FLOYD WESTERMAN – Custer Died for Your Sins – (Perception) – 1969

At the outset I point out to those who refer to any grammar inconsistencies or for the "bitiness" of paragraphs that these comments are written contemporaneously with the listening to of the record (usually while I am doing something else) and are meant to be comments not reviews, though, obviously, sometimes I have to spin through the record twice. You are lucky I even spell-check!
 
I was on a bit of a Jimmy Curtiss (what Frank is listening to #100, #111) kick so I bought this Native American protest album as Curtiss was behind it. The fact that Westerman is a authentic Native American is a bonus.
 
I have always been partial to Native American music, whether it be authentic "Native American rock" (Redbone) , music with Native American themes (Johnny Cash) or Hollywood Native American music (Elvis soundtracks) … I even have some Indian chant albums.
 
I suspect my appreciation was fuelled by watching a lot of western movies as a kid.
 
By way of bio regarding Westerman, wikipedia: Floyd "Red Crow" Westerman (August 17, 1936 – December 13, 2007) was a Dakota musician, activist and actor. Late in his life, he became a leading actor depicting Native Americans in American films and television. He is sometimes credited as Floyd Crow Westerman … Westerman was born Floyd Kanghi Duta Westerman on the Lake Traverse Reservation, home of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Dakota (Sioux) in the U.S. state of South Dakota. "Kanghi Duta" means "Red Crow" in Dakota (one of the 3 "Sioux" dialects). As a youth, he attended an off-reservation elementary school where he was forced to cut his hair and forbidden to speak his native language. This would profoundly impact his later life and his restless pursuit of championing his own heritage. At the age of 10, Westerman was sent to the Wahpeton Boarding School, where he first met Dennis Banks of the American Indian Movement.
 
It is abundantly clear Westerman (or "Red Crow" as he is sometimes known) is an authentic Native American singing about authentic Native American issues. Westerman sings of reservations, land exploitation, governmental indifference, disease and death. This is as real as it gets … but don't expect Westerman to be singing in a Sioux dialect doing traditional Sioux music.

Westerman was largely influenced by the immediate early protest folk of Bob Dylan (though I think he is closer to Phil Ochs) and the country music of his youth, especially Hank Williams. Though not mentioned in what I have read he must also have been influenced by Peter La Farge, the first of the great Native American (if he indeed was) folk singer activists (Johnny Cash covered his "Ballad of Ira Hayes"). Westerman's voice is a clean baritone and all the music is punctuated with straight country (not Nashville though and I don't mean that in a bad way). He comes over as a rougher Jim Reeves or Charlie Rich, or perhaps, even closer still, a Native American Johnny Cash. Ultimately there are unequal parts of country, singer-songwriter and folk in here, with country being the largest portion in the mix. Also, the legendary country session muscian, Pete Drake, supplies steel guitar to the recordings.

If you refer to Allmusic you will see that all the songs are credited to Westerman (and I note the that the album was re-recorded by Westerman in 1982) and indeed all the reviews refer to his talent as a songwriter. The album however indicates that Westerman only co-wrote three of the tracks whereas Jimmy Curtiss wrote or co-wrote all of the songs. In the fifties it was common for songwriters to give up some of their credit to secure a recording deal but this practice was pretty much dead by the early 60s. So what is the truth?

I suspect that Curtiss was mainly behind the songs. He produced this album on his label (Perception) and plays rhythm guitar whilst the liner notes by Indian activist Vine Deloria Jr indicate Curtiss as the main songwriter. And if any other proof is needed the album sounds very, very much like Curtiss's solo album from early 1969, "Life". ( what Frank is listening to #100)

And just to add to the confusion the album mentions in its notes : "Lyrics based upon the book Custer Died for Your Sins by Vine Deloria Jr."

What I suspect is that Westerman, the aspiring country folk singer and Indian activist, gravitated to New York and bumped into Queens, New York native Jimmy Curtiss and they thought they would hook up and do an album. Curtiss accordingly wrote an album of tunes, with some help from Westerman drawing on his experiences as well as on the aforementioned book (which is a seminal text on Native American history).

I only mention this at some length because a number of reviews of this album must be based on the later re-recordings or CD reissue where all the songs are credited to Westerman and wax lyrical about his songwriter abilities. I am sure they would not say the same if they found it was mainly written by a white guy from Queens. Of course this says more about music critics than anything else (I note that the allmusic review is from no less than the legendary Eugene Chadbourne).

Interestingly co-writer on 4 tracks is John Phillips … apparently it's the John Phillips of "Mamas and Papas" fame … but the sources I have read do not allow me to say that with any certainty.

Regardless, this is powerful protest music based on a mix of country and  singer-songwriter. Curtiss has written songs with universal themes that have a Native American backdrop and the authenticness comes from his obvious close working relationship with Westerman or Deloria or both. It would be less authentic, and for me not really palatable, if he was the singer (not that Curtiss ever had that as an intention as he largely liked to hide in the background and usually doesn't even credit his name on albums but uses "J.C."). I norrmally like a bit of authenticness in my music …. you know what I mean?

…. delta blues from Tooting Bec?

…. reggae from Sydney?

Give me a break.
 
Deloria who does the liner notes says: "The songs, brilliantly penned by Jimmy Curtiss, are a testimony to Jimmy's ability to transcend time and space and live with the people in their sorrow and triumphs, to understand their sense of hopelessness and yet to see their vision".
 
I am not taking anything away from Westerman because he only cowrote three of the songs. Those who know me well enough or who have read enough of my comments know I appreciate the singer, not just for the quality of the voice (which is not that important) but for the interpretation of the song (which is supreme). The singer is a much maligned and disregarded musician even though how the singer interprets the lyric ultimately, I believe, determines the fate of the song.
 
Westerman is not a largely expressive singer (well not here – he has done four or five albums but this is the only one I have) but what he is, is a sincere and straightforward singer. He sings, but yet there is a feeling he is standing in front of you discussing Native American problems. This ability is much underrated. And this matter of fact-ness combined with some catchy tunes and potent protest lyrics makes for a great album.
 
It takes a couple of listens to get into it but, ultimately, its a winner.
 
Tracks (best in italics)
  • Custer Died for Your Sins  – this song really sums up the tone and mood of the album – putting forward an alternative version of history, finger pointing at those who have done wrong, pointing out the suffering of Native Americans, casting an accusing eye at the "masses" and "middle America" who sit by and do nothing about the problems, and finally a plea for a "new day" to begin. If you can get past the late 60s early 70s arrangements the music is quite powerful.
            For all the lies that were spoken
            For all the blood that we have spilled 
            For the treaties that were broken
            For the leaders, you have sinned
 
            Custer died for your sins
            Custer died for your sins
            Now a new day must begin
 
            For the tribes you terminated
            For the myths that you keep alive
            For the land you confiscated
            For a freedom, you deprived
 
            Custer died for your sins
            Custer died for your sins
            Now a new day must begin
 
            For the truths that you pollute
            And for the life you have cost
            For the good you prostitute
            And for all, that we have lost
 
            Custer died for your sins
            Custer died for your sins
            Now a new day must begin
 
  • Missionaries  – a particularly barbed attack on white Christianity being imposed on Native Americans.     
  • World Without Tomorrow  – a song right out of the Johnny Cash songbook.
  • Going Back  –   whether it be straight country or Native American country matters not, here is a familiar theme – going back to the land of your youth and your ancestors. The potency here is of course the fact that the land is truly, before all else, the ancestral home of the Native American.
  • Thirty Five More Miles  –  the story of Floyd's mother and her suffering.
  • Red, White and Black  –   an interesting song juxtaposing the separate and distinct civil rights movements of Native Americans and Afro Americans and accusing white America of playing favourites. 
  • Where Were You When  –  a great song having a go at opportunistic people in the Native American civil rights movement. Much like something Phil Ochs would have written.  Biting. Ouch!    
  • Here Come the Anthros  –   a hilarious, satirical, humorous song about anthropologists coming to research Native Americans
            And the anthros still keep coming
            like death and taxes to our land
            to study their feathered freaks
            with funded money in their hand
 
  • They Didn't Listen  – a powerful song about about environmental degradation in the search for wealth. Interestingly Westerman updated the song later to include the contentious "uranium mining" issue. 
            And I told them not to dig for gold
            For if they did the eagle would die
            They didn't listen, they didn't listen
            They didn't listen to me
            And I told them if the eagle died
            There would be no keeper of the land       
              
  • Task Force  –    another humorous song – though this one darkly so. About a "task force" from Washington who come to see why the "Indians" are unhappy. 
  • B.I.A.  –   a Native American chant in both Native Indian dialect and English that attacks the B.I.A …. the Bureau of Indian Affairs (thanks google)
And …
 
A great album and if you love mid-period Johnny Cash you should have no trouble loving this. I do on both accounts so I'm keeping this.

Sounds

Custer Died for Your Sins    

the rerecorded version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oY_a-HjdiOE

original attached

World Without Tomorrow  

the rerecorded version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWZcuIfjyR8&feature=related

 
Where Were You When  
attached 
 
They Didn't Listen  
attached
 
Task Force      
the rerecorded version

Other:
 
Review
 
 
Bio
 
 
Obituary:
 
Other:
 
Trivia
  • It would be remiss of me not to point out these songs are universal enough to be relevant to any peoples dispossessed of their traditional lands whether they be Irish, Croatian or (especially) Australian Aboriginal. The WASP "invasions" of both Aboriginal and Native American lands are strikingly similar (though with some fundamental differences) and much of this album can be transported to present day Australia … "sorry" or not. There has been no official "sorry" in America but I suspect the knowledge of Native American problems as well as sympathy for them has more popular support than the equivalent here in Oztralia. Interestingly, the music of the Australian aboriginal, they being largely rural Australians till recently, is also country, not reggae or hip hop or any other forms of music associated with African Americans which they have little in common with. This is something that is largely overlooked, even though there have been quite a few Aboriginal country acts … and that is saying something as the Australian country music establishment is even more reactionary and conservative than the American equivalent. (Where are "Mop and the Dropouts" when you need them?)
Pictures
 
 
Floyd Red Crow Westerman

(originally posted: 17/01/2010)

About Franko

Hi, I'm just a person with a love of music, a lot of records and some spare time. My opinions are comments not reviews and are mine so don't be offended if I have slighted your favourite artist. I have listened to a lot of music and I don't pretend to be impartial. You can contact me on franklycollectible@gmail.com though I would rather you left a comment. I also sell music at http://www.franklycollectible.com Cheers
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