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Magnetic Hill Concert Site is a live music venue in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. It is one of the largest music venues in Canada. Originally built in 1984 for Pope John Paul II to hold a papal mass during his tour of Canada, the site was redesigned in the 1990s as a concert venue. The site has hosted annual or biennial summer concerts since ...
The new "K94.5" enjoyed early success with the new music format; however, constant tweaking of the format and lack of advertising led to its downfall. By 2009 , when sister station CFQM-FM switched from adult contemporary to classic hits , the station switched to its current hot adult contemporary format, but kept the same branding.
CJXL-FM is a Canadian radio station broadcasting at 96.9 FM in Moncton, New Brunswick serving the Greater Moncton area. The station currently broadcasts a country format branded on-air as New Country 96.9 and is owned by the Stingray Group .
The Nashwaak Music Festival is an annual event, featuring Country, Roots and Folk music. Held every New Brunswick Day weekend 20 km north of Fredericton. The Moncton music scene local Acadian and songwriters as well as concert festivals held at Magnetic Hill Concert Site .
Université de Moncton: Campus radio/community radio (French) Les Médias acadiens universitaires, inc. FM 94.5 CKCW-FM: K94.5 Hot adult contemporary (English) Maritime Broadcasting System: FM 95.5 CBA-FM: CBC Music: adult album alternative, folk, world music, classical music [1] (English) (Rebroadcasters of CBH-FM, Halifax) Canadian ...
Some hospitals in the U.S. are seeing an increase in RSV and higher levels of "walking pneumonia" among young children despite overall respiratory illness activity remaining low nationally.
For individual musicians originating from Moncton, see Category:Musicians from Moncton. Pages in category "Musical groups from Moncton" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Roger Lord is a Canadian performing classical pianist and professor of piano at l'Université de Moncton in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. [1] Lord studied at Université de Moncton, McGill University, Université de Montréal, and the Moscow Piano Institute at the Gnessin Music Academy. He has also studied in Paris and Strasbourg.