After Polaris win, Buffy Sainte-Marie reflects on songwriting, protest and music - Action News
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Saskatchewan

After Polaris win, Buffy Sainte-Marie reflects on songwriting, protest and music

After 20 albums and a career that has spanned decades, Buffy Sainte-Marie reflects on the meaning of her Polaris Music Prize win.

Says timing and technology big factors in getting message out

After 196 Canada-wide jurors decided on along list of 40 albums, then a short list of 10 albums, Saskatchewan-bornBuffy Sainte-Marie'sPower in the Bloodwas chosen as this year's PolarisMusic Prize winner, earning her $50,000 along withthe award.

The album is the 74-year-old's twentieth in her long career. Shewas born on the Piapot First Nation, northeast of Regina.

She joined SheilaColes, host of CBC Saskatchewan'sThe Morning Edition,to talk about the many facets ofher long career.

What the award means

"I'm so thrilled. Ididn'tthinkit would come to me, but it's a wonderful prize for several reasons. The first is, I've always been amulti-genre person, and in the 1960s that was a good thing, and now,that's a good thing. Butin between, it was a bad thing," she said. "It was very hard to get recordsplayedif you were a multi-genre artist [during those years]."

"Second, the fact they do give an artist some money. It's impossible to tourand take your album on the road. I really do appreciate that Polaris recognizes artists andgives them money to support their careers."

On the process of songwriting

A lot of her songs are already in her head, she said. They already have their elements built in.

Referring to the songGeneration, she said,"Iremember walking around Regina in the1970s with my dad when they were trying to put that guy on the moon. And my dad said, 'Daughter, they ought to leave that moon alone.'That line was in my head,and Iwas tryingto get to the Rosebud Sioux Reservation for the sun dance [at that time]."

Buffy Sainte-Marie's 'Power in the Blood' wins the 2015 Polaris Music Prize. (True North Records)

"This was the 1970s and Iwas blacklisted in the U.S. It didn't matter what type of songs I wrote love songs, rock songs, serious songs like Generation Icouldn't get them played no matter what.

"So Irewrote the song, becauseI'm on the road all the time. I do these songs on the stage all the time, but audiences couldn't find them. Instead of sending them back to vinyl, I thought, 'Why not re-record them to re-reflect contemporary issues?'"

Her message on First Nations rights

"With Generation, we were saying things that were too early for their time [in the 1970s]. Most people were not thinking that way. Most people were thinking banks were like, the priest, you know? The church. They wouldn't do anything wrong.Some of us knew better."

"[Today] it's thesame message with very few updates necessary. What's different is that people are now able to hear about the message. Now, more people are able to hear about the issues that I'm talking about," Sainte-Marie said, citing theIdle No More movement as an example.

"The good news about the badnews is that now more people can see it."

"In a way, songs that were too early for their time, that kind of got lost in that blacklist-sandwich, I updated.Generationand several other songs are talking about Idle No More. I'm so proud of people in Saskatchewan who've been involved with Idle No More."