Indigenous Singer #4
Tanya Tagaq is from Cambridge, Nunavut, and also attended school in the Northwest Territories and Nova Scotia. One of her most stunning achievements is her tours and album in collaboration with Björk in 2004, and has been an active artist since 2002.

Bertlesen, O. (n. d.). Cambridge Bay’s Tanya Tagaq entertaining a large audience at the Riddu Riddu international indigenous festival in northern Norway during a July 17 performance. [Photo]. Retrieved from https://nunatsiaq.com/stories/article/photo_tanya_tagaq_in_norway/

Bertlesen, O. (n. d.). Cambridge Bay’s Tanya Tagaq entertaining a large audience at the Riddu Riddu international indigenous festival in northern Norway during a July 17 performance. [Photo]. Retrieved from https://nunatsiaq.com/stories/article/photo_tanya_tagaq_in_norway/
Music:
Tanya has released five studio albums, her third, Animism, having won the 2014 Polaris Prize. The same album also won the Juno Award for Aboriginal Album of the year. She has received many nominations throughout her entire musical career, and has performed across Canada. Besides be an accomplished musician, Tanya is also a visual artist and has published book, called Split Tooth, which is a mix of fiction and memorial aspects, and was nominated for both 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize and 2019 Amazon.ca First Novel Award.
Goals:
Tanya has spoken out against anti-sealing activists, which is huge. The seal skin trade is an immense portion of the modern Inuit economy, and rules preventing them from selling the skin have a devastating effect, even though they hunt sustainably and use every part of the animal. A picture of Tanya and her child wearing sealskin received comments saying she should have her child taken away from her, which is an awful way of racism against Inuit apparel and way of life.
N. A. (2015). Tanya Tagaq at Interstellar Rodeo, 2015. [Photo]. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Indigenous_Musicians
One of Tanya's unique aspects of her art is her solo form. Inuit throat singing is traditionally done by two woman, and Tanya's lack of a partner was a large step away from the usual Inuit throat singing. Her combination of modern and traditional singing, with her own twist, as well as a book and visual art, is an amazing combination of skills. Tanya is a varied artist in many forms, and brings attention to problems in the media that are usually very one-sided.
A biography on Tanya Tagaq by Timothy Monger can be found here:
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/tanya-tagaq-mn0001400520/biography
A biography on Tanya Tagaq by Timothy Monger can be found here:
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/tanya-tagaq-mn0001400520/biography

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