One day in October, the dancer Kenneth Shirley got a message from Injury Reserve, a hip-hop group he had befriended in Phoenix, where he grew up and still lives. The band was performing in Manhattan and had noticed from Shirley's Instagram posts that he was on the East Coast, too. Would he like to come to the show as a guest?
Yes, he answered, though that meant a 3½ hour drive from Jacob's Pillow, the dance center in Massachusetts where he and the group he leads, Indigenous Enterprise, had a rehearsal residency. But he also had another idea: Since it was Indigenous Peoples Day, Oct. 11, would Injury Reserve like his troupe to do a set?
And so, at the Bowery Ballroom that night, an audience expecting rap and maybe a mosh pit opened a circle on the floor so that Shirley and his crew, Native Americans from several tribes, had some space. Decked out in many-colored beads, bells and huge feathered bustles, accompanied by flute, drum and song, they did a Fancy Dance, a Jingle Dance, a Prairie Chicken Dance. Before kaleidoscopically juggling as many as 11 hoops, Shirley's colleague Jorge Gonzales-Zuniga Jr., of the Salt River Pima tribe, crowd-surfed from the stage.
"It was a rock star moment," Shirley said, relishing how the audience had erupted. It was the kind of response that he's always looking for, the kind he encourages in all his shows by getting on the mic and urging people to "make some noise."
"We've been going to concerts our whole lives," he said of himself and his group. "We love getting the crowd hyped. Like at Coachella, with thousands of people screaming — we want that in our shows."
This is one way that the members of Indigenous Enterprise, almost all in their early or mid-20s, are updating what a Native American dance troupe can be.
Since its founding six years ago, the group has quickly gained attention: It had a cameo in the 2016 music video "Stand Up/Stand N Rock" with Taboo of the Black Eyed Peas and performed at the Sydney Opera House in 2019. In the past year, Indigenous Enterprise has appeared on the TV competition "World of Dance," in the virtual inauguration parade for President Joe Biden and during the NBA Finals. The company performed "Indigenous Liberation," a new show, at the Joyce Theater in Manhattan this month.
But while the troupe and its members are young, its practices are deeply rooted. Most of the dancers were introduced to the traditions at an early age, while attending powwows, multi-tribe gatherings of Native people that occur regularly across North America.