Friday, November 21 | 8:30 am  

Music Tales
Fundy Folk
Songs From "The Forest Primeval"
The Snowbird's Song
Think on Me
The Pipers of Pictou
A Musical Legacy
A Reel Learning Experience
Flying on Her Own
The Music of the Mines
"My Blood is Maritime"
A Joyful Sound
From Beethoven to Blues
"As Many Songs As There Are Stars in the Sky"
Hank Snow, the Singing Ranger
Fantastic Music from a Fantasy Town

Bag Piper Nova Scotia has long been famous for its breath-taking vistas, record-breaking schooners and mouth-watering seafood. Another claim to fame is our rich tradition of music which in the 1990s is taking the world by storm.

Traditional Scottish strathpeys, toe-tapping Acadian jigs, inspirational gospel hymns, or blistering Celtic rock--our music expresses who we are. It's seen us through hard times (in 1956, men trapped in the Springhill mine for eight days without food or water survived on "songs and hope instead") and it's helped us celebrate the good times. Nova Scotians have always loved their music, and now, it seems, so does the world.

Recognition of our rich musical heritage is not entirely new. In the 1940s, contralto Portia White won rave reviews in New York opera circles. In the 1960s, Denny Doherty became part of the pop phenomenon, the Mamas and the Papas. In the 1970s, Anne Murray rocketed to international stardom. And in the 1980s, Rita McNeil went from local attraction to national treasure.

In the last ten years, though, more Nova Scotian musicians than ever have found themselves on the world stage. Halifax's vibrant alternative music scene has spawned bands like Sloan and jale and prompted Harper's Bazaar to label the capital "the very anatomy of a hip city". The Nova Scotia Mass Choir wowed the gospel world at the 30th anniversary of Martin Luther King's March on Washington. New York composer Phillip Glass discovered Ashley Maclsaac fiddling at a Cape Breton ceilidh, and soon whisked the teenage prodigy off to sold-out houses at Carnegie Hall. And, of course, the Rankin Family regularly brings Celtic rhythms and Gaelic Lyrics to the hit parade.

DancerBut these are just a few of our better-known artists. Towns and villages throughout Nova Scotia ring with the sound of music all year long. There are country singers hoping to be the next Hank Snow or Carole Baker. Classical musicians performing at the international Scotia Festival of Music. Bagpipers "kirking the tartans" at a country church. Or just party-goers launching into a spontaneous tune or two around the kitchen table. In Nova Scotia, music is everywhere.

The evolution of the Nova Scotian sound says something about us too. One of our signature styles is Celtic rock, a harmonious blending of the old and the new.

This year, come share the joy of music with us. Square dances, folk festivals, classical concerts and seaside ceilidhs--they're all part of the fabulous line-up for Nova Scotia's Celebration of Music. Come to listen. Come to dance. Come to sing along. The Celebration of Music promises to be a truly bravura performance.