A singing collaboration in the Northern Territory has shown how music can unify communities.
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The Barkly Voices Project, sponsored by Indigenous Business Australia saw 160 schoolchildren, Traditional Owners and community members from the Barkly Region contribute their voices.
The resulting four and a half-minute video clip of 'Keep My Culture Strong' was released today.
The Barkly Voices Project arranged and remixed a song composed and recorded by Barkly musician Brian Morton and musician and songwriter Neil Murray.
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"We wanted to show the Barkly Region in a positive light," says Julianne Croft, a musician and artistic director who coordinated the project via her role at Barkly Regional Arts.
The idea for the collaboration came from IBA Retail Asset Management CEO John Kop during COVID-19 lockdowns after seeing the diverse virtual choirs popping up around the world. He arranged sponsorship from IRAM, a subsidiary of IBA, which manages the Tennant Creek supermarket.
Barkly Voices participants were invited to use their smart phones to simultaneously listen to Brian Morton's backing track and record audio-visual files, which were posted on an interactive website for editing. This was balanced by participants recorded either on site or at the Winanjjikari Music Centre studio at Barkly Regional Arts.
Four schools took part in the collaboration including Tennant Creek Primary School, the Munkarta Homelands, Murray Downs (Imangarra) Primary School and Elliott Public School (with singer Ray Dimakarri Dixon). Other organisations contributing their voices included Catholic Care, Nyinkka Nyunyu Art and Culture Centre and Papulu Apparr-Kari Language Centre.
Sean Armistead, Executive Director of Government & Public Relations at IBA said projects like the Barkly Voices shine a positive light on Australia's Indigenous culture - and something we should all be proud to promote.
"The theme of Reconciliation Week 2021 is 'More than a word, reconciliation takes action' and this video shows what action can look like."
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