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CTV News
20 minutes ago
- CTV News
African Experience Festival highlights rich cultural heritage in Bradford
Vendors at the African Experience Festival in Bradford July 5, 2025 An annual tradition is Bradford took over the Bradford West Gwillimbury (BWG) public library. The African Experience Festival was a three-day event that celebrated Black and African culture though fashion, food, and storytelling. The event showcased unique traditions, talents, and contributions by vendors. Omolara Akerele, co-founder of the festival emphasized the importance African culture in Bradford. 'We talk about cultural challenges and culture shock and how to adapt when you move to Canada,' said Akerele. 'How to bring your own culture and Canadian culture and bring it together.' Vendors like Oyin, a fashion vendor, are thrilled that the festival happened outside in the public square for the first time. 'It is nice we are going all out this year,' said Oyin. 'I encourage everyone to come down and look out for me, other vendors selling African wears and a lot of other things.' Akerele added festivals like the African Experience Festival are creating a more welcoming atmosphere for the Bradford region. 'It is becoming more diverse, a lot of people from the Caribbean, Jamaican, African and Indian descent are moving to Bradford and the city is expanding,' said Akerele. 'I think great things are coming for Bradford.'


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Inaugural jazz festival strikes a chord in Windsor's Via Italia
The inaugural Electric Avenue International Jazz Festival seen in Windsor, Ont. on July 5, 2025. (Robert Lothian/CTV News Windsor) A new outlet for Windsor's jazz musicians took off on Saturday afternoon with the press of a valve. Rhythms from the Electric Avenue International Jazz Festival echoed down Erie Street from the WindsorEats Food Hall. 'The way sometimes I think about it is, it's most often sort of contemporary, improvised, conversational,' explained Russ Macklem, a Windsor-Detroit-based musician who helped organize the show. 'It's a mostly instrumental version of contemporary Black music.' The festival began Friday evening and will continue into Saturday night, with musicians from Windsor, Vancouver, Toronto, and Detroit, including Macklem himself. Windsor's proximity to Detroit has made it a home for the 'evolving art form' of jazz, Macklem said. 'Because of the influence of Detroit, and not just jazz, but really all kinds of Black music, Windsor has a pretty diverse musical community, kind of thanks to that,' he said. Macklem said the goal is to make the festival an annual part of Windsor's jazz landscape each summer. For more information on the schedule for the show click here.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Fiddle Festival proves traditional music alive and well in the Maritimes
The 76th annual Maritime Fiddle Festival is on at the NSCC Ivany Campus in Dartmouth, N.S., for two days of traditional music this week. The celebration started Friday and continues until the closing concert Saturday night. 'We like to promote and preserve our Maritime fiddle tradition,' said festival co-chair Diane Hicks. There are over 45 fiddlers competing at the festival, aged five to 85 or older, said Hicks. Amelia Parker has participated in the festival since she was six. 'It's something you work towards every year,' Parker said. 'I think it's great for the youth because it encourages everyone to take up the fiddle and keep the tradition going.' The festival includes seven fiddle classes, two step dance classes and two nights of music and dancing. Hicks said the festival started as a fundraiser for a church in Dartmouth in 1950. At 76-years-old, it is Canada's longest running old-time fiddle contest. 'It just grew and grew over the years,' Hicks said. Volunteers took over the festival after it grew too large for the church to manage. The Maritime Fiddle Festival has attracted notable fiddlers during its 76 years including Ivan & Vivian Hicks, Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy, April Verch, J.P. Cormier, Scott Woods, Shane Cook, and others. 'Bring your fiddle. Bring your dancing shoes. It's going to be a great time,' Hicks said.