Remembering Gurrumul: Child of the Rainbow

Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, better known as Gurrumul or Dr G Yunupingu, was a Yolngu Aboriginal musician from Elcho Island, off the coast of Arnhem Land. Born blind, Gurrumul taught himself to play a guitar held upside down. HeÌýwas said to be acutely shy and knew little English, but these things did not define his life nor his career. He took ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlogn music by storm and achieved international acclaim, garnering praise from the likes of Elton John, Sting, Quincy Jones, and Bjork. He featured on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine, performed for President Obama during his 2011 ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog visit, and performed at the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Concert in 2012. In less than a decade, Gurrumul became the highest-selling Indigenous musician in ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlogn history.

Gurrumul died on July 25, 2017, at only 46, due to organ failure relating to the Hepatitis B he’d contracted during childhood.ÌýHis final album,ÌýDjarimirri (Child of the Rainbow),Ìýwas released posthumously in 2018 after almost six years in the making. When I found the album,Ìýmerely by coincidence,ÌýI knew that it was special.ÌýDjarimirriÌýessentiallyÌýfeaturesÌýYolngu chants set against an orchestral background, and is therefore situated somewhere in between an Indigenous and Western sound. There’s an incommunicableÌýdepth to it: the drone of the strings, the ringing horns, and through it all, the purity of Gurrumul’s voice.

, who writes for IndigenousX,ÌýYolngu people are bound byÌýgurrutu,Ìý‘a complex kinshipÌýsystem which then governs the basic aspects of life’, and she explains that Yolngu culture ‘is rich with song, dance, story and ceremony demonstrating beliefs and history, and the natural and spiritual worlds.’ Indeed, these are themes that are present throughoutÌýDjarimirri,Ìýwith the 12 songs that comprise the album all relating to specific totems and aspects of Yolngu culture, such asÌýWaak (Crow)ÌýandÌýGapu (Freshwater). As Miriam DhurrkayÌýYirrininba, Gurrumul’s niece,Ìý inÌý2018Ìý‘[e]ven though he couldn’t see the nature, he was born to feel the nature.’ Her Uncle’s sight, says Miriam, emanated from somewhere else, from ‘a special place to see, which was his heart.’

Gurrumul’s death has been described as a true loss to the Aboriginal community, but according to Nicol, the legacy of his work lives on and is immortalised in Paul Williams’ 2018 documentary,ÌýGurrumulÌý(stream it for free ). Gurrumul’s Aunt, Susan Dhangal Gurruwiwi, who serves as a narrator in the documentary, remarks at one point thatÌýhe was not simply aÌý¶ÙÂá²¹°ù¾±³¾¾±°ù°ù¾±â€”Child of the Rainbow—he livedÌýinsideÌýthat rainbow. He shed light on and shaped the spaces of two separate but interacting worlds.

As a non-Indigenous person, I can’t speak to the impact of Gurrumul’s work on the Aboriginal community. IÌýalso cannot fully appreciate the poetry of his music, which, although beautifulÌýto me, belongs to a culture and a history I am not personally familiar with. But listening to his music, his raw voice which radiates both a strength and a sensitivity, I am reminded that some sounds are so striking they can’t be expressed in words, or maybe they can, only in a language that isn’t yours. Your heart aches anyway, and you feel it in some part of you that lies dormant until the right sound comes along and reminds you it’s there, listening.

Tagged in Culture, What messes with your head