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Biography

Music of CanadaThe music of Canada has reflected the diverse influences that have History of Canada|shaped the country .cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0001624 |title=History of Canada in music |work=Historica Foundation of Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 Aboriginal peoples in Canada|Aboriginals , the United Kingdom|British , and the France|French have all made unique contributions to the musical Culture of Canada|heritage of Canada .cite book|title=Canadian Music-Issues of Hegemony & Identity|author=eds Beveley Diamond & Robert Witmer|publisher= Canadian Scholars Press|year=1994 The music has subsequently been heavily influenced by Culture of the United States|American culture because of its proximity and migration between the two countries.cite book |title=Profiles of Canada|author=edited by Kenneth G. Pryke, Walter C. Soderlund|publisher=Boulder, Colo. NetLibrary|year= 2000 |isbn= 0-585-27925-X Since French explorer Samuel de Champlain arrived in 1605 and established the first permanent Canadian settlements at Port Royal, Nova Scotia|Port Royal and Quebec City in 1608, the country has produced its own List of Canadian composers|composers , List of Canadian musicians|musicians and List of bands from Canada|ensembles .cite book |title=Music in Canada 1600-1800 |author=by Amtmann, Willy. Cambridge, Ont.|publisher= Habitex Books|year= 1975 |page= 320|isbn=0-88912-020-Xcite book |title=La Musique au Québec 1600-1875|work= by Michelle Pharand|publisher= Montreal - Les Éditions de l'Homme |year=1976|isbn=0-7759-0517-8

Canada's music industry has produced internationally renowned Canadians|Canadian artists.cite book|url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=vtDhVXAkpxcC& lpg=PP1& dq=The%20cultural%20industries%20in%20Canada%3A%20problems%2C%20policies%20and%20prospects%20%20By%20Michael%20Dorland& pg=PA95#v=onepage& q& f=true|title=The cultural industries in Canada: problems, policies and prospects|first= Michael |last=Dorland|page=95|publisher=J. Lorimer|year=1996|isbn=1-55028-494-0|accessdate=2011-01-16 Canada has developed a music infrastructure, that includes church hall s, Chamber music|chamber hall s, conservatories , academies , performing arts center|performing arts centre s, record company|record companies , radio stations , television music video channels.cite book|url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=eZQch8ieRtsC& pg=PP1& dq=Music+in+Canada:+A+Research+and+Information+Guide,#v=onepage& q=& f=false |title=Music in Canada: A Research and Information Guide|author= Carl Morey|publisher= New York Garland Publishing|year= 1997|accessdate=2009-10-28|format=Google books cite web |url= http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/timeline/CCFTimeline.html |title=The history of broadcasting in Canada |author=The Canadian Communications Foundation|accessdate=2009-10-28 Canada's music broadcasting is regulated by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).cite book
|url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=eZQch8ieRtsC& pg=PP1& dq=Music+in+Canada:+A+Research+and+Information+Guide,#v=onepage& q=& f=false
|title=Music in Canada: A Research and Information Guide
|author= Carl Morey
|publisher= New York Garland Publishing
|year= 1997|accessdate=2009-10-28
|format=Google books |page=223
cite web |url= http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/timeline/CCFTimeline.html
|title=The history of broadcasting in Canada
|author=The Canadian Communications Foundation
|accessdate=2009-10-28
The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences administers Canada's music industry awards, the Juno Award s, which commenced in 1970.

History


See |First Nations musicBefore European colonization of the Americas|European settlers came to Territorial evolution of Canada|what is now Canada , the region was occupied by a large number of Aboriginal peoples in Canada|Aboriginal peoples , including the West Coast Coast Salish peoples|Salish and Haida people|Haida , the centrally located Iroquois , Blackfoot and Wyandot people|Huron , the Inuit and Dene people to the North, and the Innu and Mi'kmaq people|Mi'kmaq in the East.cite web |url= http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/exhibitions/tresors/ethno/etb0170e.shtml |title=First Nations Culture Areas Index |work=the Canadian Museum of Civilization |accessdate=2009-10-28 Each of the aboriginal communities had (and have) their own unique musical traditions. Chanting - singing is widely popular and most use a variety of musical instruments. Being resourceful and creative they used the materials at hand to make their instruments for thousands of years before Europeans immigrated to the new world . They made gourds and animal Blowing horn|horns into Rattle (percussion instrument)|rattles , many rattles were elaborately carved and beautifully painted.cite web|url= http://www.aboriginalcuratorialcollective.org/research/kingfisher.html|format=PDF |title=The Aboriginal Curatorial Collective |work=kingfisher (ACC/CCA) |accessdate=2009-10-28 In woodland areas, they made horns of birchbark and drumsticks of carved antlers and wood.cite book |title=Canadian native art; arts and crafts of Canadian Indians and Eskimos|work= by Patterson, Nancy-Lou|publisher= Don Mills, Ont., Collier-Macmillan|year= 1973|isbn= 0-02-975610-3|page= 36 Drums were generally made of carved wood and animal hides .cite book|title=First Nations? .. Second Thoughts |work=by Thomas Flanagan |date=2008 - 2nd ed.|isbn= 0-7735-3443-1|pages=12–28 These musical instruments provide the background for songs and led to aboriginal dances. For many years after Europeans came to Canada, First Nations and Inuit peoples were discouraged from practicing their traditional ceremonies.cite book|title=First Nations Music in Canada|publisher= Published under the authority of the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development|work=Government of Canada|year=1999|isbn=0-662-26856-3 In 1606-1607 Marc Lescarbot collected the earliest extant transcriptions of a songs from the Americas: three songs of Henri Membertou , the sagamore (title)| sakmow (Grand Chief) of the Mi'kmaq people|Mi'kmaq First Nations tribe situated near Port Royal , present-day Nova Scotia .cite web|title=Membertou's Three Songs|url= http://Flutopedia.com/song_Membertou.htm|accessdate=16 April 2011|author=Clint Goss |year=2011

17th century


See also|Canadian classical music French colonization of the Americas|French settlers and explorers to New France brought with them a great love of song, dance and fiddle playing. Beginning in the 1630s French and Aboriginal children at Quebec City were taught to sing and play European instruments, like viols , violins , guitars , Western concert flute|transverse flutes , drums, Fife (musical instrument)|fifes and trumpets . Ecole des Ursulines, Quebec|Ecole des Ursulines and Ursulines of Quebec|The Ursuline Convent are among North America 's oldest schools and the first institutions of learning for women in North America.cite web |url= http://www.museocapitale.qc.ca/014a.htm |title=The Ursulines in New-France |work=Musée des Ursulines de Québec|accessdate=2009-10-28 Both where founded in 1639 by French nun Marie de l'Incarnation (1599–1672) alongside laywoman Marie-Madeline de Chauvigny de la Peltrie (1603–1671) and are the first Canadian institutions to have music as part of the curriculum.New Catholic encyclopedia. editors, Thomas Carson, Joann Cerrito - Washington, D.C. Catholic University of America.(ISBN 0-7876-4004-2)

The earliest written record of violin s in Canada comes from the Jesuit missions in North America|Jesuit Relation of 1645.cite web |url= http://college.cengage.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/colonial/thejesuitrelations.html |title=The Jesuit Relations(c.1635) |work=Cengage Learning, Inc |accessdate=2009-10-28 The Jesuits additionally have the first documented organ sale, imported for their Quebec City chapel in 1657. Notre-Dame de Québec Cathedral build in 1647 is the primate (religion)|primate church of Canada and seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Quebec . It is the oldest Catholicism|Catholic Episcopal see|" Episcopal see " in the New World north of Mexico and site of the first documented choir in Canada.Music in Canada: Capturing Landscape and Diversity. by Elaine Keillor. McGill-Queen's University Press. 2006. (ISBN 0-7735-3012-6)

Canada, New France first formal ball was given by Louis-Théandre Chartier de Lotbinière (1612–1688) on 4 Feb. 1667.cite web |url= http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=118 |title=Louis-Théandre Chartier de Lotbinière |work=University of Toronto/Université Laval|accessdate=2009-10-28 Louis Jolliet (1645–1700) is on record as one of the first classically trained practicing musicians in New France, although history has recognized him more as an explorer, Hydrography|hydrographer and Voyageurs|voyageur .cite web |url= http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=360 |title=Louis Jolliet |work=University of Toronto/Université Laval |accessdate=2009-10-28 Jolliet is said to have played the organ, harpsichord , flute, and trumpet. 1700, British America|under British rule at this time, an organ was installed in Notre-Dame Basilica (Montreal)|Notre-Dame Basilica in Montreal and military bands gave concerts on the Champ de Mars, Montreal|Champ de Mars . A French-born priest, René Ménard , composed motets around 1640, and a second Canadian-born priest, Charles-Amador Martin , is credited with the Plainsong|plainchant music for the Sacrae familiae felix spectaculum , in celebration of the Holy Family|Holy Family feast day in 1700.
clear

18th century


Historically, music was composed in Former colonies and territories in Canada|Canada's colonies and settlements during the 18th century, although very few popular named works have survived or were even published. The French and Indian Wars began and left the population economically drained and ill-equipped to develop cultural pursuits properly. The part-time composers of this period were nonetheless often quite skilled. Traditional songs and dances, such as those of the Habitants and Métis people (Canada)|Métis , were transmitted orally, from generation to generation and from village to village, thus people felt no need to transcribe or publish them.Contemporary Canadian Composers. ed. by Keith MacMillan and John Beckwith. Toronto, Ont. Oxford University Press, 1975. Printed music was required, for music teachers and their pupils, who were from the privileged minority where domestic music making was considered a proof of gentility.The Canadian musical heritage Ottawa. Canadian Musical Heritage Society, 1983 A series of historical Canadian MUSIC SCORES publications.(ISBN 0-919883-00-1) Music publishing and printing in Europe by this time was a thriving industry, but it did not begin in Canada until the 19th century.Contemporary Canadian composers ed. by Keith MacMillan and John Beckwith. Toronto. Oxford University Press, 1975 (ISBN 0-19-540244-8) List of Canadian composers|Canadian composers were not able to focus entirely on creating new music in these years, most made their living in other musical activities such as leading choirs, Pipe organ|church organists and teaching.Canadian Music and Education : an annotated bibliography of theses and dissertations / by Diane Peters. Lanham, Md. : Scarecrow Press, 1997. 476 p. Military band|Regimental bands were musically part of civil life, they featured perhaps a dozen woodwind and brass instruments, performing at parades, festive ceremonies, minuet s, country dances and balls.Canadian Musical Works S 1900-1980 : a bibliography of general and analytical sources. Ottawa : Canadian Association of Music Libraries, 1983. p96

After the 1760s, regular concerts became a part of the cultural landscape, as well as a wide variety of dancing. Operatic excerpts began to appear, and before the end of the century Canada had its first home-grown grand opera. A "Concert Hall" existed in Québec City by 1764 and subscription concerts by 1770, given, one may presume, by band players and skilled amateurs.Research in music education : a Festschrift for Dr. Allen Clingman Brian A. Roberts, ed. St. John's Nfld. : Binder's Press, 1993. 214 p. A survey of research in Canada. (MT3 .C2O93 1993t) Programs for the Québec City and City of Halifax|Halifax concerts of the 1790s reveal orchestral and chamber music by Handel , J.C. Bach , Haydn , Mozart and Pleyel . Canada's first wildly published sheet music are two operas written in late 18th century by New France composer, poet , and playwright Joseph Quesnel (1746–1809).cite web |url= http://www.carleton.ca/carletonsound/cscd1011.html |title=Canadian Songs for Parlour and Stage |work=Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 The instrument of favor for the Social class|lower-class was the fiddle. Fiddle#Fiddling|Fiddlers were a fixture in most public drinking establishments.cite book |url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=Qi5CXDIA918C& pg=PA7& dq=fiddling+in+canada+1700s#v=onepage& q=& f=false |work=By Edward A. Whitcomb |title=Canadian fiddle music|accessdate=2009-10-28 The late 18th century two new melodic instruments the Richter-tuned harmonica|diatonic harmonica and the button accordion make their appearance in folk-music tradition. God Save the Queen#Use in Canada|God Save the Queen has been sung in Canada Canada under British Imperial control|since British rule and by the mid-20th century was, along with " O Canada ", one of the country's two de facto national anthems.Citation| last=MacLeod| first=Kevin S.| authorlink=Kevin S. MacLeod| title=A Crown of Maples| place=Ottawa| publisher=Queen's Printer for Canada| year=2008| edition=1| pp=54, I url= http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/fr-rf/crnCdn/crn_mpls-eng.pdf| isbn=978-0-662-46012-1Citation| last=Kallmann| first=Helmut| contribution=The Canadian Encyclopedia| title=Encyclopedia of Music in Canada > Musical Genres > National and royal anthems| editor-last=Marsh| editor-first=James Harley| place=Toronto| publisher=Historica Foundation of Canada| url= http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0002533| accessdate=25 June 2010cite web|title=Royal Salute (Formerly known as the Vice-Regal Salute)| url= http://lt.gov.ns.ca/en/royal-salute.aspx| last=Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia| authorlink=Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia| publisher=Queen's Printer for Nova Scotia| accessdate=25 June 2010| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100430134828/ http://lt.gov.ns.ca/en/royal-salute.aspx | archivedate=30 April 2010Citation| contribution=Encyclopaedia Britannica| title=O Canada| editor-last=Hoiberg| editor-first=Dale| place=Toronto| publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.| url= http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/423313/O-Canada| accessdate=25 June 2010

19th century


See also| Celtic music in CanadaThe beginning of the 19th century Canadian musical ensembles had started forming in great numbers, writing waltzes , quadrilles , polkas and galop s.cite web |url= http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/sheetmusic/m5-180-e.html#cc |title=Canadian Musical Composition before the First World War |work=Library and Archives Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 The first volumes of music printed in the Canadas was the "Graduel romain" in 1800 followed by the "Processional 'sic' romain" in 1801. Folk music was still thriving, as recounted in the poem titled " http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/m5/f1/csm05496-v2.jpg A Canadian Boat Song". The poem was composed by the Irish people|Irish poet Thomas Moore (1779–1852) during a visit to Canada in 1804.cite web |url= http://theotherpages.org/poems/poem-mn.html#moore |title=The Canadian Boat Song Thomas Moore {128} |work=Poets' Corner Editorial Staff|accessdate=2009-10-28 "The Canadian Boat Song" was so popular that it was published several times over the next forty years in Boston , New York and Philadelphia . Dancing likewise was extremely popular form of entertainment as noted In 1807 by the Scottish people|Scottish traveler and artist George Heriot (artist)|George Heriot (1759–1839), who wrote..
Quotation|The whole of the Canadian inhabitants are remarkably fond of dancing, and frequently amuse themselves at all seasons with that agreeable exercise.|George Heriot|Travels Through the Canadas|1807Among the earliest musical societies were City of Halifax|Halifax s "New Union Singing Society" of 1809 and Quebec's "Harmonic Society" of 1820. One of the first registered all-civilian musical ensemble was a religious sect organized from Upper Canada called David Willson (1778-1866)|Children of Peace in 1820.cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0000189 |title=Band music composition |work=Encyclopedia of Music in Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 1833, a student orchestra was organized at the Séminaire de Québec the Société Ste-Cécile , as it was known, is one of the earliest ensemble of its kind in Lower Canada . The first appearance of a piece of music in a newspaper or magazine was in the pages of the Montreal twice-weekly newspaper, La Minerve , on September 19, 1831.cite web |url= http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/sheetmusic/m5-160-e.html |title=Canadian Sheet Music Before 1867 |work=Library and Archives Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 Many immigrants during this time lived in relative isolation and music sometimes obtained through subscriptions to newspapers and magazines, provided entertainment and a life line to civilization. One of the earliest surviving publication in Canada of a song for the piano in sheet music format is The Merry Bells of England by J.F. Lehmann, in 1840.cite book |url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=SlhlFB07kqIC& pg=PA232& lpg=PA232& dq=The+Merry+Bells+of+England+sheet+music#v=onepage& q=& f=false |title=A book of scattered leaves |work=James G. Hepburn Bucknell University Press (1999) |accessdate=2009-10-28
The Great Migration of Canada from 1815 to 1850, done largely by Irish people|Irish , United Kingdom|British and Scottish people|Scottish immigrants, broadened considerably the Canadian musical culture.cite book |url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=QoUySegAmagC& pg=PA50& lpg=PA50& dq=canadian+Mass+immigration+during+the+1840s+and+1850s,#v=onepage& q=& f=false |title=Mass immigration and the national interest (Pg50) |work=By Vernon M. Briggs (ISBN 0-7656-0933-9)|accessdate=2009-10-28 1844, Samuel Nordheimer (1824–1912) opened a music store in Toronto selling pianos and soon thereafter began to publish engraved sheet music . Samuel Nordheimer store was among the first and the largest specialized music publisher in the Province of Canada . Library and Archives Canada|LAC . " http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/confederation/023001-2101-e.html Canadian Confederation" the Web site of Library and Archives Canada , 2006-01-09 (ISSN 1713-868X) includes a http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/confederation/023001-2930-e.html bibliography They initially had the sole right to publish copies of Alexander Muir 's " The Maple Leaf Forever " that for many years served as an unofficial Canadian national anthem .cite web |url= http://www.utoronto.ca/icm/0101b.html |title=Maple Cottage, Leslieville, Toronto |work=Institute for Canadian Music|accessdate=2009-10-28 By the time of Canadian Confederation (1867), songwriting had become a favored means of personal expression across the land. In a society in which most middle-class families now owned a piano, and standard education included at least the rudiments of music, the result was often an original song.The Piano Concert In Canada, 1900-1980 a bibliographic survey. by Zuk, Ireneus. Baltimore, Md. Peabody Institute, 1985. 429 p. (Ref ML128 .P3Z85 1985t) Such stirrings frequently occurred in response to noteworthy events, and few local or national excitements were allowed to pass without some musical comment.Making Music: Profiles from a Century of Canadian Music, Alex Barris and Ted Barris. Toronto: HarperCollins, 2001. Canadian news facts v. 35 no. 22 (15 December 2001. ISSN 0008-4565
The 1870s saw several conservatories opened their doors, providing their string, woodwind and brass faculty, leading to the opportunity for any class level of society to learn music.cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0002886 |title=Publishing and printing |work=The Canadian Encyclopedia |accessdate=2009-10-28 http://hymntime.com/tch/htm/o/n/onesweet.htm ' One Sweetly Solemn Thought in 1876 by Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton -based Robert S. Ambrose, became one of the most popular songs to ever be published in the 19th century. It fulfilled the purpose of being an appropriate song to sing in the parlors of homes that would not permit any Sacred|non-sacred music to be performed on Sundays. At the same time it could be sung in dance halls or on the stage along operas and operettas .cite web |url= http://cliffordfordpublications.ca/digital-collections//violin/one_sweetly_solemn_thought/ |title= One Sweetly Solemn Thought Composer. Robert Steele Ambrose |work=Clifford Ford Publications |accessdate=2009-10-28

"O Canada" was originally commissioned by the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec , the Honourable Théodore Robitaille (1834–1897), for the 1880 Fête nationale du Québec|St. Jean-Baptiste Day ceremony.cite news|accessdate=2008-04-22|url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0002611|title='O Canada' |publisher= The Canadian Encyclopedia |accessdate=2009-10-28 Calixa Lavallée (1842–1891) wrote the music, which was a setting of a patriotic poem composed by the poet and judge Sir Adolphe-Basile Routhier (1839–1920). The text was originally only in French, before it was translated to English in 1906.

Leo, the Royal Cadet a light opera with music by Oscar Ferdinand Telgmann and a libretto by George Frederick Cameron was composed in Kingston, Ontario in 1889. The work centres on Nellie's love for Leo, a cadet at the Royal Military College of Canada who becomes a hero serving during the Anglo-Zulu War in 1879. The operetta focussed on typical character types, events and concerns of Telgmann and Cameron's time and place.cite web|url= http://www.archive.org/details/cihm_06551 |title=Leo, the Royal cadet microform& #93; : Cameron, George Frederick, 1854-1885 : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive |publisher=Archive.org |date=2001-03-10 |accessdate=2010-06-30

20th century


1900–1929


Prior to the development of the Phonograph|gramophone , Canadian songwriters' works were published as sheet music, or in periodicals in local newspapers such as The Gazette (Montreal)|The Montreal Gazette and Toronto Empire . Most recordings purchased by Canadians in the early days of the gramophone were made by American and British performers, behind some of these international hits were Canadian songwriters.Music in Canada, capturing landscape and diversity by Elaine Keillor. Montreal McGill-Queen's University Press. 1939 (ISBN 0-7735-3177-7)cite web|url= http://www.edunetconnect.com/cat/oldnewspap/pap1.html |title=Early Toronto Newspapers II |publisher=Edunetconnect.com |date= |accessdate=2011-10-29 Robert Nathaniel Dett (1882–1943) was among the first Black Canadians|Black Canadian composers during the early years of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers . His works often appeared among the programs of Will Marion Cook|William Marion Cook 's New York syncopated Orchestra.cite book |url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=PSvxJtF3_fUC& pg=PA356& lpg=PA356& dq=New+York+syncopated+Orchestra#v=onepage& q=New%20York%20syncopated%20Orchestra& f=false |title=The music of black Americans |work=By Eileen Southern (ISBN 0-393-03843-2) Publisher, Norton|accessdate=2009-10-28 Dett himself performed at Carnegie Hall and at the Boston Symphony Hall as a pianist and choir director . Eileen Southern|Southern, Eileen . The Music of Black Americans: A History . W. W. Norton & Company; 3rd edition. (ISBN 0-393-97141-4) Following quickly on the gramophone's spread came Military history of Canada during the First World War|Canada's involvement in the First World War .cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0000658 |title=Chamber music performance|work=Encyclopedia of Music in Canada |accessdate=2009-10-28 The war was the catalyst for the writing and recording of large numbers of Canadian-written popular songs, some of which achieved lasting international commercial success.cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1SEC873941 |title=Canadian Songwriting to 1920 |work=Historica Foundation of Canada|accessdate=2009-10-28 The military during WWI produced official music such as March (music)|regimental marches and songs as well as utilitarian bugle call s. The soldiers had a repertoire of their own, largely consisting of new, often ribald, lyrics to older tunes.cite web |url= http://www.capsnews.org/barrcan.htm |work=Canadian Antique Phonograph Society |title=History of Recorded Sound in Canada|accessdate=2009-10-28

Canada's first independent record label Compo Company built a pressing plant (the largest of its day) in 1918 at Lachine, Quebec .cite web |url= http://www.capsnews.org/barrcom.htm |title=The Compo Company, History of Recorded Sound in Canada |work=Canadian Antique Phonograph Society |accessdate=2009-10-28 Compo was originally created to serve the several American independent record companies such as Okeh Records which wanted to distribute records in Canada.cite web |url= http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0000771 |title=Compo Company Ltd. |work=The Canadian Encyclopedia (Historica Foundation of Canada)|accessdate=2009-10-28 The 1920s saw Canada's first radio stations, this allowed Canadian songwriters to contribute some of the most famous popular music of the early 20th century.cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0004103 |title=Songwriters and Songwriting (English Canada)|work=Historica Foundation of Canada|accessdate=2009-10-28 Canada's first commercial radio station CINW|CFCF (formerly XWA) begins broadcasting regularly scheduled programming in Montreal in 1920, followed by CKAC , Canada's first French language radio station, in 1922.cite web |url= http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/issues_resources/cultural_policies/chronology/cult_policies_chronology.cfm |title=Canadian Cultural Policies Chronology 1920's |work=Canadian Cultural Policies Chronology |accessdate=2009-10-28 By 1923, there were 34 List of radio stations in Canada|radio stations in Canada and subsequently proliferated at a remarkable rate, and with them spread the popularity of jazz . Jazz became associated with all things modern, sophisticated, and also decadent.Hakim, Joy (1995). War, Peace, and All That Jazz. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 41–46. (ISBN 0-19-509514-6)

In 1925, the Canadian Performing Rights Society was formed to administer public performance and royalties for composers and lyricists. It became known as the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada|Composers, Authors and Publishers Association of Canada (CAPAC). Toronto-born Murray Adaskin (1906–2002) was a violinist, composer, conductor and teacher at the University of Saskatchewan . From 1923 to 1936 he was an orchestral and chamber musician with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra , he was later named head of music at the University of Saskatchewan.cite web |title=The Murray Adaskin collection |work=University of Saskatchewan He was a Artist in residence|composer-in-residence at the University of Saskatchewan, the first appointment of this type in Canada.Everett-Green, Robert. ''Composer expressed joy in art's beauty , The Globe & Mail|The Globe and Mail , Wednesday, May 8, 2002. R7. Retrieved October 18, 2006.

1930–1959


See also|Canadian rock|Canadian blues|
Emerging out of the great depression on near equal-footing to American popular music , Canadian popular music continued to enjoy considerable success at home and abroad in the preceding years.Before the gold rush: flashbacks to the dawn of the Canadian sound by Nicholas Jennings, (Yorkville ON: Viking, 1997) (ISBN 0-670-87381-0)Canadian music fast facts : profiles of Canada's pop music pioneers. by Randy Ray and Mark Kearney London, Ont. : Sparky Jefferson Productions, c1991. (ISBN 0-9695149-0-5) Among them Montreal 's jazz virtuoso Oscar Peterson (1925–2007) who is considered to have been one of the greatest pianists of all time, releasing over 200 recordings and receiving several Grammy Awards during his lifetime.cite web | url=Allmusic|class=artist|id=p7322/biography|pure_url=yes | title=Oscar Peterson Biography | publisher=allmusic | author= Scott Yanow |accessdate=2009-10-28 Also notable is Hank Snow (1914–1999), who signed with RCA Victor in 1936 and went on to become one of America's biggest and most innovative country music superstars of the 1940s and 1950s.Wolfe, Charles. (1998). "Hank Snow". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 494–5. ISBN 0-19-517608-1 Snow became a regular performer at the Grand Ole Opry on WSMV-TV|WSM in Nashville and released more than 45 LP album|LPs over his lifetime.The Hank Snow Story: Hank Snow, the Singing Ranger. With Ownbey, Jack and Burris, Bob. Chicago, 1994 _(ISBN 0-252-02089-8) Snow was one of the inaugural inductees to the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame started in 2003.

Military history of Canada during the Second World War|Canada during the Second World War produced some patriotic songs, but were not hits in the music industry sense. A number of Canadian singers who learned their craft in Canadian opera companies in the 1930s went on to sing in major international opera houses.SOCAN yearbook. Don Mills, Ont. : Society of Composers, Authors and Music publishers of Canada, 1994- (ML27 .C3S635) Most notable from the 1940s is contralto singer Portia White (1911–1968). She achieved international fame because of her voice and stage presence. As a Canadian female of African descent, her popularity helped to open previously-closed doors for talented women who followed. She has been declared " Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)|A person of national historic significance " by the Government of Canada .cite web |url= http://www.mta.ca/about_canada/study_guide/famous_women/portia_white.html |title=Portia White 1911-1968 |work=The Centre for Canadian Studies |accessdate=2009-10-28 In 1964 she performed for Queen Elizabeth II , at the opening of the Confederation Centre of the Arts .cite book |url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=ZqeZBw6nzjgC& pg=PA273& dq=Portia+White+1911-1968#v=onepage& q=Portia%20White%201911-1968& f=false |title=100 Canadian heroines: famous and forgotten faces Pg.274 |work= by Merna Forster (ISBN 1-55002-514-7)|accessdate=2009-10-28
Following World War II a growth phase for Canadian bands was experienced, this time among school bands.cite web|url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=A1SEC824778 |title=xpansion Since WWII, 1940-84 |work=Historica Foundation of Canada|accessdate=2009-10-28 Rapid advances in the inclusion of instrumental music study in formal school curricula brought about fundamental changes to the philosophy of the band movement and the type of repertoire available. The CHUM Chart debuted on May 27, 1957, under the name CHUM's Weekly Hit Parade, was in response to the fast growing diversity of music that needed to be subdivided and categorized.Music Directory of Canada. 8th ed. Toronto : Norris-Whitney, 2001 The CHUM charts were the longest-running Top 40 chart in Canada ending in 1986.cite news |url= http://www.thestar.com/article/217451 |title=Happy 50th birthday old CHUM |work=Toronto Star May 26, 2007|accessdate=2009-10-28 | first=Greg | last=Quill | date=2007-05-26

1958 saw its first Canadian rock|Canadian rock and roll teen idol Paul Anka , who went to New York City where he auditioned for American Broadcasting Company|ABC with the song, Diana (song)|Diana .Canadian musician periodical. Unionville Branch v. 20 no. 4, 1998 August (ISSN 0708-9635) This song brought Anka instant stardom as it reached number one on the Billboard charts|US Billboard charts .cite book|title=The Billboard Book of Hits Pg12|ISBN=0-8230-8285-7|author=Adam White & Fred Bronson|publisher=Billboard Books|year=1988 "Diana" has gone on to be one of the best selling Gramophone record|45s in music history.cite web |url= http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-101.01-e.php? PHPSESSID=ccntousk30frf6h4jsn237nm12 |title=RPM (magazine)collection at Library and Archives Canada |work=RPM Awards|accessdate=2009-10-28 Requires running a searches for Artist or year US-born rockabilly pioneer Ronnie Hawkins came to Canada in 1958, where he became a key player in the Canadian blues and rock scene.cite web|url= http://www.ronniehawkins.com/bio_ronniehawkins.cfm|title=Ronnie Hawkins Biography|last=Hawkins|first=Ronnie|date=Copyright 2008 |work=Official Ronnie Hawkins Website|publisher=Hawkstone Enterprises Inc|accessdate=2009-06-02 The 4th of October was declared "Ronnie Hawkins Day" by the city of Toronto when Hawkins was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame .cite web | title= Canada's Walk of Fame inductees | work=canadaswalkoffame.com|accessdate=2006-11-26 |url= http://www.canadaswalkoffame.com/inducteelistRequires running a searches for Artist or year He was also inducted into the Canadian Music Week#Canadian Music Industry Hall of Fame|Canadian Music Industry Hall of Fame cite press release| title =Ronnie Hawkins 1958–2005| publisher =The Hamilton Spectator- Souvenir Edition |page= MP43| date =June 10, 2006|accessdate=2009-10-28 and his pioneering contribution to rockabilly has been recognized with induction into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame .cite web | title= Rockabilly Hall of Fame inductees| work=rockabillyhall.com|url= http://www.rockabillyhall.com/home.html|accessdate=2006-11-26

1960–1999


See also|Canadian jazz List of Canadian musicians|Canadian artists and List of bands from Canada|Canadian ensembles were generally forced to turn toward the United States to establish healthy long lasting careers during the 1960s.cite book |title=The CHUM Story |author=by Allen Farrel|publisher= Stoddart Publishing|year= 2001 |isbn=0-7737-6263-9 Canada would produce some of the world's most influential singer-songwriters during this time.cite book|title=Garland Encyclopedia of World Music|page= Volume 3|work= The United States and Canada|author= Koskoff, Ellen (ed.)|year=2000|publisher= Garland Publishing|isbn= 0-8240-4944-6 Among the most notable is Winnipeg 's Neil Young who has been inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame , Canada's Walk of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice.cite book |title=Neil Young- reflections in broken glass|author= Simmons, Sylvie |year=2001|publisher= Edinburgh: Mojo|isbn=1-84195-084-X Leonard Cohen has been inducted into both the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame and is also a Companion of the Order of Canada.cite web|author=James Hale |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=U1ARTU0000754 |title=Leonard Cohen |publisher=The Canadian Encyclopedia |date= |accessdate=2011-11-08 Folk legend Joni Mitchell is an Alberta native, and has been inducted into both the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Walt Grealis of Toronto started in the music business with Apex Records in 1960, the Ontario distributor for Compo Company. He later joined London Records , where he worked until February 1964, when he then established RPM (magazine)|RPM weekly trade magazine . From the first issue of RPM Weekly on February 24, 1964 to its final issue on November 13, 2000, RPM was the defining charts in Canada.cite web |url= http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/index-e.html? PHPSESSID=hcpqabrflcj0j327o3unbt23d7 |title=RPM 1964–2000 The Conscience of Canada's Music Industry |work=Library and Archives Canada -RPM history |accessdate=2009-10-28


Canada's first nation-wide music awards began as a reader poll conducted by Canadian music industry trade magazine RPM Weekly in December 1964. A similar balloting process continued until 1970 when the RPM Gold Leaf Awards , as they were then known, were changed to the Juno Awards . The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences held the first Juno Award ceremony in 1975.cite book|url= http://books.google.ca/books? id=IxVuSFLo8fAC& pg=PA127& dq=Canadian+Academy+of+Recording+Arts+and+Sciences+%22Juno%22#v=onepage& q& f=true|page=127|title=Canadian content, culture and the quest for nationhood|first=Ryan |last=Edwardson|publisher=University of Toronto Press|year=2008|isbn=978-0-8020-9759-0|accessdate=2011-01-16 This was in response to rectifying the same concerns about promotion of Canadian artist that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission had.cite web |url= http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm? PgNm=TCE& Params=A1ARTA0004198 |title= Juno Awards |work=The Canadian Encyclopedia|publisher=Historica Foundation of Canada|author=McLean, Steve|accessdate=3 August 2009


The influence and innovations of Canadian hip hop came to the foreground in Canada when Music video s became an important marketing tool for Canadian musicians, with the debut of MuchMusic in 1984 and MusiquePlus in 1986. Now both English and French Canadian musicians had outlets to promote all forms of music through video in Canada.Have Not Been the Same: the CanRock renaissance 80s-90s, by Michael Barclay, (Toronto ON: ECW Press, 2001) (ISBN 1-55022-475-1)cite web|url= http://www.muchmusic.com/aboutus/faq/#programming |title=What is the first video that MuchMusic aired? |publisher=Muchmusic.com |date=1984-08-31 |accessdate=2011-10-29 The networks were not just an opportunity for artists to get their videos played—the networks created VideoFACT , a fund to help emerging artists produce their videos. http://www.videofact.ca/home/background Background MuchFACT VideoFACT Retrieved 2011-01-22

Canadian women at the end of the 20th century enjoyed greater international commercial success than ever before.Women Musicians in Canada "on the record" ''the Music Division of the National Library of Canada / by C. Gillard. Ottawa : NLC, 1995. 6 leaves. (ML136 .O8G54 1995t) Canadian women set a new pinnacle of success, in terms financial, critical and in their immediate and strong influence on their respective genres.Hand Me Down World: the Canadian pop-rock paradox by Greg Potter, (Toronto: Macmillan, 1999) (ISBN 0-7715-7642-0) They were the women and daughters who had fought for Feminism in Canada|emancipation and equality a generation before. Most notable is French Canadian|French-Canadian singer, Celine Dion , who became Canada's best-selling music artist," http://www.allbusiness.com/retail-trade/miscellaneous-retail-retail-stores-not/4599216-1.html Dion Named All-time Best-selling Canadian Act". (2000-1-06). Allbusiness. Retrieved 2009-10-12.Learn, Josh " http://media.www.brockpress.com/media/storage/paper384/news/2009/03/10/ArtsEntertainment/High-Fidelity.Top.Selling.Canadian.Artists-3666963.shtml High Fidelity: Top Selling Canadian Artists". The Brock Press . Retrieved 2009-10-12. and who, in 2004, received the Chopard Diamond award|Chopard Diamond Award from the World Music Awards for surpassing 175 million in album sales, worldwide.cite web |title= RIAA statistics|work=RIAA Certifications |url= http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php? table=tblDiamond |accessdate=2009-10-28 cite web |url= http://www.celinedion.com/celinedion/english/journey_awards.html |title=World’s Best Selling Female Artist of All Time |work= Sony Music Entertainment Canada|accessdate=2009-10-28 cite web |url= http://www.aboutcelinedion.net/celine-dion-awards.html |title=Celine Dion Awards |work=.aboutcelinedion.net|accessdate=2009-10-28 http://www.cbc.ca/arts/music/story/2007/11/05/worldmusic-awards.html Dion, Lavigne score trophies at World Music Awards. CBC News|CBC News.ca November 5, 2007. Retrieved July 21, 2008.

21st century


See also|Caribbean music in Canada|Canadian hip hop The turn of the millennium was a time of incredible nationalism, at least as far as List of radio stations in Canada|Canadian radio is concerned.cite book|title=The Canadian encyclopedia |work= James H|publisher=Marsh Edition: 2|year= 1988 |page=Item notes: v. 3–273|isbn=0-7710-2099-6 The 1971 Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission|CRTC rules (30% Canadian content on Canadian radio) finally come into full effect and by the end of the 20th century radio stations would have to play 35% Canadian content.cite web |title=A home-grown philosophy of Canadian content |work=by Charles Gordon The Ottawa Citizen, May 7, 1998 |url= http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/articles/sovereignty_identity/philosophy_content.cfm |accessdate=2009-10-28 This led to an explosion in the 21st century of Canadian pop musicians dominating the airwaves unlike any era before.cite book|title=The CHUM Story |work=by Allen Farrell|publisher= (C.A ON: Stoddart Publishing|year= 2001|isbn= 0-7737-6263-9 In 1996, VideoFACT launched PromoFACT, a funding program to help new artists produce electronic press kits and websites .cite web |url= http://www.videofact.ca/home/background |title=A Foundation To Assist Canadian Talent, was created in 1984 |work=VIDEOFACT AND PROMOFACT |accessdate=2009-10-28 At about the same time, the CD (cheap to manufacture) replaced the vinyl album and Compact Cassette (expensive to manufacture).cite web|url= http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-10705268.html |title=End of track. (the vinyl record is meeting its demise in music recording industry) |publisher=The Economist (US) |date= May 11, 1991|accessdate=2009-10-28 Shortly thereafter, the Internet allowed musicians to directly distribute their music, thus bypassing the selection of the old-fashioned " record label ".cite book|work=Millard, Andre|url= http://books.google.com/books? id=gd2b0M2fDckC& pg=PA353& dq=record+playing+time#PPA58,M1 |title=America on Record-A History of Recorded Sound |publisher= Cambridge University Press |year=1995|isbn=0-521-47556-2|format= Google Books |accessdate=2009-10-28 Canada's main stream music industry has suffered as a result of the internet and the boom of independent music. The drop in annual sales between 1999 - the year that Napster 's unauthorized peer-to-peer file sharing service launchedcite web |url= http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_33/b3694003.htm |title=Napster's High and Low Notes|publisher= Businessweek |date=August 14, 2000 |accessdate=2009-10-28 - and the end of 2004 was $465 million.cite web |url= http://www.cria.ca/about.php |work= Canadian Recording Industry Association |title=(CRIA)President's Message|accessdate=2009-10-28 In 2007, Canada joined the controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement talks,cite web |url= http://www.med.govt.nz/templates/ContentTopicSummary 34357.aspx |title=Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement |work=Ministry of Economic Development (Wellington, New Zealand)|accessdate=2009-10-28 whose outcome will have a significant impact on the Canadian music industry.cite web |url= http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/legislation/canadian_law/federal/copyright_act/cdn_copyright_ov.cfm |title=Canadian Copyright Act - Overview |work= Media Awareness Network (Department of Justice) |accessdate=2009-10-28 In 2010 Canada introduced new copyright legislation. The amended law makes hacking digital locks illegal, but enshrine into law the ability of purchasers to record and copy music from a CD to portable devices.cite web|title=Canada announces new copyright law for digital age |url= http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iI9pXzLLcyvoJCMSwKgUvHEbH3HA |publisher=Google News|year=2010|accessdate=2010-06-24

Anthems


main|Anthems and nationalistic songs of CanadaPatriotic music in Canada dates back over 200 years as a distinct category from British patriotism, preceding the Constitution Act, 1867|first legal steps to independence by over 50 years. The earliest, " The Bold Canadian ", was written in 1812.cite book|author=Adam Jortner|title=The Gods of Prophetstown: The Battle of Tippecanoe and the Holy War for the American Frontier|url= http://books.google.com/books? id=l6whyXqA7BUC& pg=PA217|date=December 12, 2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-976529-4|page=217
  • " O Canada " - the national anthem adopted in 1980.cite web

  • |author=Government of Canada
    |title=Hymne national du Canada
    |work=Canadian Heritage
    |publisher=Government of Canada
    |date=2008-06-23
    |url= http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/symbl/anthem-fra.cfm
    |accessdate=2008-06-26

  • " God Save the Queen " - Royal Anthem of Canada and previously the national anthem until 1980.cite web|url= http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/symbl/anthem-eng.cfm |title=Canadian Heritage - National Anthem: O Canada |publisher=Pch.gc.ca |date=2009-12-11 |accessdate=2011-10-29

  • " The Maple Leaf Forever " - unofficial old national anthem 1867.cite web|url= http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/symbl/patriot-eng.cfm |title=Canadian Heritage - Patriotic Songs |publisher=Pch.gc.ca |date=2010-03-03 |accessdate=2011-10-29

  • " Alberta (song)|Alberta " official anthem of of Alberta .cite web|last=Anonymous|title=Canada Alberta: Alberta Provincial Song|url= http://www.national-anthems.org/anthems/naw_id/PSC-001|work=Sheet music|publisher=National Anthems of the World Oranisation|accessdate=4 May 2012

  • " Ode to Newfoundland " - official anthem of Newfoundland and Labrador .


  • Accolades


    The Canadian Music Hall of Fame established in 1976 honours Canadian musicians for their lifetime achievements.cite book|author=Nielsen Business Media, Inc.|title=Billboard|url= http://books.google.com/books? id=6xQEAAAAMBAJ& pg=PA13|date=June 4, 2005|publisher=Nielsen Business Media, Inc.|page=13|id=ISSN|00062510 The ceremony is held each year as part of Canada's main annual music industry awards the Juno Award|Juno' s .cite web |title=Juno Award winners list by year|format= Requires a search by year |url= http://www.metrolyrics.com/juno-awards.html|work= Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences |publisher= MetroLeap Media Inc.|MetroLeap Media |accessdate=2009-12-29

    The Governor General's Performing Arts Awards for Lifetime Artistic Achievement are the foremost honours presented for excellence in the performing arts, in the categories of dance , classical music , popular music , film , and radio and television broadcasting.cite book|author=Sarah Jennings|title=Art and Politics: The History of the National Arts Centre|url= http://books.google.com/books? id=ZdjXSiWAwC4C& pg=PA246|date=June 11, 2009|publisher=Dundurn Press Ltd.|isbn=978-1-55002-886-7|page=246 They were initiated in 1992 by then Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn , and winners receive $25,000 and a medal struck by the Royal Canadian Mint .cite web| url= http://www.ggpaa.ca/en/awards.html| title=The Awards| publisher=Governor General's Performing Arts Awards Foundation| accessdate=23 April 2009

    Canada also has many specific music awards, both for different genres and for geographic regions:cite book|author=Hephaestus Books|title=Articles on Canadian Music Awards, Including: Juno Award, Canadian Music Hall of Fame, Casby Award, F LIX Award, Muchmusic Video Awards, Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame, Urban Music Association of Canada, Polaris Music Prize|date=August 22, 2011|publisher=Hephaestus Books|isbn=978-1-242-64024-7|pages=14–21
  • CASBY Award s – Canada’s annual indie rock|independent and alternative rock|alternative music awards

  • Canadian Country Music Award s – Canada’s annual country music industry awards

  • GMA Canada Covenant Awards – Canada’s national awards for the Gospel music industry

  • East Coast Music Awards – annual music appreciation for the East Coast of Canada

  • Felix Award s – annual prize for members of the Quebec music industry

  • MuchMusic Video Award s – Canada’s annual music video awards

  • Polaris Music Prize – award annually given to the best full-length Canadian album based on artistic merit

  • Canadian Urban Music Awards – Canada’s annual urban music awards

  • Aboriginal rock|Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards – Canada’s annual appreciation for the promoters, creators and performers of Aboriginal rock|Aboriginal music

  • Western Canadian Music Awards – annual music appreciation for the western part of Canada


  • Cultural and regional


    Music of Canada (by province or territory) Canada provinces map |AB =Music of Alberta|BC =Music of British Columbia|SK =Music of Saskatchewan|MB =Music of Manitoba|ON =Music of Ontario|QC =Music of Quebec|NB =Music of New Brunswick|PE =Music of Prince Edward Island|NS =Music of Nova Scotia|NL =Music of Newfoundland and Labrador|YU =Music of Yukon|NT =Music of Northwest Territories |NU =Music of Nunavut

    main|Music of Canadian cultures|Canadian music genresDistinctive music scenes have been an integral part of the cultural landscape of Canada. With Canada being vast in size, the country throughout its history has had regional music scenes, with a wide and divers accumulation of styles and genres from many different individual communities, such as Inuit music , Music of the Maritimes|music of the Maritimes and Canadian fiddle|Canadian fiddle music .Encyclopedia of Canadian rock, pop and folk music by Rick Jackson, (Kingston, ON: Quarry Press, Inro (1994) (ISBN 1-55082-107-5)

    See also


    Portal|Music of Canada
  • The Top 100 Canadian Albums

  • List of diamond-certified albums in Canada

  • List of number-one singles (Canada)

  • List of radio stations in Canada

  • List of Canadian composers

  • List of Canadian musicians

  • List of bands from Canada

  • -

    References


    Reflist|30em

    Further reading


    refbegin
  • citation |last =Beckwith |first =John |coauthor= |year =1997 |title =Music papers: articles and talks by a Canadian composer, 1961-1994

  • |url = http://books.google.ca/books? id=Jw5yVtb9qBsC& lpg=PA55& dq=canadian%20composers& pg=PP1#v=onepage& q& f=true |publisher=Golden Dog Press |isbn= 0-919614-72-8|accessdate =
  • citation |last = Browner |first = Tara|coauthor= |year = 2009|title =Music of the First Nations: Tradition and Innovation in Native North America

  • |url = http://books.google.ca/books? id=QXkM557ASogC& lpg=PP1& dq=First%20Nations& pg=PP1#v=onepage& q& f=true |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn= 9780252022210 |accessdate =
  • citation |last = Edwardson |first =Ryan |coauthor= |year =2009 |title =Canuck rock: a history of Canadian popular music

  • |url = http://books.google.ca/books? id=cwc4o2qntH4C& lpg=PA199& dq=Canadian%20music& pg=PP1#v=onepage& q& f=true|publisher=University of Toronto Press |isbn=978-0-8020-9989-1 |accessdate =
  • citation |last = Morey |first =Carl |coauthor= |year =1997 |title =Music in Canada: a research and information guide

  • |url = http://books.google.ca/books? id=eZQch8ieRtsC& lpg=PP1& dq=Music%20in%20Canada%3A& pg=PP1#v=onepage& q& f=true|publisher= |isbn=Routledge |accessdate =
  • citation |last =Pegley |first =Kip |coauthor= |year =2009 |title =Coming to you wherever you are: MuchMusic, MTV, and youth identities |url = http://books.google.ca/books? id=2YLmEqymuPIC& lpg=PP1& dq=MuchMusic& pg=PP1#v=onepage& q& f=true |publisher=Wesleyan Univ. Press |isbn= 0819568694 |accessdate =

  • Music in Canada, capturing landscape and diversity by Elaine Keillor. Montreal McGill-Queen's University Press. (1939) (ISBN 0-7735-3177-7)

  • http://library.queensu.ca/webmus/canmus.htm Canadian Music Catalogues and Acquisitions lists. Toronto, (1971) various lists of Canadian music (orchestral, vocal, chamber, choral).

  • Canadian native art; arts and crafts of Canadian Indians and Eskimos. by Patterson, Nancy-Lou. Don Mills, Ont., Collier-Macmillan, (1973) (ISBN 0-02-975610-3)

  • Music in Canada, 1600-1800 by Willy Amtmann (1975), Habitex Books. (ISBN 0-88912-020-X)

  • Contemporary Canadian Composers ed. by Keith MacMillan and John Beckwith. Toronto : Oxford University Press, (1975)

  • La Musique au Québec 1600-1875 by Michelle Pharand. Montreal: Les Éditions de l'Homme (1976) (ISBN 0-7759-0517-8)

  • http://library.usask.ca/education/files/Guides/canmus.pdf Canadian Musical works 1900-1980 a bibliography of general and analytical sources. Ottawa : Canadian Association of Music Libraries, (1983) (ISBN 0708896358)

  • Heart of Gold: 30 years of Canadian pop music by Martin Melhuish, (Toronto ON: CBC Enterprises, (1983) (ISBN 08-87841-125)

  • The Penguin Book of Canadian Folk Songs by Edith Fowke. Markham, ON: Penguin, (1986) (ISBN 0-14-070842-1)

  • The Piano Concert In Canada, 1900-1980 a bibliographic survey. by Zuk, Ireneus. Baltimore, Md. : Peabody Institute, (1985) (Ref ML128 .P3Z85)

  • ''Canadian music fast facts : profiles of Canada's pop music pioneers. by Randy Ray and Mark Kearney London, Ont. : Sparky Jefferson Productions, (1991) (ISBN 0-9695149-0-5)

  • Canadian Music Fast Facts: Canadian pop music history by Mark Kearney, Randy Ray, (London, ON: Sparky Productions, (1991) (ISBN 0-9695149-0-5)

  • Encyclopedia of Canadian rock, pop and folk music by Rick Jackson, (Kingston, ON: Quarry Press, (1994) (ISBN 1-55082-107-5)

  • Women Musicians in Canada "on the record the Music Division of the National Library of Canada by C. Gillard. Ottawa : NLC, (1995) (ISBN 0-7759-0517-8)

  • http://twu.ca/library/cmpi.htm Canadian musician periodical Unionville Branch v. 20 no. 4, (1998) (ISBN 0-547-08963-5)

  • Profiles of Canada. edited by Kenneth G. Pryke, Walter C. Soderlund. Boulder, Colo. : NetLibrary, (2000)(ISBN 0-585-27925-X)

  • Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 3: The United States and Canada. Koskoff, Ellen (ed.), ed (2000). Garland Publishing. (ISBN 0-8240-4944-6)

  • The Top 100 Canadian Albums by Bob Mersereau, Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions, (2007) (ISBN 978-0-86492-500-8)

  • refend

    External links


    Commons category|Music of CanadaWikiquote|music
  • http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/cmpi-ipmc/index-e.html Canadian Music Periodical (CMPI) - Library and Archives Canada

  • http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-200-e.html? PHPSESSID=ccntousk30frf6h4jsn237nm12 RPM Magazine, 1964-2000 - Library and Archives Canada

  • http://www.ubishops.ca/library_info/guide-music.html# Canadian General Research Guide For Music Bishop's University

  • http://www.teachwithmusic.ca/ Teach with Music: songs that can be used in a classroom setting to teach Canadian history and culture

  • http://www.musiccentre.ca/home.cfm The CMC- Canadian Music Centre

  • http://www.canadianbands.com CanadianBands.com biographies on Canadian Classic Rock

  • http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/ Canoe.ca Jam!

  • http://www.newmusiccanada.com/ New Music Canada by CBC Radio 3

  • http://www.canuckistanmusic.com/index.php? type=3 Canuckistan Music - Reviews of alternative and experimental records past and present


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