Vancouver New Music celebrates 50th anniversary at All Yesterday's Parties, November 23
Free open house at VIVO Media Arts Centre features live performances by Matthew Ariaratnam, Andromeda Monk, Sapphire Haze, and Anju Singh

Sapphire Haze. Photo by Jan Gates
Join Vancouver New Music at All Yesterday’s Parties as the organization celebrates more than 50 years of bringing innovative music and sound art to the community. To mark the occasion, Vancouver New Music will host an open house at VIVO Media Arts Centre on November 23 from 7:30 pm to 10 pm with live performances by Matthew Ariaratnam, Andromeda Monk, Sapphire Haze, and Anju Singh.
Founded in 1973 by a group of musicians, radio producers, and university faculty, Vancouver New Music was one of the city’s first platforms for commissioning and presenting contemporary music. From its earliest days, the organization has been dedicated to supporting artists while simultaneously raising the profile of new music and enriching the arts community through festival and concert presentations, unique workshops, and local events.
Access to the event is free, and snacks and refreshments will be served. Guests can RSVP by November 17 through Vancouver New Music.
Post sponsored by Vancouver New Music.
Related Articles
As if haunted by centuries of hits and flops, the three figures in this Bard on the Beach comedy take jabs at the self-consciousness and shaky footing of being an actor
Lineup also includes an offering from South Korea, an adaptation of The Paper Bag Princess, and a family-friendly drag show
Poetic flourishes and strong characterizations bring compelling charge to imagined story of Shakespeare and the woman who inspired and challenged him
Comedy with Charlie Demers and Jacob Samuel and a remount of Wakey, Wakey are some of the offerings onstage before renovations and a time of internal review in 2026
More mainstage offerings include love story Gertrude & Alice, video-game-style production 2021, and solo show Danceboy
Facilitated conversations with directors take place before matinee showings of four Bard on the Beach productions this season
Core elements of this audience favourite remain in a production full of touches that feel unmistakably contemporary
Vancouver’s Neworld Theatre is producing and administering nationwide initiative in search of experienced arts writers who are IBPOC or face other barriers
This year’s event, on from August 7 to 17, also features a standup comedy show by YouTube star Manpreet Singh and all-ages dance workshops
Young cast fuels this new production of the Roald Dahl classic with over-the-top silliness and sheer song-and-dance talent
New production of Jessica B. Hill’s witty play reclaims the lost history of poet Emilia Bassano
From revealing performances to spot-on costumes and sets, this new production conjures all the atmosphere of the play’s old London home
Western Gold Theatre fundraiser features the U.K.–born Canadian artist in an intimate, informal setting
In Bard on the Beach’s new production, retro pastels and power suits map surprisingly well onto the chaos of Shakespeare’s sometimes troublesome original
Neworld Theatre in collaboration and SFU’s School for the Contemporary Arts humanizes the issue by drawing on real, lived memories of fires, floods, and heat waves
With audiences sworn to secrecy over a decades-long run, the mystery at the heart of author’s most famous whodunit endures
With modernized touches and strong performances, this adaptation renews the wit and scheming of Shakespeare’s classic comedy
Rachel Drance’s poignant performance mixes well with choreographic and design innovations in new rendition of musical at the Stanley
Sean Bayntun and Eliza De Castro sound off on bringing to life the bold characters of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Legally Blonde: The Musical
Kat Sandler’s Wildwoman and Axis Theatre’s Where Have All the Buffalo Gone? round out the stage offerings
The first female published poet in England interacts with Shakespeare in Jessica B. Hill’s witty, complex love story