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Charlie Panigoniak / Lora Tasseor - Just For Kids flac album

Charlie Panigoniak / Lora Tasseor - Just For Kids flac album
  • Performer Charlie Panigoniak / Lora Tasseor
  • Title Just For Kids
  • Date of release 1981
  • Style Aboriginal
  • Other formats AU RA MP1 TTA AA AHX XM
  • Genre For kids / World & Folk & Country
  • Size MP3 1392 mb
  • Size FLAC 1297 mb
  • Rating: 4.3
  • Votes: 585

Charlie Panigoniak (7 March 1946 - 6 March 2019) was born in Chesterfield Inlet, Northwest Territories in what is now Nunavut, Canada, is an Inuk singer-songwriter and guitarist whose albums reflect on northern life.

Charlie Panigoniak was born on March 7, 1946 in the town of Chesterfield Inlet, NorthWest Territories. By the time he was 30 years old he was already a prominent performer of Inuit music in many different Eskimo communities around what is now Nunavut. Panigoniak is an interesting artist because he has taken main stream music and songs and covered them using his own unique style of music. Perhaps the most well known example of this is Panigoniak’s cover of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, a popular children’s Christmas song.

Panigoniak went on to record 3 records for the CBC Northern Service. These records include two EPs (11 songs) and the LPs Inuktitut Christmas & Gospel Songs (ᖁᕕᐊᓱᒃᕕᒃᓯᐅᑎᑦ ᑐᒃᓯᐊᕈᑎᓪᓗ), My Seasons (ᐱᐅᓯᑲ) and Just for Kids (ᓱᕈᓯᑯᓗᖕᓄᑦ). The children's album was recorded with Tasseor, Panigoniak's "frequent partner" from this point on. This album shows Panigoniak's love of singing for children. Panigoniak has also made two CBC broadcast EP. .

And Charlie said, 'No I'm only Panigoniak. Charlie Panigoniak in Arviat, Nunavut, in 2016 during a benefit concert. Friends say Panigoniak was known for his sense of humour. He was also referred to as the 'Johnny Cash of the North. The loss is going to be very significant, not just in the North, but also in the south. I mean he influenced a lot of people. He said he met Panigoniak in the late '70s, when Prescott first came north to what was then Frobisher Bay to perform at the Toonik Tyme festival.

Charlie Panigoniak is a territorial treasure," said commissioner Nellie Kusugak at the time. His songs are full of joy and humour, and capture the very essence of community life in Nunavut. Guitar picks in lieu of flowers. He was also included on other CBC North CDs. His album My Seasons was released in Switzerland in 1982.

Charlie Panigoniak was born on 7 March 1946 in the town of Chesterfield Inlet, NorthWest Territories. By the time he was 30, he was already a prominent performer of Inuit music in many different Inuit communities around what is now Nunavut. Panigoniak has collaborated with his partner Lorna Tasseor for the past 30 years. He is not only the lead singer and song writer but also plays guitar and keyboard with Tasseor as an accompanying singer. com/Charlie Panigoniak. Panigoniak is an interesting artist because he has taken mainstream music and songs and covered them using his own unique style of music. Perhaps the most well known example of this is Panigoniak's cover of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, a popular children's Christmas song. The children's album was recorded with Tasseor, Panigoniak's "frequent. partner" from this point on.

Charlie Panigoniak is an Inuit singer-songwriter and guitarist whose albums reflect on northern life. He began recording in the early 1970s, including projects for broadcaster CBC Northern Service.

Born on the land, he didn’t move into a community until the late 1950s and learned to play the guitar on an instrument his father made from a tin can. A stay in Brandon, Ma. in 1967 for tuberculosis treatment opened his ears to the sounds of country and folk music. We just don’t want to ask for help from our relatives. They got their own family to look after. Main said it’s not unusual for Nunavut homeowners to be squeezed by the North’s high home heating costs at this time of year. In the winter, your utility costs go through the roof. This is the tightest time of year. But Panigoniak, he said, deserves better. He’s a living legend and he deserves all the support we can give him. He had a big influence on the current generation of Nunavut musicians just because his music was so pervasive.