Juan Unified School District, Citrus Heights, California Santa Fe Public Schools, Santa Fe, New Mexico Saskatoon International Children’s Festival, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Scottsbluff Centennial, Scottsbluff, Nebraska Seattle International Children’s Festival, Seattle, Washington Sebastapol Center for the Arts, Sebastopol, California Shakopee and Mdewkanton Sioux Community, Prior Lake, Minnesota Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Appearances (3 of 3) Sebastapol Center for the Arts, Sebastopol, California Shakopee and Mdewkanton Sioux Community, Prior Lake, Minnesota Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC South Dakota Art Museum, Brookings, South Dakota South Dakota Child Protection Services, Pierre, South Dakota Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri Spiritual Assembly of Bahai’s of Minnetonka, Arden Hills, Minnesota Spring Creek School, Santa Rosa, California Stanford University, Palo Alto, California Stanton Community Schools, Stanton, Nebraska TB Sheldon Performing Arts Theatre, Red Wing, Minnesota Terrace Elementary Parent-Teacher Organization, Ankeny, Iowa The Kennedy Center, Washington, DC The Office of Human Concern, Springdale, Arkansas The Peace Center for the Performing Arts, Greenville, South Carolina The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska University of California, San Diego, California University of California, Santa Barbara, California University of Maryland, Silver Spring, Maryland University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan University of South Dakota, Spearfish, South Dakota University of Texas, Austin, Texas University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont University of Wisconsin, Green Bay, Wisconsin University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming Ute Museum, Montrose, Colorado Vancouver International Children’s Festival, Vancouver, British Columbia Village Theatre, Issaquah, Washington Violence Prevention Initiative, Point Arena, California Waubay School, Waubay, South Dakota Weber State University, Ogden, Utah Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut Winnipeg International Children’s Festival, Winnipeg, Manitoba World Citizen Association, Duvall, Washington WYO Theater, Sheridan, Wyoming OVERSEAS Australia Department of Education Sydney, Brisbane, Australia Australian Festival for Young People, Adelaide, Australia Earth Summit ’92, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil UN Habitat II Conference, Istanbul, Turkey WOMAD World Music Festival, Auckland, New Zealand WOMAD World Music Festival, Reading, England ...and more! The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Discography Earth Gift The Hoop of Life (1 of 3) Dream Catcher The First Flute Open Circle The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Discography Midnight Strong Heart Keepers of the Dream (3 of 3) The Flash of the Mirror Flute Planet The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download. Kevin Locke Ixtlan Artists ARTIST REPRESENTATION Kevin Locke is represented in North America by Ixtlan Artists Group, Inc., an agency representing the very best in traditional, roots, ethnic and world music. Information and downloadable press kits are available at www.IxtlanArtists.com, or contact Robin Troup at [email protected] or 800.961-9601 toll free. IXTLAN ARTISTS ROSTER \BOYS OF THE LOUGH Legends of Celtic music from Scotland and Ireland. An ensemble. BRAVE OLD WORLD The klezmer supergroup. An ensemble. HARMONIA Breathtaking music and song from the heart of Eastern Europe. An ensemble. LLAN DE CUBEL Masters of Celtic music from Spain. An ensemble. KEVIN LOCKE & THE KEVIN LOCKE NATIVE DANCE ENSEMBLE Champion Native American dance/song/instrumentals/stories. Solo and Ensemble. PETER OSTROUSHKO Phenomenal roots composer/musician. Duo and ensemble. TOMMY SANDS County Down’s own singer-songwriter and social activist. Solo and ensemble. SALLY ROGERS Award-winning singer-songwriter. Solo and duo. THIRZA DEFOE Native American storyteller, and dancer of the Oneida and Ojibwe Nations SOTAVENTO Acoustic performers from Latin America. BABATUNDE LEA African-inspired jazz vocalist and multi-percussionist. ANDREI PIDKIVKA Explorer of the rich flute traditions of the Carpathian Mountains and Eastern Europe. ALAN BERN & GUY KLUCEVSEK Soul-stirring accordion performances by two famed virtuosos. KUSUM GBOO Pan African dancers who combine traditional African music and dance with their own creative choreography. An ensemble. MAGGIE MACINNES One of Scotland's foremost Gaelic singers and clarsach players. AMAZONES: THE WOMEN MASTER DRUMMERS OF GUINEA All-female world-renowned percussion group of West Africa. BEPPE GAMBETTA Inspired acoustic guitar music that combines a high level of technical excellence with emotion. The Ixtlan Artists Group • www.ixtlanArtists.com • [email protected] • 800.961.9601 Promotional text and high-resolution photos available for download.