Donny Parenteau is one of nine individuals who will receive a Saskatchewan Order of Merit during a ceremony in Regina on June 2 (photo: Donny Parenteau)
Saskatchewan Order of Merit

Storied career of Donny Parenteau garners Sask. Order of Merit

May 18, 2026 | 11:15 AM

For Donny Parenteau, there wasn’t much of a learning curve when he first picked up the fiddle. Beginners typically take around six months to get the basics down. A young Parenteau, in high school, was getting the hang of things in the first evening.

“I could play half a fiddle tune that was in my head after one night,” said Parenteau.

The next day, after perplexing his parents with his sudden knack for fiddling, he went to his high school music teacher in Prince Albert to show him his newfound talent.

“He said, ‘you have a gift. Now here’s the second half of that tune’. Within a day and half, I was playing a tune.”

This wasn’t the first time the young Parenteau had perplexed adults around him. He had been playing the trombone in his high school band for over a year, all the while keeping an innocent secret: he couldn’t read music.

During one practice, a teacher called him out for not following along properly. Parenteau then admitted he was unable to read the sheet music, and had gotten by simply through watching the finger and hand movements from the other players around him.

“She didn’t believe me. After that, she gave the whole class a test. She told us all to go home and learn a song from the radio. The next day, I was the only kid who could do it,” said Parenteau.

“That’s when I knew there was something different about the way music was in me.”

Fast forward a few decades, and the multi-talented Métis singer-songwriter-fiddler-record-producer is being honoured with province’s highest civilian distinction, the Saskatchewan Order of Merit for his immeasurable contributions to music and Métis culture.

Parenteau performing at a Saskatchewan Roughriders game at Mosaic Stadium in Regina (photo: Donny Parenteau)

“I was absolutely shocked, surprised, and honoured. And very humbled when I see who I’m nominated with – there are doctors there,” said Parenteau.

“Somebody recently said to me, ‘music is healing. What do doctors do? Heal’. I’m not saying I’m a doctor but music is very healing and I would pity a world without music.”

Since he was 19 years old, Parenteau has been able to share his gift of music with the world. Parenteau got a kickstart in music by touring with American country music singer Neal McCoy. Touring across North America, Parenteau has had the opportunity to open for music legends including Merle Haggard, Shania Twain, Garth Brooks, George Jones, and Reba McEntire, to name a few.

Parenteau has also recorded three solo studio albums, thrice nominated for a Juno, and received several awards including the Saskatchewan Country Music Awards and Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards.

The Prince Albert-based artist has also started his own music academy, the Donny Parenteau School of Music, where he provides lessons on song writing, guitar, vocals, fiddle, and mandolin. He also dedicates time to touring the province, speaking to elementary schools about bullying.

“I want to give back, to always encourage others. To be someone who is remembered as being a musician with drive and passion, but not selfish,” said Parenteau.

Despite being surrounded by legendary musical talent throughout his career, Parenteau’s biggest musical influence as a musical artist has always been his late father, Wilbur Parenteau.

“People would ask what instrument my dad played, and I’d say, ‘he played the radio’. He would also play the music of the heroes I had – Charley Pride, Buck Owens, George Jones, Merle Haggard,” he said.

Parenteau has played the fiddle since he was a teenager without any formal training. (photo: Donny Parenteau)

“When the day come that I was able to meet every one of those people, it brought me back to my dad. And I thought, man, don’t tell me dreams don’t come true.”

Parenteau’s father was not the only family member who was instrumental in helping those dreams become a reality. When he was 19, Parenteau was working with his brother at PA Bottlers Ltd., who gave him a needed push out the door to launch his music career.

“He looked at me one day and said, ‘you need to do something with your life. If you stay here, you’re going to be stuck here’,” said Parenteau.

A few weeks after that conversation, Parenteau was hired as a touring musician by a Canadian band.

Those influences and pivotal moments in Parenteau’s life have left a lasting mark. After years of touring, his heart was calling him back to Prince Albert, where he now resides.

“When I came home to Prince Albert, it felt like the right thing to do. Being home grounds and humbles you. It lets you see things differently.”

“My songs are always about family. Getting back to your roots is something I try to instill in all my students. Never forget where you came from.”

That connection to his home, family, and culture, has made Parenteau stand out during his career. A champion of Métis culture and music, Parenteau can often be seen with a Métis sash as a guitar strap on stage, or wielding his fiddle. Even in the studio, Parenteau said producers he worked with from around North America regularly noticed something different about the way Parenteau played music.

“It was the Métis flowing out of me. It was that feel for music I had,” he said. “It doesn’t make you better than anyone else. It makes you different.”

Parenteau has used his platform to share Métis culture, launch an Indigenous music awards, start his own music academy, and work with charities and schools. (photo: Donny Parenteau)

Parenteau said throughout his career, he’s had countless people supporting him. With a desire to give back to others, Parenteau established the Saskatchewan Indigenous Music Association, which is in it’s fourth year of hosting an awards show. It is currently the only Indigenous music awards show in Canada, said Parenteau.

“So many young dreams end up dying in four walls, especially in the north. When I saw that, it made me open my eyes and do what I can to provide more opportunities,” said Parenteau.

“I absolutely love it. What better way to have that gift of music than to give it back to the next person.”

While Parenteau’s name and legacy is forever etched in the history books, the Saskatchewan musician hasn’t lost any of his passion to share his music and culture. He recently performed with friend and fellow Sask-musician Brad Johner, who shared his tireless enthusiasm for their craft.

“Brad asked me if I still get nervous when I go on stage, and I said ‘hell yeah’. He said ‘the day we walk on stage and don’t get nervous, we need to quit’,” said Parenteau.

“I still hits me. I still get excited to play. There could be someone there who has never seen me before. Give them the best show you can. That’s why I don’t care if there are five people or five thousand. You’re going to get the same show out of me every time.”