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Jim Dorsey Unit ; performers : Jim Dorsey, Larry Dubin, Al Mattes, Orville Thompson ; [concert]

Consists of an audio recording of a live performance by the Jim Dorsey Unit, including Jim Dorsey on piano, Larry Dubin on drums, Al Mattes on bass and Orville Thompson on saxophone. The performance begins with Dorsey introducing the members of the Jim Dorsey Unit and dedicates the performance to his grandmother. The third composition is introduced at the 44 minute mark but the tape runs out. The recording takes up mid-performance. Performance hosted by The Music Gallery

Musical Relations : Pretentious Music and The Nature of the Beast :concert

Recording of third and fourth set of concert held at the CCMC Music Gallery, "Musical Relations: Modes of Improvisation." The third set is titled "Pretentious Music" and features three pieces: "Mystic Music," "Imitation Canadian Music" and "Accidential Music" performed by Don MacMillan and others (donmac 1976). The final set is titled "The Nature of the Beast: When Infected with the Tastelessness of Old Haunts Moves Again in the Eye of the Fantasy Still Storming", performed by Don MacMillan (donmac 1976) and Nick Kilbourn and inspired by the work of Hakuin Zenji.

Musical Relations : Real Canadian Music : concert

Recording of second set of concert held at the CCMC Music Gallery, "Musical Relations: Modes of Improvisation", titled "Real Canadian Music 1976" featuring Don MacMillan on saxaphone, Kevin MacMillan on violin and percussion, Betsy MacMillan on cello and metalophenes, Nick Kilbourn on piano and horn and Larry Dubin on drums (and "good looks").

Musical Relations :Transformations : concert

Recording of the first set of a concert "Musical Relations: Modes of Improvisation" titled "Transformation : Part I" featuring Don MacMillan on alto sax and piano and Kevin MacMillan on piano and violin. Concert was held at the CCMC Music Gallery on 21 August 1976.

1976 Aug - swimming

Donor contributed description follows: "Item consists of a Chinese family's home movie featuring children and adults swimming in a lake. The Chen family is swimming with friends at Nickerson State Park, Brewster, Massachusetts. Camera: Edward Tzen-hwa Chen.

The Chens had an immense appreciation for the outdoors and natural landscapes and wanted to nurture this relationship in their children."

Positive energy : Don MacMillan and friends ; performers: Don MacMillan, Casey Sokol, Kevin Mac, Chris Prevost, Paul Hodge, Miguel Frasconi, Marvin Green, Gayle Young, Juan Pallo Oueje, Andrew Timar ;[concert]-001

Item consists of a recording and may include performance(s) by MacMillan, Don; Sokol, Casey; MacMillan, Kevin; Prevost, Chris; Hodge, Paul; Frasconi, Miguel; Green, Marvin; Young, Gayle; Timar, Andrew; Oueje, Jaun Pallo.

Jim Dorsey Unit

Item features performs: Jim Dorsey on piano, Michael Snow on trumpet piano, Larry Dubin on drums, Lionel Williams on bass, and Orville Thompson on percussion.

Our Native Land

Item consists of an audio recording of a radio show hosted by Albert Angus and Bernelda Wheeler. It is called "Our Native Land" and the subtitle for this series is "Native Prisoners". It begins with a continuation of the report on discrimination faced by Aboriginal parolees, started on tape 2000-050 / 004 (10) (ASC33162). The reporter, Albert Angus, interviews Doreen Hunter, a woman who works with Aboriginal Canadian inmates, and David Rimpole, District Director of the National Parole Service, Winnipeg. Bernelda Wheeler then interviews Ronda [Sharr?] of the Native Plan, a half-way house for recent parolees, on where Aboriginal Canadian parolees usually want to resettle. This is followed by a statement from David Rimpole on what the government is willing to do to try to fix the situation and closing statements from Albert Angus and Bernelda Wheeler.

N-5-6-7-8-9- 1976 (Jampi)

Item consists of an Argentine-Chilean family’s home movie featuring a child playing in his house and park; the first third of the clip consists of urban and rural landscapes.

Project and donor(s) contributed description follows: "Jean-Pierre Marchant's parents immigrated from South America in the early 1970s before he was born. His mother is from Argentina and his father is from Chile. Jean-Pierre was born in Vieux-Rosemont, Montreal, and spent the first year of his life there before they all moved to (what was then) the suburbs in Saint-Hubert, Longueuil, about 14 km from downtown Montreal. Jean-Pierre recalls day trips with his parents to the United States and Toronto. On this day, the family captures the roads and cityscapes of New Hampshire."

Achilleas Kostoulis at Trojan Horse performing the songs of Giannis Ritsos

Achilleas Kostoulis at the Trojan Horse Coffee House performing the songs of Giannis Ritsos. The first informal public performance of the series "18 Folk Songs for my Bitter Country". The audience around him applauds. Ο Αχιλλέας Κωστούλης στο καφέ Δούρειος Ίππος τραγουδά τα τραγούδια του Γιάννη Ρίτσου. Η πρώτη ανεπίσημη δημόσια εκτέλεση της σειράς "18 Λιανοτράγουδα της Πικρής Πατρίδας". Γύρω του οι Θεατές χειροκροτούν.

George Papadatos reciting poetry at Acquarium Coffee House

George Papadatos reciting poetry at Acquarium Coffee House on Bloor St. The audience gathered around him are observant. Ο Γιώργος Παπαδάτος απαγγέλλει ποιήματα στο καφέ Ενυδρείο στην οδό Μπλουρ. Γύρω του οι ακροατές τον παρακαλοθούν με προσοχή.

Our Native Land

Item consists of an audio recording of a radio show hosted by Albert Angus and Bernelda Wheeler. It is called "Our Native Land" and the subtitle for this series is "Native Prisoners". The show begins with an introduction from the two hosts, then a fiddle song called "Snow deer" by Lee Cremo. Next is a segment called Getting to Know Joe [Blye?], in which the subject speaks on leaving prison and becoming a Métis and Aboriginal rights activist and leader. This is followed by several news stories on: the city council of Calgary refusing to rent office space to a Native Alcoholism Service organization, the Secretary of State refusing a grant to the Registered Nurses of Canadian-Indian Ancestry, the ongoing trial of Leonard Peltier in North Dakota, a fast by students in Ontario trying to get the MacKenzie pipeline stopped, and financial troubles faced by the Indian Brotherhood of the Northwest Territories in an ongoing legal battle over the MacKenzie pipeline and Native land rights. Next follows a segment broadcasting some of the more light-hearted moments in their ongoing coverage of the [Berger?] Inquiry into the MacKenzie Valley Pipeline and its effects their people and environment. This is followed by an segment of an ongoing series on Iroquois music by Mike Mitchell of the Akwasasne Reserve. In the segment he plays "The Handshake Song" and "The Rabbit Dance". Next is an interview with Vera Martin on her viewing of the Canadian film, "Eliza's Horoscope". The song "Dispersed" by Shannon [Tupa?] is played, followed by a report on the difficulties faced by recently paroled Aboriginal peoples. The recording cuts off shortly after this report begins.

Takis - photographer

Fotographer Takis with a dark suit is sitting beside a Flipper game. Ο φωτογράφος Τάκης με σκούρο σακάκι κάθεται δίπλα από ένα παιχνίδι τύπου "Φλίππερ"

Montreal Caribbean Carnival

Item consists of a Black-Canadian family’s home movies featuring crowds and performers at Montreal Carifiesta parade. Participants in costumes are playing mas, marching with a masquerade band. Several carnival bands - made up of dozens and sometimes hundreds of participants, wearing themed costumes created by various Caribbean designers and assembled by volunteers - would dance and perform for crowds and a group of judges (who would select and later announce the best mas band) at a local stadium, before the masquerade bands would make their way through downtown streets. In the 70’s and 80’s, the Carifiesta parade would mainly make its way along Ste-Catherine Street in Montreal, before the parade was moved to nearby René Lévesque Boulevard in later years.

Donor(s) and project contributed description follows: "This footage was shot in the mid-1970’s and marks one of the first Montreal Caribbean Carnival celebrations in the city. Heather’s parents, Richard and Althea Seaman, brought her and her siblings, Hazel and Herbert, to see their first few parades as spectators. In later years, the family was occasionally involved as participants – whether helping to create costumes, build floats or march in the annual parade. The summer event was established to celebrate and showcase the Caribbean culture and heritage of immigrants, who were born on one of the diverse islands of the West Indies or those who had ancestry there. While Caribbean immigrants in Toronto started their carnival celebration - Caribana - in 1967, to mark Canada’s centennial celebration, Montrealers held their first Carifiesta parade and festival in July 1975."

Celebrating Halloween in Laval, Quebec

Item consists of a Black-Canadian family’s home movie featuring children in costumes, joking around, waving to the camera, entering and exiting a home, and showing off their treats.

Donor(s) and project contributed description follows: "The Seaman family moved to their second family home on 100th Avenue in Chomedey, Laval, Quebec in the mid-1970s. In this particular footage, Heather recalls getting ready for Halloween and dressing up in homemade costumes. Heather recalls doing a multitude of different activities as a child, and explains that they weren’t limited as children. For example, her brother, Herbert, played hockey at a high level and played guitar, while she and her sister Hazel figure skated, took piano lessons, and dance classes. "We were the only Black family in the neighbourhood and an interesting story is when we first moved there, people were shocked to see a Black family with two cars!"

In Laval, while living at their fourth family home, back on 100th Avenue in Chomedey, Heather’s mother, Althea Joseph Charles Seaman, started the ‘Laval Black Community Association’ in 1983 to bring together Black people from different cultural backgrounds. The intention was to create a support system, but also a space for people to learn about each other’s cultures and share their achievements and heritage with the wider Canadian community. Her mother also developed an annual Black History Month celebration where people showcased their artwork, music, writing, spoken word pieces and dance performances. Business people, clergy from various faiths and politicians from all levels of government were always in the audience – no matter their race or whether they were English or French speakers. "The organizations that our mom created were to give us a sense of our heritage" and to share that with others."

Howard Riley

Item consists of a sound recording and may include performance(s) by MacMillan, Don; Sokol, Casey; MacMillan, Kevin; Prevost, Chris; Hodge, Paul; Frasconi, Miguel; Green, Marvin; Young, Gayle; Timar, Andrew; Oueje, Jaun Pallo.

1977 Feb - piano concert

Donor contributed description follows: "Item consists of a Chinese family's home movie featuring a girl playing the piano in front of an audience, a woman watering plants at home, and family members in a living room. Millie gives a piano recital at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, followed by shots of the Chen family at home after the concert. Camera: Edward Tzen-hwa Chen.

In this piano recital, Millie was nervous as usual to perform publicly. She was grateful to be wearing her mother’s handmade skirt that was long enough to hide her trembling knees. Mavericks in many ways, Edward and Chia-chi (parents) always encouraged their children to participate in diverse cultural experiences. Millie and Cecilia both trained in the arts and later continued to take part in the arts professionally and in daily life."

1977 Mar - public school choir

Donor contributed description follows: "Item consists of a Chinese family's home movie featuring a children’s choir recital. Cecilia is performing with the Runnymede Public School choir in the Sing the Rainbow event. Camera: Edward Tzen-hwa Chen.

Mavericks in many ways, Edward and Chia-chi (parents) always encouraged their children to participate in diverse cultural experiences. Millie and Cecilia both trained in the arts and later continued to take part in the arts professionally and in daily life."

1977 Jun - birthday cake

Donor contributed description follows: "Item consists of a Chinese family's home movie featuring two adults and two girls blowing out candles on a birthday cake, reading a booklet titled "Happy Birthday Mom," removing the candles, and slicing the cake. The Chen family is celebrating Chia-chi’s (mother) birthday. On footage: Chia-chi (mother), Millie (elder daughter), Cecilia Chen (younger daughter), Edward Chen (father). Camera: Edward Tzen-hwa Chen."

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