Marja Mortensson
Marja Helena Fjellheim Mortensson is a South Sámi singer from Engerdal in Innlandet county, Norway. She won the 2018 Spellemannprisen in the folk/traditional music category for her album Mojhtestasse – Cultural Heirlooms, and in 2021 for Raajroe – The Reindeer Caravan.
Life
Mortensson comes from a family of reindeer herders, and grew up in, a Siida in Hedmark county. Her family belongs to the South Sámi ethnic minority, whose language and culture are important influences for her music. Mortensson sings in her native language, Southern Sámi, which is only spoken by about 500 people today. The traditional South Sami joik has also largely disappeared from her area and so an important part of her music is based on old recordings and lyrics as well as individual traditions. In addition to her own research, she studied joik and Sami culture at the Nord University in Levanger under the Sami musician Frode Fjellheim, who is also the producer and co-composer of her 2017 debut album Aarehgïjre – Early Spring.In 2018, Mojhtestasse – Cultural Heirlooms followed, a collaboration with Daniel Herskedal and Jakop Janssønn, which contains a mixture of traditional joiks and new compositions and was created on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the first Sami country meeting in Trondheim in 1917. The third album Lååje – Dawn, released in 2019, is also a collaboration with Herskedal. She can also be heard on his album A Single Sunbeam.
In 2017, she was appointed as Fylkesjoiker in the county of Troms for the year.
She is one of the main characters in the 2023 Swiss documentary film , in which she talks about what traditions and joik mean to her.
Discography
- Aarehgïjre – Early Spring
- Mojhtestasse – Cultural Heirlooms
- Lååje – Dawn
- Raajroe – The Reindeer Caravan
- ''Båalmaldahkesne – Entwined''
Awards
- 2013: Hedmark Fylkeskommunens Kulturpris
- 2014: Riddu Riđđu Young Artist of the Year
- 2016: Sami Music Awards
- 2018: Spellemannprisen
- 2021: Áillohaš Music Award
- 2021: Spellemannprisen