Making Songs

Singing the Land: Finding Connection through Song

by Rebecca Hass November 10, 2025.

In the last year I have had so many incredible opportunities to be in the space of composing music. It was never in my mind that this would be part of my practice as a creative being. I have had so much encouragement, and I have found such great joy in welcoming the melodies that come to visit. I keep trying to find a way to express my journey in words, and my vision. Here is what it feels like today.

When I was little, people in my small Ontario town knew me as the girl who sang all the way to school and back. At home, I was the star of our kitchen parties—singing folk and country songs while my uncle played the spoons and my grannie step danced. Looking back, I realize that was my first lesson in what music can really do: bring people together.

Over the years, my path took me far from those early roots. I spent decades as a classical mezzo-soprano, performing on big stages across Canada and abroad. I lived almost entirely inside the world of my European ancestors—German, English, and French—where music was complex, intellectual, and carefully constructed. It was beautiful, but something in me was still searching for a deeper kind of connection.

It’s only in the last few years that I’ve begun to bring all of myself into my creative work, including my Georgian Bay Métis ancestry and the teachings passed down from my dad and my grannie. This has completely changed how I think about music—why I make it, who it’s for, and what it can do.


Learning to Value “Simple” Again

My classical training taught me that “complicated” meant “better”, but in the years I have sat and drummed with my urban Indigenous community, I have reconnected to my ancestral understanding of music. Elders and knowledge keepers have helped me remember that a song’s power is in its ability to be shared. A song that’s easy to learn and sing together opens our hearts and spirits. It allows everyone in the circle to feel the rhythm, the words, and the story—not from the head, but from the heart. The songs that I was singing in urban Indigenous community were inviting people in, and I realized, that is what I wanted to do with my music too. 


Listening for the Songs in the Land

When I’m out walking—on city trails, by the ocean, or in the woods—I often hear melodies. They arrive quietly, like little whispers. Sometimes they fade as quickly as they come. Other times, they stay with me, and I find myself humming them over and over. I’ll record them on my phone so they have a chance to grow into songs.

My Anishinaabe brother and Elder, René Meshake, taught me that the music is already in the land—you just have to listen for it. That idea changed everything for me. After more than thirty years of performing other composers’ music—studying every note, every phrase, every emotion, searching for perfection in my vocal instrument—I’ve come to a point in my life where I want to listen differently and sing differently.  


Why I Make Music Now

These days, I see music as a way to bring people back to themselves and to each other. As someone of mixed European and Métis heritage, I carry many musical languages inside me. My work now is about letting them meet—finding ways for different traditions, stories, and voices to sit together in harmony.

We live in a world that can feel divided, fast-paced, and disconnected from the natural world. But when we sing together—when we share breath and vibration—we remember something ancient and true. We remember that we belong.

Through my compositions and community gatherings, I hope to create spaces where people can reconnect with their own ancestors, with the land beneath them, and with the joy of making music together.


Looking Ahead

Composing in this new way feels both exciting and humbling. I’m still learning, still listening. Each new song feels like a small discovery—a thread that leads me toward deeper understanding.

After a lifetime of performing others’ work, I’m finally finding my own voice. And it’s rooted in something simple, yet profound: the belief that music has the power to heal, to gather, and to remind us of who we are.Sharing songs for me is a radical action. I know that when we sing together, and we sing the land, we become one once again with all our relatives. 

The Song Blanket-A Story Telling Concert

7 pm | September 30, 2025

Guelph City Hall

The Song Blanket is a work in development, ahead of its anticipated full premiere at New York’s Symphony Space in 2026. This special Guelph presentation offers a rare opportunity to experience the heart of the piece in an intimate setting, where personal story becomes collective reflection.

Blankets are more than warmth—they are memory, protection, and legacy. In The Song Blanket, Métis artist Rebecca Hass (Georgian Bay Métis, French, German, English) invites us into a deeply personal and powerful journey through story and song, woven from the threads of her family’s hidden history and the teachings passed down through her granny’s quilts.

This intimate performance honours the matriarchs—those who sewed, wove, and dreamed their love into every stitch. Drawing on traditional knowledge shared with her, Rebecca shares songs written for drum, guitar, and flute, activating “blood memory”—a connection to ancestors, known and unknown. Audiences are invited not only to witness, but to participate, learning a song that carries the teachings of the quilt home with them.

Join us as we gather on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation to honour the enduring strength of Indigenous matriarchs.

Loon Calls | NuMus Concerts 2025.26 Season

7:30 pm | Saturday September 27, 2025.

KW Little Theatre, Kitchener Waterloo, Ontario.


Loon Calls
 is an immersive journey into the living language of the land, brought to life through music, story, and spoken word. Mezzo-soprano Rebecca Hass (Georgian Bay Métis, European) bridges her Western classical training with the heartbeat of the kitchen parties she grew up with and the drum circles she sings in today. Guided by a name given to her by Elders—Maanginoweh –“The voice of the loon on the lake”—Rebecca invites audiences into a shared space of listening, reflection, and reconnection.

At its heart, Loon Calls is about remembering that we are all connected. This sharing in gathering invites us to slow down and truly listen together. The land is still speaking: through the rhythm of the seasons, the pull of the moon, the quiet hum beneath our feet. Loon Calls helps us tune back in—reminding us that story, song, and vibration are pathways to belonging. As we move from disconnection to connection—with each other, with place, and with a broader national story—Loon Calls asks: Are we ready to listen? Are we ready to raise our voices, and sing with the land?

EARTH SONG

May 2, 3 2026 at 3 pm | The Newcombe Singers, Music Director, Kathryn Whitney

Earth Song is a concert co-curated by Kathryn Whitney and Rebecca Hass

Featuring a new choral composition premiere by Rebecca Hass

How shall we live well on the earth? First, we must ask the earth how it would like
to be lived upon. .
The concert EARTH SONG takes us on a journey, curated jointly by Métis singer
and composer Rebecca Hass and Newcombe music director, Kathryn Whitney, to a
place where we can hear the Earth sing.
Taking the idea of a Land Acknowledgment as our point of departure, our concert
mixes indigenous and non-indigenous voices, each of which, through singing,
brings us closer to the sounds of the natural world.
Listening to these voices, and lifting our voices to sing along with them, we hear
the earth and the sound of the tundra, trees, warm sun, and tall mountains. The
sound of our own footprint, as well as the history of the footprints of our own
ancestors on the land, becomes clearer, leading to understanding of our
relationship to the land, and to ourselves.
EARTH SONG offers our singers and audience the chance, through group singing,
to come to a new understanding of what it means to live on, and be part of, the
land.

You can learn more about this concert here

November 11, 2025 Reflection by Rebecca Hass

In the land acknowledgement that I often hear there is a line that strikes me ‘ we give our gratitude to the Indigenous people’s of this place who have stewarded it since time immemorial’. It’s that word: stewarded. That word leaps out at me. I am a visitor on the territory I live on, and I take caring for the land very seriously. I feel the responsibility to be a good caretaker, in relationship to, and in respect to, this land. I’m attentive to my own role as a visitor in being a good steward. This comes from how my Dad raised me, and the Métis teachings he carried from his mom. I grow medicine plants in my garden and have been working to restore my small yard to more of the Garry oak meadow it once was. I think about what I harvest, and from where, and think about how what I take might impact other creatures that also live on this land.

When Kathryn first spoke to me about working with the Newcombe Singers, it was my land based music creative practice that I wanted to share. I believe that we can all find ourselves and our role in the land acknowledgement. As visitors, we have a responsibility and an opportunity, to care for this place. The first step is to begin to listen more deeply to the place we are. To build a relationship to the land we are on.

If you were to stop and listen, what might you hear? Could you move beyond the sound of traffic, and the noise of city living? If you moved beyond the pavement, could you hear the lands tonality? Could you feel the beat of the ocean? Or the tempo of the forest at Beacon Hill?

I’m excited to begin this journey of listening and relationship building with this place with the Newcombe Singers. It is my vision to learn from the choir members what the land is telling them and let that lead into the choral composition for the May performance. What is it to sing the land? What is the song the earth is singing to us? I’m looking forward to exploring these questions and hearing the song that arises.

The Song Blanket | January 2026

The Song Blanket

Commissioned by Sparks and Wiry Cries, Sorel Foundation Grant.

Premier February 20, 2026 NYC, USA | Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre, Symphony Space

In my project, The Song Blanket, I bring forward the quilt as a holder of traditional teachings.
An ordinary item, familiar to many cultures, the quilt lives in the world of ‘craft’ and ‘folk art’ and is often identified as ‘women’s work’. I see the quilt as part of our collective memory and I place it in the centre of this project. Through the teachings held in the quilts my grannie made, I explore cultural loss, impacts of colonization, and the world matriarchal knowledge as a blood memory. I view this as a grass roots movement that unites the classical musician with their work as storytellers using voice and community music making to create change.

Rebecca Hass


Rebecca, through the character of the old woman, calls forward the matriarchs who travel with us, wrapping all in the transformative vibration of music. Joined by local guest artists, audiences will journey through stories and songs — both new and old, as the old woman seeks to remember and reclaim.

DEVELOPMENT UPDATES

The Song Blanket will enter workshop development in November 2025, hosted by Pacific Opera Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. A second workshop will follow at Ithaca College in New York, USA, in February 2026, leading up to its official premiere at The Thalia Theatre.

NEW MUSIC

This work will feature the debut of What Binds Us — a song cycle with music by Ian Cusson and words by Michelle Poirier-Brown and Rebecca Hass. It will also include several new compositions by Rebecca Hass, including a piece for solo voice, another for solo voice and Native flute, a quartet for a cappella voices, and a participatory song written for audience voices.

Learn more:
www.sparksandwirycries.org/songcircle