The first four issues came as a supplement to
Only Paper Today, a
Toronto art magazine published by Victor Coleman. It was then published quarterly by Toronto's
Music Gallery, with funding from the
Canada Council, the
Ontario Arts Council, private donations and paid advertisement. The journal's offices were located inside the
Music Gallery on St. Patrick Street, Toronto. In 1981, John Oswald summed up the birth of the magazine in an editorial titled "The History of Musicworks": Four years ago interested parties at the Music Gallery, an experimental music performance facility in Toronto, and
Only Paper Today, an art publication, initiated a magazine of new musics as a supplement to OPT. This was accomplished with volunteered contributions of materials, editorial time, and print space in an existing magazine with existing distribution. The first four
Musicworks issues were published in this way. In 1982, composer
Tina Pearson, then instructor at the
Ontario College of Art and Design, became editor and launched the first companion cassette with issue #23, 1983. Pearson and Timar were both members of contemporary music collective
New Music Co-op, along with
Miguel Frasconi, Paul Hodge and
Robert Stevenson. ==Contents==