Juno Awards of 1982

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Juno Awards of 1982
Date14 April 1982
VenueHarbour Castle Hilton, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byBurton Cummings
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC

The Juno Awards of 1982, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 14 April 1982 in Toronto at a ceremony hosted by Burton Cummings at the Harbour Castle Hilton Convention Centre in the Grand Metropolitan Ballroom.[1]

The biggest winner this year was Loverboy with a record six awards in various categories including Group, Album and Single of the Year. To date this record number of wins in a single Juno year still stands.

Awards ceremony[]

The original plan for the 1982 ceremonies was to have David Steinberg in Toronto, while Burton Cummings would co-host the broadcast live from the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver, British Columbia. Juno organisers CARAS cancelled that plan on 15 February citing fears of "fragmentation" of the ceremonies with a dual city hosting approach. This resulted in some talk of hosting the Junos in Vancouver for 1983 but this would not be accomplished until 1991.

CARAS scheduled a music industry conference with guest speakers author Alvin Toffler and producer Bob Ezrin prior to the Juno awards event in an attempt to expand on the occasion. This was cancelled due to lack of advance registrations but this situation did not affect plans for the Juno ceremonies themselves.

Tickets to the ceremonies were priced at $115 for people who were not members of Juno organisers CARAS, and $85 for members. All tickets to the ceremonies were reportedly sold.

Performers during the show included Rough Trade, Liona Boyd, Ronnie Hawkins and B.B. Gabor. The comedic duo of Bob and Doug McKenzie presented the awards for "Most Promising Male Vocalist", "Most Promising Female Vocalist" and "Group of the Year".[2]

When Eddie Schwartz went to the podium to give his acceptance speech for the "Most Promising Male Vocalist" award he took a big drink of beer on live TV. Afterwards two Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers approached Schwartz and reprimanded him, telling him that was illegal before finally releasing him back into the show.[2]

A clean cut Neil Young dressed in a tuxedo accepted his "Canadian Music Hall of Fame" award with a very short speech acknowledging his family and that he was "proud to be a Canadian". He would expand on his thoughts on the award and the current state of the Canadian music scene in a post-Juno Awards show broadcast on CBC following the main ceremonies.[3]

The Juno Awards television broadcast on CBC set a new record with an estimated 2,170,000 viewers.[3]

Nominees and winners[]

Most nominations were announced 28 February 1982, with certain nominations in classical, jazz and album graphics categories announced 12 March 1982.

Performers Raffi and Sharon, Lois & Bram did not enter their albums for the Juno children's category, as they felt the Junos were about popularity rather than artistry.

Anne Murray continued her streak of absence despite winning two prime awards again this year.[4]

A tie was issued this year for the "Recording Engineer of the Year" award, and Rush was nominated twice in the "Best Album Graphics" category for two of their albums.

Female Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Anne Murray

Other nominees:

Male Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Bruce Cockburn

Other nominees:

Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Shari Ulrich

Other nominees:

Most Promising Male Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Eddie Schwartz

Other nominees:

Group of the Year[]

Winner: Loverboy

Other nominees:

Most Promising Group of the Year[]

Winner: Saga

Other nominees:

Composer of the Year[]

Winner: Mike Reno and Paul Dean, "Turn Me Loose" by Loverboy

Other nominees:

Country Female Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Anne Murray

Other nominees:

Country Male Vocalist of the Year[]

Winner: Ronnie Hawkins

Other nominees:

Country Group or Duo of the Year[]

Winner: The Good Brothers

Other nominees:

Folk Artist of the Year[]

Winner: Bruce Cockburn

Other nominees:

Instrumental Artist of the Year[]

Winner: Liona Boyd

Other nominees:

Producer of the Year[]

Winner: Paul Dean / Bruce Fairbairn, "Working for the Weekend" and "When It's Over" by Loverboy

Other nominees:

Recording Engineer of the Year[]

Winner (tied):

Other nominees:

  • David Greene, "Battlescar" and "Blue River Liquor Shine" by Max Webster
  • Paul Northfield, "Tom Sawyer" and "Red Barchetta" by Rush
  • Hayward Parrott, "Plaisir d'Amour" and "Prelude to Romance" by Frank Mills

Canadian Music Hall of Fame[]

Winner: Neil Young

Nominated and winning albums[]

Album of the Year[]

Winner: Loverboy, Loverboy

Other nominees:

  • Exit...Stage Left, Rush
  • The Great White North, Bob and Doug McKenzie
  • Moving Pictures, Rush
  • The Nature of the Beast, April Wine

Best Album Graphics[]

Winner: Hugh Syme and Deborah Samuel, Moving Pictures by Rush

Other nominees:

  • Dave Buck, Footloose (self-titled)
  • Richard Desmarais, Butler
  • Dean Motter, But I'm Just a Kid (self-titled, featuring Mark Domenico, Larry Lacy and Ricky Yorke)
  • Hugh Syme and Deborah Samuel, Exit...Stage Left by Rush

Best Children's Album[]

Winner: Inch By Inch, Sandra Beech

Other nominees:

  • Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch, Camping in Canada (various artists)
  • The Cats - Getting Ready for Christmas, The Children's Hour Production Orchestra
  • Listen to the Children, Bob Schneider
  • The Polka Dot Pony, Fred Penner

Best Classical Album of the Year[]

Winner: Ravel: Daphnis Et Chloe (Complete Ballet), Orchestre symphonique de Montreal, Charles Dutoit Conductor

Other nominees:

  • Mozart's Serenade for 12 Winds and Double Bass, Toronto Chamber Winds
  • Rodrigo's Concerto de Aranjuez and Fantasia Para Un Gentilhombre, Orchestre symphonique de Montreal, Charles Dutoit - Conductor
  • Rossini-Respighi's La Boutique Fantastique, Toronto Symphony Orchestra
  • York Winds (woodwind quintets), York Winds

International Album of the Year[]

Winner: Double Fantasy, John Lennon

Other nominees:

Best Jazz Album[]

Winner: The Brass Connection, The Brass Connection

Other nominees:

Comedy Album of the Year[]

Winner: The Great White North, Bob & Doug McKenzie

Other nominees:

Nominated and winning releases[]

Best Selling Single[]

Winner: "Turn Me Loose", Loverboy

Other nominees:

International Single of the Year[]

Winner: "Bette Davis Eyes", Kim Carnes

Other nominees:

References[]

  1. ^ Krewen (2010), p. 48.
  2. ^ a b Krewen (2010), p. 51.
  3. ^ a b Krewen (2010), p. 52.
  4. ^ Krewen (2010), p. 43.
  • "Briefly: Co-hosts named for Juno awards". The Globe and Mail. 29 January 1982. p. 15.
  • "Briefly: Juno show only in Toronto". The Globe and Mail. 16 February 1982. p. 15.
  • Lacey, Liam (2 March 1982). "McKenzies vs. Rush for best album Juno". The Globe and Mail. p. 15.
  • "Briefly: Recording artists opposed to Junos". The Globe and Mail. 11 March 1982. pp. E5.
  • "Backstage: Final nominees for Juno awards". The Globe and Mail. 13 March 1982. pp. E9.
  • "Backstage: Slow ticket sales torpedo conference". The Globe and Mail. 27 March 1982. pp. E7.
  • Cherry, Zena (14 April 1982). "Junos to top off good year for recording artists". The Globe and Mail. p. 13.
  • Lacey, Liam (15 April 1982). "Anne Murray, Bruce Cockburn top vocalists / Loverboy sweeps major Junos". The Globe and Mail. pp. E5.

Bibliography[]

  • Krewen, Nick. (2010). Music from far and wide: Celebrating 40 years of the Juno Awards. Key Porter Books Limited, Toronto. ISBN 978-1-55470-339-5

External links[]

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