The award-winning documentary RUMBLE: The Indians Who Rocked the World tells the story of a profound, essential, and, until now, missing chapter in the history of American music: the Indigenous influence. The standards-aligned TeachRock RUMBLE lesson plans can help you bring that story into the classroom.

Drawing on short clips from the film, troves of source documents, archival photos, and journalism, the TeachRock RUMBLE lessons introduce students to important Native American musicians including Link Wray, Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Salas, Redbone, Buffy St. Marie, Robbie Robertson, and the Black Eyed Pea’s Taboo. The materials require students to engage in thoughtful discussion of contemporary issues such as identity and cultural appropriation, and to imagine key moments in American history from a Native perspective.

Visit the RUMBLE homepage

To purchase or rent the full film in the U.S., visit: AMAZONITUNES, or GOOGLE PLAY.

 

Indigenous Music from Wounded Knee to the Billboard Charts
The Indigenous roots of Rock and Roll
Debating Cultural Appropriation
The Music Behind the Red Power Movement
Negotiating Native Identity Through Art and Music