Thursday 14 August 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : BLACK AUSTRALIAN " HENRY GIBSON "SEAMAN" DAN " IS A TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER, SINGER, SONG WRITER WITH A NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL REPUTION WHOSE FIRST RECORDING WAS RELEASED IN 20020 : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                    BLACK               SOCIAL                HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Henry Gibson "Seaman" Dan (born 1929), known as Seaman Dan, is a Torres Strait Islander (Australiansinger-songwriter with a national and international reputation whose first recording was released in 2000. His album Perfect Pearl won him an ARIA award for Best World Music Album in 2004[1] and in 2009 won again with Sailing Home.[2] In 2014 at the age of 85 he released A Caribbean Songbook, his tribute to the music of the West Indies.

Early life

Seaman Dan was born on Thursday Island in the Torres Strait region of far-north Queensland, Australia in 1929.[3] His great grandfather was a sailor from Jamaica in the West Indies and his great grandmother a chief's daughter from New Caledonia.[4] Another grandfather came from the island of Niue in Polynesia. In the late 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, Seaman Dan worked as a boat captain and pearl diver - gathering pearl and trochus shells across the north of Australia. He also did jobs such as mineral prospecting and taxi driving.[5]

Singing

Seaman Dan's singing came from family, friends and associating with talented musicians in his multi-cultural maritime working life, creating a fusion of music from Australia, Melanesia, North America, Africa and Polynesia, notably the Thursday Island 'hula' style. He has been a regular performer at Thursday Island's local hotels and a community musician for decades.
He is "A charismatic and consummate performer, Seaman Dan blends traditional Torres Strait Islander and pearling songs with jazz, hula and blues," (from the Australia Council for the Arts' 2005 Red Ochre Award Media Release for the 2005 Red Ochre Award). The Red Ochre Award recognizes and pays tribute to an Indigenous Australian artist who has made an outstanding contribution to the development and recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts and culture, both nationally and internationally. In 2013, he received a Hall of Fame Award at the National Indigenous Music Awards in Darwin.
He has performed in Japan[6] and throughout Australia, most notably at the National Folk Festival, Port Fairy Folk Festival, Darwin Festival, Adelaide and Adelaide Fringe Festivals, Laura Dance and Music Festival, Tasmania's 10 Days on the Island Festival, NAIDOC Ball, and at the National Museum of Australia's Tracking Kultja Festival.
Now semi-retired at the age of 85 years, he still performs occasionally for community events.
In 2013 his biography, Steady, Steady: the Life and Music of Seaman Dan, was published by Aboriginal Studies Press in Australia (Henry 'Seaman' Dan & Karl Neuenfeldt). It includes a free copy of the "Still on Deck: Personal Favourites' CD.

Discography

  • Follow the Sun (2000)
  • Steady, Steady (2002) Hot Records
  • Perfect Pearl (2004) Hot Records (ARIA award winner for Best World Music Album in 2004)
  • Island Way (2005) Steady Steady Music (Nominated for an ARIA Award for Best World Music album)
  • Somewhere There's An Island-Best of 1999-2006 (2007) Steady Steady Music
  • Sailing Home (2009) Steady Steady Music (ARIA award winner for Best World Music Album in 2009)
  • Sunnyside (2012) Steady Steady Music (A Tribute to the Songs of Nat King Cole)
  • Still on Deck: Personal Favourites (2013) Steady Steady Music
  • A Caribbean Songbook (2014) Steady Steady Music















































































































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