- Windsor Symphony Orchestra, CBC Radio Orchestra, Canadian National Arts Centre Orchestra, John Morris Russell, Mario Bernardi, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Jacques Lacombe, David Alan Miller, Judith Forst
- John Rudolph, Canadian National Arts Centre Orchestra, Murray Adaskin, Victor Feldbrill, Eitan Cornfield, Eugene Kash, Mario Bernardi, Andrew Dawes, George Zuckerman, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, John Avison
- Alex Pauk, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Harry Freedman, Esprit Orchestra, Eitan Cornfield, John Weinzweig, Brian Victor Macdonald, Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Nexus, Kazuyoshi Akiyama, William Littler, Mary Morrison, Mario Bernardi
- Eitan Cornfield, John Weinzweig, Jean Papineau-Couture, Orchestre de Radio-Canada à Montréal, Bruce Mather, Gilles Manny, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, John Beckwith, Mario Bernardi, István Anhalt, John Rea, Serge Garant, Victor Schultz, Jacques Beaudry, Orchestre à cordes Radio-Canada, Société de musique contemporaine du Québec, Alexander Brott, Montreal Tudor Singers, Nadia Papineau-Couture, Gilles Tremblay
- Purcell String Quartet, University of Alberta String Quartet, David Duke, Don Mowat, Eitan Cornfield, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Dwight Bennet, William Bruneau, Jean Coulthard, Robert Silverman, Patricia Fagan, Jane Adams, John Ogden
CBC Vancouver Orchestra
Live Albums
Compilations
Biography
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Vancouver Orchestra was founded in 1938 as the CBC Vancouver Chamber Orchestra. From 1939 to 1980, John Avison was the music director and during this period, he gave premieres of countless of works by Canadian composers, including Jean Coulthard, Barbara Pentland, and Elliot Weisgarber. In 1980, the orchestra abandoned its designation as a chamber orchestra upon the appointment of John Eliot Gardiner as music director. After a brief period of concentration on earlier repertoire, the orchestra returned to its commitment to contemporary works under the baton of Mario Bernardi, who became music director in 1983. The orchestra now commissions at least two major compositions every year. By the end of the twentieth century, the orchestra was the last-surviving radio orchestra in North America. It performs in a regular concert series in Vancouver, on tours in both Canada and the United States, and in broadcasts heard throughout Canada.
