This five-day artist development intensive is open to Indigenous artists across Canada. Each year, six participants will converge at Calgary's Studio Bell, home of the National Music Centre, to learn new skills and connect with national music industry experts. This...
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New Women in Music Songwriting Workshop on April 28, 2024
Women in Music BC is offering an educational panel on the business of songwriting on April 28, 2024. This event is open to women and gender-diverse creatives, and will culminate in an intimate songwriter's circle. Delivered by Mary Ancheta, Alexandria Maillot, and...
Kelowna Named Host City for Canadian Country Music Week 2025 and CCMA Awards
Last week, the Canadian Country Music Association announced that Kelowna, B.C. will be the host city for Country Music Week 2025 and the 2025 CCMA Awards. This marks the third time Country Music Week will be hosted in British Columbia, and the first time in Kelowna...
Applications Closing Soon for the 2024 ARC Program
Applications close soon for the third cycle of B.C.'s very own artist development program, ARC. Administered by Music BC, ARC provides professional and industry development for the diverse musical voices that beat in B.C. This multi-stage program features individual...
New digital fund gives voice to B.C. storytellers’ film shorts
- Announced in June 2018, Creative BC and CBC each contributed $150,000 to the fund.
- The submission period for applications ran from June 25-October 15, 2018.
- All qualified projects were reviewed by CBC for assessment on a first come, first served basis.
- Funding was limited to genres that qualify for British Columbia’s domestic motion picture tax credits.
For more information on Creative BC, visit: https://creativebc.com
For more information on the CBC Gem streaming service, visit: https://watch.cbc.ca/
Filmmaker: Jules Koostachin
A follow up to her previous short documentary, NiiSoTeWak, this follows 12-year-old Cree twins Tapwewin and Pawekin as they journey to their ancestral homeland of Attiwapiskat for a ceremony celebrating the cutting of their hair.
Director: Cat Mills; producer: Joella Cablu
Six strangers are brought together when a bottle containing the message “Biker Bob, if you find me turn me loose” washes up on Vancouver Island. At the bottom of the bottle: human ashes.
Producer/director: Michael Hamilton
Inside an Athlete’s Head: Season 2 takes viewers on thought-provoking and candid journeys into the minds of Canada’s most compelling professional and amateur athletes.
Producers: Carl Bessai and Munire Armstrong
A short-form scripted pilot focusing on the mosaic of new Canadians who interact with a refugee settlement agency in Vancouver.
Producer: Kent Donguines
Indigenous tattoo artists connect with their culture and heal others by resurrecting their ancestors’ practices.
Filmmaker: Amanda Strong
In this short stop-motion animation Biidaaban sets out to harvest sap from sugar maples from an urban Ontario neighbourhood. This suburb is primarily inhabited by Settlers. The practice of harvesting sap goes back to time immemorial for the Anishinaabe people. Biidaaban works in continuum with this practice, accompanied by her friend Sabe and other spirit beings that once lived in this area. The neighbourhood acts as both nemesis and provider. The fear of being
caught plays up against the bravery it takes to continue ceremony and practice on occupied lands. Biidaaban: The Dawn Comes was nominated for a 2019 Canadian Screen Award for best animated short.
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