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The 35 edition of Montreal’s Festival International Présence Autochtone (FIPA) August 5-14 featured an ambitious aquatic international music production called Song to the Whales.
Vizsla Copper Corp. (TSXV: VCU) (OTCQB: VCUFF) (FRANKFURT: 97E0) ("Vizsla Copper" or the "Company") announces that Odyssey Trust Company has replaced Computershare Trust Company as the transfer agent ...
Growing up in Wiikwemkoong First Nation on Manitoulin Island, Canadian country and blues artist Crystal Shawanda had to leave ...
The Canadian Press on MSN3d
Today-History-Aug20
Today in History for Aug. 20: In 1691, Henry Kelsey of the Hudson's Bay Co. was the first white man to see what is now Saskatchewan. Kelsey was an explorer whose exact route into the Prairies is not ...
A wave of First Peoples presence is expected to sweep through Montreal August 5 to 15 The wave of creativity rising among the ...
We have the answer for Most-spoken Canadian aboriginal language crossword clue that will help you solve the crossword puzzle ...
About a month ago, Northern Lights Festival Boréal took over the shore of Ramsey Lake as it has done every year since 1972.
The band who famously sang in support of treaty will perform following Anthony Albanese's keynote address at the annual ...
The US biotech company that says they brought back the 'Dire Wolf', now want to bring back another extinct animal. This ...
“Let’s go big or go home,” Honey Jam founder Ebonnie Rowe says ahead of a 30th anniversary concert on Wednesday at Massey Hall in Toronto.
He said he's presently in talks with Universal Music Canada to upload a performance by the Tragically Hip. Until those details are ironed out, sit-down interviews are the main content.
Honey Jam founder Ebonnie Rowe talks about her nonprofit empowering young female artists ahead of a 30th anniversary concert.