ANU launches Indigenous music studio to “keep fire burning”
This new Yil Lull recording studio here at the School of Music is a place for us, our mob, to come and meet; to create and to share; to expand on our stories; to keep our culture alive and our music alive; and to just keep that fire burning.
The Â鶹´«Ă˝AV National University (ANU) has established a recording studio dedicated to Indigenous musicians.
Yil Lull studio at the ANU School of Music - officially being launched today - will offer free recording and music assistance to Indigenous musicians from across Australia.
The studio is led by Torres Strait Islander musician Will Kepa, who will run live recordings of Indigenous musicians at the launch.
"This new Yil Lull recording studio here at the School of Music is a place for us, our mob, to come and meet; to create and to share; to expand on our stories; to keep our culture alive and our music alive; and to just keep that fire burning," Mr Kepa said.
"It's also a place to come to feel like we belong here. This space is not just my space, it's a space for all of us to be here together."
Special guests will include the Tiwi Island Strong Women, singer-songwriter Uncle Joe Geia, classical rapper Rhyan Clapham and Uncle Ozzie Cruz, as well as the School of Music's Indigenous faculty and students led by Dr Chris Sainsbury.
Yil Lull is a written and performed by Joe Geia, and it originally appeared on his 1988 album of the same name.
Mr Geia said he sees a great opportunity for First Nations people to come to the studio and bring their songs to a new audience.
"I noticed that there's the School of Music and the School of Art right next door to each other at ANU," he said.
"In Aboriginal culture, we've used our song and dance and we've used our art to communicate. We had to tell our stories and keep our important things in either song and dance or painting. A traditional painting has a dance and it has a song to go with it. These are all communicating skills we use to share stories with others in our mob, regardless of their dialect."
Ngambri-Ngunnawal elder Aunty Matilda will welcome attendees, and ANU Vice-Chancellor Professor Brian Schmidt will join in the celebrations.
Associate Professor Kim Cunio, Head of the School of Music, said the idea of establishing Yil Lull studio came about with a submission he and Dr Sainsbury made for the Vice-Chancellor's Grand Challenges Scheme on Indigenous Health in 2019.
"Our School of Music wants to be of service to Indigenous musicians," he said.
"Initially, it was to be a mobile recording studio. This will now be the second stage of this project and something we will do in 2022.
"We had a space that wasn't being used, so we decided to transform it into a space that would inspire Indigenous musicians to tell their stories through song."
Associate Professor Cunio and Dr Sainsbury talked to First Nations musicians and realised that the school needed to make a space that was Indigenous led and would be free for Indigenous musicians to use.
Associate Professor Cunio said Will Kepa was one of the best people to lead the new studio.
"Will is hugely respected by Indigenous communities," he said.
"Lots of musicians are already interested and we did our first recording with Uncle Joe Geia, a Queensland master storyteller and musician who has gifted the name from his Yil Lull song."
Associate Professor Cunio said local Indigenous musicians will also use the studio, with the growing cohort of Indigenous staff and students at the ANU School of Music leading the way.
You can make inquiries about using the studio