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Chester Knight
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Chester Knight

Key Information

Chester Knight (born 1955/1956) is a Canadian folk singer-songwriter from Saskatchewan.[2] He is most noted for the 1999 album Falling Down, which won the Juno Award for Best Aboriginal Recording at the Juno Awards of 2000.[3]

Background

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A Cree musician originally from the Muskoday First Nation near Prince Albert,[4][5] Knight also worked as an academic counsellor at the Saskatchewan Indian Federated College, later known as First Nations University of Canada, in Saskatoon.[2]

He is the uncle of musician Eekwol.[6]

Musical career

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He was initially active in music as leader of the band Chester Knight and the Wind, in which he was the sole constant member; other supporting musicians over the band's lifetime included his brother Vernon Knight on backing vocals,[3] bass player Darryl Ross,[3] lead guitarists Malcolm Pooyak[3] and Todd Duncan,[7] and drummers K.K. Nogada,[3] Robin Turner[7] and Hal Schrenk.[8]

In 1996 the band released its debut album Freedom,[9] which was shortlisted for Best Aboriginal Recording at the Juno Awards of 1997.[10] Falling Down followed in 1999;[11] in addition to its Juno Award win, the album won a Prairie Music Award[12] and an Aboriginal Music Award.[13] The following year, Falling Down was reissued in the United States with the alternate title Windfall.[14]

Knight released the album Standing Strong in 2002 as a solo artist,[15] although he still toured under the band name.[16] Guest musicians on the album included Brandon Friesen, Lucie Idlout, Derek Miller and Paul Carrack. The album was again a Juno nominee for Aboriginal Recording at the Juno Awards of 2003,[17] and Knight won Songwriter of the Year for "Cochise Was a Warrior" at the Aboriginal Music Awards.[18] In 2004, his music video for "Love Fades Away" won the award for Best Music Video at the American Indian Film Festival.[19]

With his band now consisting of his sons Lancelot and Daniel, a new album was in the planning stages in 2004.[16] The album did not materialize, although Knight continued to perform selected festival tour dates in Western Canada.[20][21]

In 2013, he released "Idle No More (Tomahawk)", a song inspired by the Idle No More activist movement which was his first new release since Standing Strong.[22] He followed up in 2015 with the single "Indian Girl".[23]

References

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