A Whole Different Hill

A Whole Different Hill

Sunday concert takes listeners from Arctic to Ozarks

Courtesy Photo “The Stjerna family is very well documented and actually has a newsletter that comes out for all the relatives now and then,” Kelly Mulhollan says about his wife Donna Stjerna Mulhollan’s ancestry. “This whole Sami thing has been percolating for a long time, but it finally erupted this year! It is a very powerful and moving presentation.”

Courtesy Photo
“The Stjerna family is very well documented and actually has a newsletter that comes out for all the relatives now and then,” Kelly Mulhollan says about his wife Donna Stjerna Mulhollan’s ancestry. “This whole Sami thing has been percolating for a long time, but it finally erupted this year! It is a very powerful and moving presentation.”

“This is a most unusual Still on the Hill presentation,” Kelly Mulhollan begins. “It’s been really hard to communicate to people how different this is.”

The program he’s talking about takes place Sunday at the Fayetteville Public Library as part of the Mountain Street Stage summer concert series. But the roots of it reach back to Donna Stjerna Mulhollan’s ancestors, reindeer herders living near the Arctic Circle in Norway, Finland, Sweden and Russia. Commonly called “Laplanders,” they prefer the term “Sami” or “Saami,” she explains, adding that their culture has been endangered since a cultural “cleansing” in the early 1700s “burned their shamanic drums and shut down their music and their religion.”

 created on Tuesday 6/27/2017 at 10:26:24 am by Becca Martin Cutline 1editforRoots.jpg Courtesy Photo Donna Mulhollan says fans can expect to see some of her signature “low-tech PowerPoint” quilts at Sunday’s concert. This one is titled “Roots.”
Donna Mulhollan says fans can expect to see some of her signature “low-tech PowerPoint” quilts at Sunday’s concert. This one is titled “Roots.”

Mulhollan says that as his wife learned more about her ancestry, “she went wild and started writing songs spontaneously and put together this whole fabulous show,” which will make its public debut on Sunday.

“We’ve been doing it just for fun for friends, and it’s been moving people to tears,” he says. “So we decided this would be a fun place to unveil it for the wider audience.”

That hourlong set will be followed by a second hourlong set of classic Still on the Hill tunes about the Ozarks, “so we’ve been calling it ‘Still on the Hill Explores Their Roots From the Arctic to the Ozarks’,” Donna Mulhollan says. “From my Arctic roots to Kelly’s Ozark roots — and it’s kind of timely to say ‘hey, this is a cool thing to dig into where we’re from.’”

BECCA MARTIN-BROWN

bmartin@nwadg.com

 

FAQ

Still on the Hill

WHEN — 2 p.m. Sunday

WHERE — Fayetteville Public Library

COST — Free

INFO — www.stillonthehill.com

 

Courtesy Photo Kelly Mulhollan decorated Donna’s banjo with symbols used by her ancestors, the Sami people.

Courtesy Photo
Kelly Mulhollan decorated Donna’s banjo with symbols used by her ancestors, the Sami people.

Flyer-Library-SamiOzark-1

 

 

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