Bands (Music)

Taxonomie

Code

Bereik aantekeningen

ron aantekeningen

  • PAASH 2020

Toon aantekening(en)

Hiërarchische termen

Bands (Music)

Gelijksoortige termen

Bands (Music)

Verwante termen

Bands (Music)

10 Archivistische beschrijving results for Bands (Music)

10 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

The Alameda Band

Group photograph of members of the Alameda Band of Alameda, Saskatchewan, along with instruments and mascot, a dog named Clinton.

Members identified as follows: Top row - left to right: A. McIntyre, R. Tufts, M. T. Willis, W. Deyell, M. Sabety, W. Hayter and W. Flegg. Second row: Neil Fox, A. G. Paul, A. D. Truscott, Ed Hayter, T. H. Truscott, A. Chance, W. A. Mellett, T. E. Truscott, S. A. Goldstone. Third row: W. Jones, L. Truscott, K. McLennan, B. Jones, P. Paul, H. Truscott, R. Paul and S. Truscott.

Hart Rouge

Unedited footage of French Canadian musical group Hart-Rouge performing at an outdoor concert. Geographical location unknown. Performers are not identified but all are members of the Campagne family of Saskatchewan. Songs sung in English and French.

Photographs collected by Government House, Regina

(1): Daniel Brown standing in a garden holding a pipe to his mouth with his left hand.
(2): Daniel Brown and an unidentified woman and man standing outside a residence.
(3): Head and shoulders portrait of Daniel Brown taken by Rossie, Regina. [1904 or after].
(4): Exterior view of Government House, Battleford. [copied 1992, originally created 1877].
(5): Portrait of Mrs. Joseph Royal [copied 1992, originally created ca. 1890].
(6): Exterior view of the residence of Thomas Brown, known as "Wascana Lodge", on Dewdney Avenue in Regina. Thomas Brown is standing with his son, Edgar Brown, while Mrs. Brown is standing on the veranda holding an umbrella, 1887.
(7): Members of the crew of the RCSCC Impregnable ferrying Lieutenant Governor F. W. Johnson to shore from Willow Island during the sunset ceremony on June 3, 1985. Photograph taken by Don Healy of the Leader-Post, Regina.
(8): Lieutenant Governor F. W. Johnson and his wife, Mrs. Johnson, standing in the drawing room at Government House on the occasion of the World Parliamentary Association Dinner in 1985.
(9): Group photographs of members of a band in Regina, Saskatchewan that played in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1906 at the Exhibition. Image taken by Steele Co. Limited, Winnipeg and Calgary. Some of the band members are identified, as follows: George Watt; George Dempster; and Charles Williamson.
(10): Unidentified men, women and children gathered at the blessing (consecration) of the shrine at Lebret, Saskatchewan, July 1, 1919.
(11): Unidentified men, women and children seated on the grass in front of the church with the convent and shrine in the background in Lebret, Saskatchewan. [1926 or before].
(12): Group photograph of judges of the Supreme Court of the North-West Territories and other associated individuals as follows: Sheriff Benson; Judge Wetmore; Judge Macleod; Judge Richardson; Judge Rouleau; Judge McGuire; and registrar Mr. Watson, 1891.
(13): Group photograph of attendees at the First Biennial Meeting of the Governor-General of Canada and Lieutenant-Governors in Ottawa, Ontario, November 1973. Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan Stephen Worobetz is standing in the back row, first on the left. Image taken by John Evans Photography Ltd., Ottawa.

Rossie's Studio

Outdoor Writers Association of America convention

Views of the Outdoor Writers Association of America convention, held at Waskesiu Lake and Prince Albert National Park, June 17-23, 1967. The convention, with its headquarters at the Lakeview Hotel, was hosted by the Saskatchewan Department of Industry and Commerce. Images include: a parade; convention sessions, award ceremony and banquet; performance and visit by Indigenous dancers; and recreational fishing and sport shooting activities. Guest speakers at the convention included Hon. Arthur Laing, federal Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, and Hon. Gordon Grant, Minister of the Saskatchewan Department of Industry and Commerce.

Christensen, R. W.

Wide Mouth Mason: Playing with Poison series

This series consists of records pertaining to Wide Mouth Mason: Playing with Poison, a music documentary for television produced by Minds Eye Pictures and Roadhouse Pictures. It was produced in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Saskatchewan Communications Network. Playing with Poison chronicles three years of work by the Saskatoon, Saskatchewan-based rock band Wide Mouth Mason (comprised of Shaun Verreault, Earl Periera and Safwan Javed) as the group rises to success and fame. Included in the documentary is footage of the band's tours and performances, and interviews of the band, its manager and members of the music industry. Wide Mouth Mason: Playing with Poison received recognition for best original score and best visual effects at the 2000 Saskatchewan Motion Picture Association Showcase Awards.

The Executive producer of Wide Mouth Mason: Playing with Poison was Kevin DeWalt. Producers were DeWalt and Trevor Grant. It was written and directed by Grant. The editor was Dean Evans, and the cinematographer was Ken Krawczyk.

Moving image records consist of: camera rolls MI-7830 to MI-7832); raw footage (MI-7833 to MI-7834); a rough cut (MI-7835); and masters, including closed-captioned and textless versions (MI-7836 to MI-7841). The sound recording consists of an original master digital audio tape.

Textual records include production notes and work records, a media release and a publicity sheet. Graphic materials include publicity shots of the band and images of the band members performing in concert and signing autographs. All photographs were taken by Calvin Fehr.

Records relating to Sleepy and Swede

  • (S)X 132
  • Bestanddeel
  • 1945?

Swedish Ballads Sung by Sleepy and Swede and two lithographed pictures of Sleepy and Swede. Sleepy was Leslie B. Frost and Swede was Nils Nilsson, a Swedish immigrant. They broadcast over various radio stations in Saskatchewan--in Saskatoon, Regina, Moose Jaw and Yorkton--and across the country. They were also popular music hall performers, and they cut several records for the CBC.