1964 in Canadian music
Births
- 18 January - Jim Matt, country music singer.
- 18 January - Patrick Esposito Di Napoli, member of Les Colocs (d.1994).
- 25 January - Andrew MacNaughtan, photographer and music video director (d.2012).[1]
- 30 January - Patricia Conroy, country music singer.
- 1 February - Dwayne Goettel, former member of Skinny Puppy (d.1995).
- 6 February - Gordon Downie, lead singer and lyricist for The Tragically Hip.
- 8 March - Denise Murray, country music singer.
- 8 June - Mark Howard, audio engineer.
- 17 August - Colin James, Juno Award winning singer-songwriter, and guitarist.
- 12 September - Greg McConnell, indie rocker and member of Absolute Whores (d.1999).
- 16 November - Diana Krall, Grammy and Juno Awards winning jazz musician.
- 29 November - Jesse Cook, Juno Award winning guitarist.
- 30 November - Edwin Orion Brownell, neo-classical composer and concert pianist.
- 7 December - Kyp Harness, folk singer and social activist.
- Full date unknown
- Charest, Benoît, guitarist and film score composer.
- Danna, Jeff, film score composer
- Lee, Brent, composer and professor of Music Composition at the University of Windsor.
- Ichkhanian, Levon, jazz composer and guitarist
Events
Albums released
Awards
Festivals
- Mariposa Folk Festival was held at the Maple Leaf Stadium[3]
- Miramichi Folksong Festival
- Montreal Festivals
Magazines and publications
Music groups
- Bands formed
- Bands disbanded
Organisations
- Alberta Music Festival Association is established to coordinate local music competition.
Singles released
- "My Baby's Comin' Home" by Paul Anka
Songs
- Early Morning Rain, composed and recorded by Gordon Lightfoot.
- Mon Pays ("My Homeland") composed by Gilles Vigneault.
- Universal Soldier (song), written and recorded Buffy Sainte-Marie.
- You Were on My Mind, written by Sylvia Tyson.
Venues
- The Matador Club, a country-music venue, opens in Toronto.
Other
- 10 April - Glenn Gould retires from public performance in Los Angeles.[8]
Deaths
- 7 January - Colin McPhee, composer and musicologist.[9]
- 9 September – Charles O'Neill, bandmaster, composer, organist, cornetist, and music educator.
- 24 November - Georges-Émile Tanguay, composer, organist, pianist, and music educator.
- 27 December - Pierre-Aurèle Asselin, tenor singer, brother to Marie-Anne Asselin.[10]
See also
References
- Citations
- ↑ Rayner, Ben (26 January 2012). "Andrew MacNaughtan, photographer, dies on Rush assignment". Toronto Star. Toronto: Torstar Corporation. www
.thestar . OCLC 679765547. Retrieved 26 January 2012..com - ↑ Lounsbury, Doug. "The RPM Legacy". avtrust
.ca . Audio-Visual Preservation Trust of Canada. Retrieved 3 February 2012. External link in|work=
(help) - ↑ "Mariposa folk festival". The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. The Historica Dominion Institute. thecanadianencyclopedia
.com . Retrieved 14 July 2012. - ↑ Lounsbury, Doug. "About RPM Magazine". avtrust
.ca . Audio-Visual Preservation Trust of Canada. Retrieved 3 February 2012. External link in|work=
(help) - ↑ Nick Warburton (June 2005). "RICK JAMES AND THE MYNAH BIRDS". earcandymag
.com . Retrieved 14 July 2012. External link in|work=
(help) - ↑ Ford, Clifford; Wardrop, Patricia. "CBC Symphony Orchestra". The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. The Historica Dominion Institute. thecanadianencyclopedia
.com . Retrieved 14 July 2012. - ↑ "Artist: Crew Cuts Biography". jam
.canoe . Jam!. 30 November 2004. Retrieved 14 July 2012..ca with notes from Richard Patterson, Bart Shevory, John B. Young and Joe Matthews.
External link in|work=
(help) - ↑ Bazzana (2003, p. 229)
- ↑ Keillor, Elaine. "Opera Canada". The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. The Historica Dominion Institute. thecanadianencyclopedia
.com . Retrieved 3 February 2012. - ↑ Thérien, Robert, "Biographies » Pierre-Aurèle Asselin, tenor (1881-1964)", collectionscanada
.gc , Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada, retrieved 3 February 2012 External link in.ca |work=
(help)
- Bibliography
- Bazzana, Kevin (2003). Wondrous Strange: The Life and Art of Glenn Gould. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-1101-6. OCLC 52286240.
Preceded by 1963 in Canadian music |
Category:Years in Canadian music 1964 |
Succeeded by 1965 in Canadian music |
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