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For Logan Staats, defending Wet’suwet’en territory is the fire that fuels his music

Staats’ upcoming album “A Light in the Attic” is named for the light that combining his artistic work and activism has brought into his life.

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Logan Staats feels a deep obligation to amplify climate change issues with his music and remain a force on the Wet’suwet’en front lines. “It’s embodied in every note that I sing, every chord that I play.”


VICTORIA Singer-songwriter Logan Staats was performing at the Wet’suwet’en blockade in northern British Columbia in November when a swarm of RCMP officers grabbed his hair, slammed his face on the ground, jumped on top of him and arrested him, he said.

The Juno-nominated Mohawk artist from Brantford, Ont., who is to perform May 7 in the Toronto Beyond Our Roots Festival, has been juggling his music with protesting the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline stretching across the Wet’suwet’en First Nation’s traditional lands.

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Logan Staats, centre with braids, takes part in a protest on Wet’suwet’en land in November 2021.

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