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Edmonton, Alberta: Official website: royaltyrecords.ca: Royalty Records is a Canadian country music record label and distributor established in 1974. [1] Royalty artists
Banks was the host of syndicated and network television programs, including “The Tommy Banks Show” (1968-1983), “Somewhere There’s Music”, “What’s My Name”, “ Love and Mr. Smith”, “Celebrity Revue”, “Symphony of a Thousand”, “Tommy Banks Jazz”, etc. Banks is credited as being the founder of Edmonton's art scene due to the success of "The Tommy Banks Show" which ...
The Sturgeon refinery is owned and operated by the Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and the Alberta government. On July 6, 2021 Premier Jason Kenney announced that the province of Alberta had acquired a 50% "equity stake" in the Sturgeon Refinery through the APMC, which now owns the "stake previously owned by Calgary-based North West Refining Inc."
The Canadian Independent Record Production Association (CIRPA) is an organisation representing the independent sector of the Canadian music and sound industry.It was established on 20 January 1971.
The district was created as Edmonton North West in the 1959 redistribution which broke up the mega-ridings of Edmonton and Calgary, creating a number of single-member districts in their place. It was replaced with Edmonton-Calder in 1971, but re-created from the same riding in 2017 when the Electoral Boundaries Commission recommended moving the ...
Steve Fox is a Canadian country music singer-songwriter based in Nashville. [1] [2] He is best known for writing "Moving to a Small Town" [3] and Montgomery Gentry's hit song "Daddy Won't Sell the Farm", which went Platinum and Gold in the United States. [2]
Edmonton Northwest Riding created from Edmonton East, Edmonton North, Edmonton West and Pembina: 34th 1988–1993 Murray Dorin: Progressive Conservative: 35th 1993–1997 Anne McLellan: Liberal: Riding dissolved into Edmonton West and Yellowhead: Riding re-created from Edmonton Griesbach, Edmonton West, and St. Albert—Edmonton
In January 2010, theatre reviewer Pollstar revealed that the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium was the busiest theatre in Canada, selling 146,555 tickets in 2009, beating its twin, the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary (138,515 tickets) and Toronto’s Massey Hall (93,742 tickets).