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The Big Valley Jamboree, commonly referred to as "BVJ", is an annual country music festival held in Camrose, Alberta, Canada. [1] Established in 1992, the Jamboree is held during the Civic Holiday in August and features country singers from North America.
With the advent of the Big Valley Jamboree [16] in Camrose it has become even more oriented towards tourism and hospitality. [17] Camrose was host to an Alberta Music Camp for upwards of 40 years, named MusiCamrose, until it later changed to MusiCamp Alberta, now hosted in Red Deer. It celebrated its 50th anniversary in the summer of 2007.
Big Valley Jamboree, an annual country music festival held in Camrose, Alberta, Canada; BVJ, the IATA code for Bovanenkovo Airport, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia; bvj, the ISO 639-3 code for Baan language, Nigeria
Evansburg, Alberta: July 31-August 3: Boom Town Music Festival: Ol'Macdonalds Resort, Buffalo Lake, Erskine, Alberta: September 5–6: Alternative country, bluegrass, folk [51] Blueberry Bluegrass Country Music Festival: Stony Plain: August: Country music [52] Big Valley Jamboree: Camrose: August: Country music [53] Bro-Tel Backyard Festival ...
In the late-1980's, the Jamboree came under government oversight due to an abuse scandal involving Larré. In 1993, the Jamboree was sold to the Alberta-based Vinco Foods, who began to hold a sister event in Camrose, Alberta. By then, the event had begun to see declines in ticket sales and revenue, leading to changes such as a cap on ticket ...
Category: Camrose, Alberta. ... Canada portal Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. ... Big Valley Jamboree; C. Camrose ...
Originally called the Big Valley Jamboree, it was first established by Father Lucien Larré as a fundraiser for his Bosco Homes for emotionally disturbed youth. [6] A successor event, the Kinsmen Rock'N the Valley rock music festival, ran until 2004. The country music format was revived in 2005.
Highway 21 is a north–south highway in Alberta, Canada that parallels Highway 2 between Calgary and Edmonton. [1] It is approximately 328 kilometres (204 mi) in length. [ 2 ] It begins at the Trans-Canada Highway ( Highway 1 ) east of Strathmore , and ends at Fort Saskatchewan where it is succeeded by Highway 15 . [ 3 ]