Showing 4086 results

Authority Record

Migone, Christof

  • Person
Christof Migone is an artist, curator and writer. His education includes a MFA from NSCAD University in 1996 and a PhD from the Department of Performance Studies at the Tishc Schools of the Arts of New York University in 2007. Migone became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1990s because his audio recordings became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Miller

  • Corporate body

Miller, Edward

  • Person
  • 1925-1901
The Reverend Edward Miller was a writer, editor, and one-time fellow and tutor of New College, Oxford. His essays were published in The Contemporary Review.

Miller, Elliot Black

  • Person
  • 1888 - 1914
Elliot Black Miller was born ca. 1888 to Dr. Charles John Miller and Elizabeth Grant MacKenzie of High Street, New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. She had two older sisters, Dalmeny E. Miller (b. 25 Dec. 1881) and Flora (Ora) W. Miller (b. 7 Oct. 1883). In 1912, Elliot Miller married a bank manager, Albert (Bert) Scott Fraser (b. 10 Feb. 1886), with whom she had one daughter, Elizabeth Scott Fraser (b. 21 Sept. 1913). She died in the summer of 1914.

Miller, James

  • Person
James Miller studied medicine under a Dr. Monro in 1820.

Miller, John Frederick, 1924-

  • Person
John Frederick Miller was born in 1924 in Colorado. He received his BA from the University of Colorado (1951) and an MSLS (Masters in Library Science) from Simmons College, Boston (1955). He was a library fellow at Brandeis University before working in turn at Yale University Library, Connecticut State Department of Education, Harvard College Library, and the University of Massachusetts. In 1966 he came to Dalhousie University Library as the head of technical sevices, later being promoted to Assistant Director of the School of Library Services. In 1968 he was appointed Director of Summer School and Extension. His research interests included the social history of merchant seamen, a project which he undertook in cooperation with the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.

Millett, Carol

  • Person
Carol Millett was associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in the 1980s.

Mills, Eric L.

  • Person
  • 1936 -

Eric Mills is an invertebrate zoologist, biological oceanographer, and historian of science. Born in 1936 in Toronto, Ontario, he received his BSc from Carleton University in 1959 and his MSc and PhD from Yale University in 1962 and 1964. His teaching and research included work at Carleton University; Queen’s University; the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts; and Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California. From 1967-2002 he taught at both Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College, serving as chairman of Dalhousie's Department of Oceanography from 1990-1992 and as the inaugural director of King's History of Science & Technology Program from 2001-2002. He retired from full-time employment as Professor Emeritus of the History of Science in the Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University, and Inglis Professor, University of King’s College.

Mills' earliest work was in marine ecology, leading to his involvement with the Hudson 70 Expedition, the first Canadian biological oceanographic research in the Antarctic. His later studies in the history of science included nineteenth-century natural history, the development of biological and physical oceanography, and the history of Canadian science. He has maintained vigorous personal and professional interest in birds and birding throughout his life.

Mills, Frank

  • Person
  • June 27, 1942-
Frank Mills is a Canadian pianist and recording artist. Mills worked as a pianist for CBC Television, and is best known for his Gold-certified single "Music Box Dancer," which reached number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 list in the Spring of 1979. Mills made a number of recordings at Solar Audio Recording Studio in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Mills, John W.

  • Person
  • 1838 - 1922
John W. Mills was born 1 December 1838. A barrister and attorney in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, he worked with various committees regarding the poor districts in Halifax and Mahone Bay and in 1874 became a founder, officer and master of the Mason's Charity Lodge no. 69 in Mahone Bay. He died 25 November 1922.

Minglewood Band.

  • Corporate body
The Matt Minglewood Band is a four member band performing in the genres of blues and country, as well as rock. By his early twenties, Matt Minglewood went on to join a band entitled Sam Moon, Matt Minglewood & the Universal Power. This band soon evolved into the Moon Minglewood Band. They toured the country extensively and, by the middle 1970s, they morphed into the Minglewood Band and recorded their first album, ‘The Red Album’, in 1976. A recording contract with RCA Records soon followed.

Mitchell, Chris

  • Person
Chris Mitchell is a saxophonist, composer, and arranger based in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Mitchell, Christopher

  • Person
Christopher Mitchell is a recording engineer who has worked in studios in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Vancouver, British Columbia.

Mitchell, Robert

  • Person
  • fl. 1859-1930
Robert Mitchell was a prominent nineteenth-century Nova Scotia physician. Known affectionately as "Dr. Bob," he was born in Amherst, Nova Scotia, and earned his medical degree from the University of Edinburgh in 1859. He returned to Amherst to practise medicine and also served for many years as physician and surgeon to the Dorchester Penitentiary.

Mitchell, Shandi

Shandi Mitchell is an author and filmmaker who currently resides in Atlantic Canada. Her shorts films, “Baba’s House” and “Tell Me” have won multiple awards and have been featured at festivals across North America including TIFF, Eastman Kodak House, New York, and Vancouver. “Baba’s House” has won numerous awards including the Kodak Cinematography Award, CBC-WIFT Toronto Writers Award, Kodak Filmmakers Award, Best Canadian Short, Best Art Direction, and received two Gemini nominations.

MITV.

  • Corporate body

Moirs Limited.

  • Corporate body
The Moir family business was established under Benjamin Moir, a native of Scotland, who opened a bakery shop on Brunswick Street, Halifax, N.S. in 1830. After his death in 1845, his son William C. Moir took over the bakery. Between 1862 and 1869 Moir built a five-story plant occupying Grafton, Argyle, and Duke Streets featuring a steam bakery, flour mill and retail store which originally operated under the name Moir and Co. A confectionery plant was opened in 1873 managed by William's son, James W. Moir, who introduced the production of chocolates. In 1875 the name of the firm became William C. Moir and Son. James W. Moir succeeded his father as head of the business in 1896 and his brother, William C. Moir Jr., also joined the firm as an associate. In 1903 the firm known as Moir Son and Co. was incorporated as a joint stock company under the name Moirs Limited.

Molly Oliver

  • Corporate body
  • 1976-[1987?]

Molly Oliver was a Nova Scotia rock band formed in 1976. The band's origins began after Bruce Wheaton (vocals/guitars) and Carson Richards (bass/vocals) had left Everyday People a year earlier. They formed the band with former Pepper Tree members Tim Garagan (drums/vocals) and Bob Quinn (keyboards/vocals).

According to the first album sleeve, the band's name was inspired from Molly Reed, a madame who came to Halifax in 1798 from England. While here she married an English sea captain by the name of Charles Oliver and set sail with him. Following his death during the War of 1812 she took command of his ship and raided and looted the Eastern Seaboard, known as the pirate, "Molly Oliver." The story is fictitious, however, and "Molly" and "Oliver" were actually two cocker spaniels that lived near the band's practice house in Purcell's Cove, Nova Scotia

The band had barely begun touring when Ken (Dutch) Schultz replaced Garagan and Tony Quinn (no relation to Bob), formerly of Moon Minglewood and The Universal Power, was added as a second guitarist. Bob Quinn was soon replaced by Mike Leggat. This lineup released a pair of independent singles, the Wheaton had penned called "Straight To My Head," backed by Tony Quinn's "Rainbow Woman." Shortly after its release, Quinn left and was replaced by new guitarist Larry Maillet.

The band signed a deal with London Records. Their revolving door policy continued while cutting tracks in Morin Heights, Quebec. Schultz left in the middle of the sessions and was replaced by Ian MacMillan. Their eponymous debut hit the shelves in the summer of 1978, polished and with a flare, with Wheaton acting as chief songwriter. "Greet Your Neighbour" became the band's first single and got some airplay across the country, backed with "Living A Dream." Other notable tracks from the album included the other singles "You Didn't Listen To Me" and "Somebody New In My Eyes," and a cover of Crosby Still Nash & Young's "Carry On."

But troubles were abrew back at London Records headquarters, and the label closed its doors. The band continued on the circuit for a couple of years while searching out a new deal. The revolving door continued to spin, and when they went back to Le Studio in Morin Heights in '81 the lineup was Wheaton, Richards, Shultz, Leggat and Maillet. But before the recordings were done, Scultz was replaced by Terry Hopkins on drums and Richards had bowed out of the group, replaced by new bassist Bo Hanson. Paul Northfield, whose credentials included the likes of Rush and The Bee Gees was hired to lend a hand to Wheaton with production. They came out with a self-titled 4-track independent EP, released the following spring. Along with a rehashing of "Greet Your Neighbour," it contained the lead-off track "Apology." The song was released as a single and received extensive airplay in the Maritimes. The relative success of the song landed them a set of opening gigs for The Beach Boys across eastern Canada. But by then Peter Jackson had replaced Leggat on keyboards, and he himself was out shortly after, replaced by Don Rodgers by 1984.

The band carried on a for a few more years, with more personnel coming and going. Neil Robertson was the new drummer and Mike Gaudet and then Ian MacDougall was the new bassist. In 1987 Wheaton's song "Keep On Giving," about Africans' continuing need for aid debuted when he and 60 other musicians held a benefit show in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. All door proceeds went to the Red Cross.

The band finally packed it in while everyone went on to there own individual projects. Wheaton, Molly Oliver's co-founder would start up his own home studio and enjoy a modestly successful solo career. He reunited with with Maillet and Gaudet in 1999 for a series of benefit concerts, adding Andre Leblanc on keyboards and drummer Doug MacKay and various versions of the group still get together for the on-again, off-again dates. The '78 debut was remastered and re-released in 2003 as MOLLY OLIVER IN THE STUDIO, along with four bonus tracks - "Apology" and "Go Back Home" from the '83 EP, the previously unreleased "Open Up" and "Straight In My Head," the band's first independent single.

Mombourquette, Angela

  • Person
Angela Mombourquette is a Halifax-based publisher, writer, editor, producer and director. Mombourquette became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1998 because their video recording “Bitch, Bitch, Bitch” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Monahan, Gordon

  • Person
Gordon Monahan is a composer and sound artist. He has exhibited his artwork nationally and internationally. In 2013, Monahan was a receipt of the Governor-General’s Award in Visual and Media Arts. Monahan became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2009 because their recording became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Moncton Transcript

  • Corporate body
  • 1882-1982
The Moncton Transcript was a newspaper from Moncton, New Brunswick. It was founded in 1882 as the Daily Transcript and renamed the Moncton Transcript in 1906. The paper was published under that name until 1982 when it merged with the Moncton Times to form the Times and Transcript.

Mongomery, Jennifer

  • Person
Jennifer Mongomery became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1993 because their video recording “’T’ is for Treasure” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Monitor

  • Corporate body
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