Sámi-Norwegian Artist Mari Boine Announces New Album – Single Out Now


 

Mari Boine has shared her new single, “Eadnán bákti”. This is the first track taken from her upcoming album, created in collaboration with pianist, Bugge Wesseltoft. Named Amame (“So We Don’t” in English), it is due out September 29th, via By Norse. The single, and deeper information about the album, can be found in the article below.

https://youtu.be/0Av_HhdJGLQ

The first single/video “Eadnán bákti” (translated: To Woman) is premiering now on the By Norse Youtube Channel here. The single and album pre-save are available here

 

About the track, Mari Boine comments: 

 “Eadnán bákti” celebrates the feminine in all of us, in all of nature. In the beginning, this song only had a melody and these lines: “Trust that you are a flower and fly, you are also a bird.” I remember singing it over and over for myself and loved the feeling it filled me with. It felt like pure medicine.”

She continues, “But the song needed more lyrics so I turned to Kerttu Vuolab. She had composed many beautiful texts. Several of our best writers come from the Deatnu/Tana area in Sápmi. Kerttu and many from that area were lucky enough to grow up with a rich storytelling tradition. Grandparents, mothers, and fathers, uncles and aunts who passed on the old stories from generation to generation.”

Amame tracklisting:

01 Amame jávkat (So We Don’t Fade)

02 Alit alihastá aliha (Blue Shines the Blue)

03 Don oidnet mu sielu (You Saw My Soul)

04 Elle

05 Čiŋadan gahpiriin (My Head Holds High the Horned Hat)

06 Eadnán bákti (To Woman)

07 If Tomorrow’s Mine

08 Mihá (I Stand Tall)

09 Jearrat biekkas (To Ask the Wind)

10 Leat go don dies (Will You Be There)

11 Mu oappá niegus (In My Sister’s Dream)

 

More about Amame:

Inspired by her love of piano music, Amame is a standout in an impressive and extensive discography. Mari Boine is accompanied here by Norwegian jazz pianist Bugge Wesseltof, who previously produced the album Gávcci Jahkejuogu – Eight seasons (2002). Mari and Bugge wrote this new album together in the same space – with the exception of two tracks that Mari recorded herself at her home in Tromsø, Norway. Bugge’s tender and responsive piano playing compliments Mari’s soft singing, as she weaves wisdom and stories about love, human vulnerability, injustice, and struggle, but also about pride and dignity.

Mari sings for others, assuming the role of an elder and imparts her wisdom to the listener. The music on Amame carries a seriousness and depth, embracing the nuance of language, preserving wisdom and traditions, and sharing the experiences of her people – something that Mari has dedicated her life to through music and activism.

The album opens with a piece about the power of memory, “Amame Jávkat” about which Mari comments, “You exchange words with a stranger, but you know you’ve met him many times before. A longing lingers in you afterwards, after something that for a short while felt like coming home.”

Elsewhere on the album the love song “Alit Alihastá Aliha” is a text by the Sámi author Karen Anne Buljo about two artists with great love for each other and for each other’s art. Anyone who listens to the interaction between Mari Boine and Bugge Wesseltoft does not need to understand the lyrics.

For the first time on her own album, Mari records “Elle”, the iconic theme song from the film The Kautokeino Rebellion, based on a true story about the Norwegian exploitation when Sámi culture was banned, now quietly and hauntingly accompanied by Bugge’s piano. Experiences of injustice are also represented in the track, “Mihá,” and from the first time she heard it, Mari knew she had to sing it in Sámi one day. She explains, “this is the song for Liv”  whose real name is Mona Marita in the book The dark secret in Tysfjord, written by Anne-Britt Harsem. It was written in Norwegian by Stian Soli, and here translated into Sámi by Rawdma C. Eira and Mari herself. Mari dedicates this track “for everyone who has managed to stand up and create a dignified life for themselves, despite betrayal and painful experiences of abuse“.

The last song on the album, “Mu Oappá Niegus” is the only song on the album that presents Mari in band format and a small nod from one producer to another, as an homage to the musician/composer and friend Svein Schultz from Bugge Wesseltoft. 

Mari Boine never stands still, and you never know what awaits, but perhaps there is a little hint here. 

Storytelling is the source of knowledge, wisdom, and survival for our people. And I am so grateful that this tradition is still alive.” – Mari Boine

 

Mari Boine online:

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