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Authority record

Adaskin, Harry

  • UBCA-ARC-AUTH-507
  • Person
  • 1901-1994

Harry Adaskin was born in Riga, Latvia, in 1901 and later emigrated with his family to Toronto. As a child, he learned to play the violin, and at the age of twelve, he entered the Toronto Conservatory of Music. In 1923 he and three colleagues formed the Hart House String Quartet, in which Adaskin played the second violin. Sponsored by Vincent and Alice Massey, it was the first Canadian musical quartet to make an international reputation. The quartet made many concert tours of North America and Europe, and in 1928 played at Maurice Ravel's New York debut. In 1938 he resigned from the quartet, and as a freelance musician, combined musical performance with a broadcasting career. His wife, pianist Frances Marr Adaskin, undertook several concert tours throughout Canada and the United States. For several seasons in the 1940s, Adaskin was an intermission commentator for the New York Philharmonic Orchestra's Sunday afternoon concerts, heard throughout Canada. He also hosted several CBC Radio programmes, including Musically Speaking and, later, Tuesday Night. In 1946, he became head of the new Department of Music at UBC, which he held until 1958. He continued as a professor until his retirement in 1973. His circle of friends and acquaintances included Emily Carr, members of the "Group of Seven," Vincent Massey, Frank Lloyd Wright, and other prominent artists. Adaskin received the Order of Canada in 1974 and honorary doctorates from Simon Fraser University in 1979, and UBC in 1980. He died in 1994.

AFB

AFB

  • Person
  • August 20th, 1917 - November 26th, 2015

AFB was born in London, England and raised in Montreal, Quebec. During WWII, he joined the Royal Canadian Armed Forces and served overseas as part of the Bomber Command. After the war, he earned a degree in Chemical Engineering from McGill University in Montreal and subsequently got a job with Cominco Ltd. (currently Teck) in Trail, British Columbia. The job at Cominco involved transfers that took AFB to Montreal, Calgary, and Vancouver, where he would live until the end of his life at South Granville Park Lodge.

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