play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

skip_previous play_arrow skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
  • Home
  • keyboard_arrow_right Folk
  • keyboard_arrow_right Music
  • keyboard_arrow_rightPodcasts
  • keyboard_arrow_right
  • keyboard_arrow_right Tyler Dettloff – Dynamite Honey: Northern Folk & Blues
play_arrow

Folk

Tyler Dettloff – Dynamite Honey: Northern Folk & Blues

Adrian V 4 January 2024 1008 100 2


Background
share close

Tyler Dettloff is a musician and poet from the swampy Delirium Wilderness of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. His second LP, “Dynamite Honey: Northern Folk & Blues” released November 2020, by Lost Dog Records.

“These thirteen songs aim to confirm the folk traditions as true north as I can honestly represent. Anishinaabe handdrums accompany some blues riffs. The Ojibwe Flag Song makes its way into TAR SNAKE to help dismantle Enbridge’s Line 5 under the Mackinac Straits. My daughter’s Anishinaabemowin middle name, Minokami, is the genesis of the song GOOD EARTH – a song I sing to her everyday since she was an infant. And it’s true–debwe–thunder is in the good earth. Traditional teachings can confirm and so can science. Where else does thunder occur in the great expanse space? We really have something unique here on this good earth. Let’s try not to let it spoil.”

And his first chapbook of poems, “Belly-up Rosehip: a Tongue Blue with Mud Songs” released August 2019 through Swimming with Elephants Publications.

Tyler Dettloff is an Anishinaabe Métis, Italian, and Irish musician, poet, professor, gardener, and water protector. He currently lives in Gnoozhekaaning (Bay Mills, Michigan) and teaches College Composition at Lake Superior State University. He has earned a B.S. in English and a dual track M.A. in Literature and Pedagogy from Northern Michigan University.

He performs as a one-man-blues-band and likes the smell of a bog before a thunderstorm.


Website: tylerdettloff.com
Buy: tydettloff.bandcamp.com/

Tyler Dettloff

“The Great Spirit is in all things. He is in the air we breathe. The Great Spirit is our Father, but the Earth is our Mother. She nourishes us… That which we put into the ground she returns to us.”

big thunder (bedagi) wabanaki algonquin

Tagged as: .

Rate it
Previous episode