Music in Canada

Capturing Landscape and Diversity

By (author) Elaine Keillor
Categories: Music, The Arts
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773530126, 512 pages, September 2006

Elaine Keillor offers an unprecedented history of Canadian musical expressions and their relationship to Canada's great cultural and geographic diversity.

Description

Kwakwaka’wakw welcome songs, an aria from Joseph Quesnel’s 1808 opera Lucas et Cécile, rubbaboos (a combination of elements from First Peoples, French, and English music), the Tin Pan Alley hits of Shelton Brooks, and the contemporary work of Claude Vivier and Blue Rodeo all dance together in Canada’s rich musical heritage. Elaine Keillor offers an unprecedented history of Canadian musical expressions and their relationship to Canada’s great cultural and geographic diversity. A survey of "musics" in Canada - the country’s multiplicity of musical genres and rich heritage - is complemented by forty-three vignettes highlighting topics such as Inuit throat games, the music of k. d. lang, and orchestras in Victoria. Music in Canada illuminates the past but also looks to the future to examine the context within which Canadian music began and continues to develop. A CD by the author of previously unrecorded Canadian music is included.