Juno Awards of 2009
The Juno Awards of 2009 honoured music industry achievements in Canada in the latter part of 2007 and in most of 2008. These ceremonies were held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada during the weekend ending 29 March 2009.[1][2]
Juno Awards of 2009 | |
---|---|
Date | 28–29 March 2009 |
Venue | General Motors Place, Vancouver, British Columbia |
Hosted by | Russell Peters |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | CTV |
Loverboy was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, and Sarah McLachlan received the Allan Waters Humanitarian Award.[3] Long-time broadcast executive Fred Sherratt, a former CHUM Limited executive, received the Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award.[4]
Events
Preliminary award-related events began on 26 March 2009. The following day featured a Welcome Reception at the Commodore Ballroom and a Juno Cup ice hockey game at the UBC Thunderbird Arena.[5]
Most awards were announced at a Gala Dinner and Awards which was a restricted-access, non-televised event at Vancouver's Westin Bayshore Hotel on 28 March 2009. The only multiple-category winner at that event was The Stills who won New Group of the Year and Alternative Album of the Year (Oceans Will Rise). Kardinal Offishall's single "Dangerous" was awarded Single of the Year, over competition from songs by established major artists such as Michael Bublé, Céline Dion and Nickelback.[6]
Primary ceremonies
The primary awards ceremony on 29 March 2009 was telecast by CTV from General Motors Place and hosted for the second consecutive year by Russell Peters.[1][7][8]
Artists performing at the ceremonies broadcast included City and Colour, Nickelback, Sarah McLachlan and Simple Plan.[9] The complete list of performing artists was:[10]
Nominees and winners
The band Nickelback received five Juno Award nominations, the most of any band or individual artist. Celine Dion and Hedley earned nominations in three categories apiece.[11] Performances have also been scheduled from Simple Plan and Alexisonfire vocalist Dallas Green (performing as City and Colour).[12]
Nominees were announced at a press conference on 5 February 2009. Reporters in attendance expressed an uncertain reaction to the announcement, particularly to the number of nominations given to the critically reviled Nickelback.[13]
The following were the 2009 Juno nominees and winners:[11]
Jack Richardson Producer of the Year
Winner: Daniel Lanois, "Here Is What Is" and "Not Fighting Anymore" (Daniel Lanois)
Other nominees:
- Stuart Brawley, "Don’t Stop Now" and "Falling" (Emmy Rossum)
- David Foster, "A Change Is Gonna Come" (Seal), "Silent Night" (Josh Groban)
- k.d. lang, "I Dream of Spring" and "Coming Home" (k.d. lang)
- Nickelback and Joey Moi (co-producer Mutt Lange), "Gotta Be Somebody" and "Something in Your Mouth" (Nickelback)
Recording Engineer of the Year
Winner: Kevin Churko, "Disappearing" and "The Big Bang" (Simon Collins)
Other nominees:
- John "Beetle" Bailey, "Lucky" and "If I Were A Bell" (Molly Johnson)
- Mike Fraser, "Rock N' Roll Train" (AC/DC), "Them Kids" (Sam Roberts)
- Joey Moi, "Gotta Be Somebody" and "Never Gonna Be Alone" (Nickelback)
- Randy Staub, "Something in Your Mouth" (Nickelback)
Songwriter of the Year
Winner: City and Colour, "Waiting...", "Sleeping Sickness", "The Girl"
Other nominees:
- Nathan Ferraro, "Never Again", "Change For You", "Unaware" (The Midway State)
- Hedley, "Old School", "For The Nights I Can’t Remember" (with Dave Genn), "Never Too Late" (with Greig Nori) (Hedley)
- Alanis Morissette, "Underneath", "Not As We", "In Praise of the Vulnerable Man" (Alanis Morissette)
- Gordie Sampson, "When I Said I Would" (Whitney Duncan), "Just A Dream" (Carrie Underwood), "Davey Jones" (Gordie Sampson)
Album of the Year
Winner: Dark Horse, Nickelback
Other nominees:
- Famous Last Words, Hedley
- Lost in the 80's, The Lost Fingers
- 70’s Volume 2, Sylvain Cossette
- Simple Plan, Simple Plan
Aboriginal Recording of the Year
Winner: Running for the Drum, Buffy Sainte-Marie
Other nominees:
- Auk/Blood, Tanya Tagaq
- First Law of the Land, Billy Joe Green
- No Lies (album)|No Lies, Tracy Bone
- The World (And Everything In It), Team Rezofficial
Blues Album of the Year
Winner: Ramblin’ Son, Julian Fauth
Other nominees:
- Acoustic Blues: Got 'Em from the Bottom, Big Dave McLean
- Get Way Back: A Tribute to Percy Mayfield, Amos Garrett
- Love & Sound, Garrett Mason
- Mess of Blues, Jeff Healey
CD/DVD Artwork Design of the Year
Winner: Anouk Pennel and Stéphane Poirer, En concert dans la forêt des mal-aimés avec l’Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal, Pierre Lapointe
Other nominees:
- John Cook, Kelly Ferguson, John James Audubon, Koko Bonaparte, Sugarbird, Paul Reddick
- Phoebe Greenberg, George Fok, Daniel Fortin, Leda & St. Jacques, Productions l’Éloi, Pulse of the Planet, Slim Williams
- Mark Sasso, Casey Laforet, Mountain Meadows, Elliott Brood
- Dallas Wehrle, Robyn Kotyk, Alex vs. Alex, Kensington Heights, Constantines
Children's Album of the Year
Winner: Snacktime!, Barenaked Ladies
Other nominees:
- Catchy Tune, Jack Grunsky
- FiddleFire!, Chris McKhool
- The Kerplunks, The Kerplunks
- Oui!, Gregg LeRock
Contemporary Christian/Gospel Album of the Year
Winner: Ending Is Beginning, Downhere
Other nominees:
- Colors and Sounds, Article One
- I Will Go, Starfield
- Roar of Heaven, Life Support
- Salvation Station, newworldson
Classical Album of the Year (large ensemble)
Winner: Beethoven: Ideals Of The French Revolution, Orchestre symphonique de Montréal and Kent Nagano
Other nominees:
- Bach: Métamorphoses, Orchestre symphonique de Québec and Yoav Talmi
- Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 7 & 8, Tafelmusik and Bruno Weil
- Bruckner: Symphonie No 9, Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal and Yannick Nézet-Séguin
- Haydn: Symphonies 62, 107 & 108, Toronto Chamber Orchestra and Kevin Mallon
Classical Album of the Year (solo or chamber ensemble)
Winner: Homage, James Ehnes
Other nominees:
- Haydn: Six Sonatas for Piano, Anton Kuerti
- Schubert: Complete Piano Trios, The Gryphon Trio
- Schumann: Sonata in F#Minor & Humoreske, Angela Hewitt
- Shostakovich: 24 Preludes & Fugues opus 87, David Jalbert
Classical Album of the Year (vocal or choral performance)
Winner: Gloria! Vivaldi’s Angels, Ensemble Caprice
Other nominees:
- Bach and the Liturgical Year, Shannon Mercer and Luc Beauséjour
- Handel: Arias, Karina Gauvin
- Schumann: Dichterliebe & other Heine Settings, Gerald Finley
- The Voice of Bach, Daniel Taylor
Francophone Album of the Year
Winner: Tous les sens, Ariane Moffatt
Other nominees:
- L’arbre aux parfums, Caracol
- Cœur de pirate, Cœur de pirate
- Tradarnac, Swing
- Le volume du vent, Karkwa
Instrumental Album of the Year
Winner: Nostomania, DJ Brace presents The Electric Nosehair Orchestra
Other nominees:
- Auk/Blood, Tanya Tagaq
- The Furniture Moves Underneath, Inhabitants
- The Soundtrack, Creaking Tree String Quartet
- Telescope, Steve Dawson
Contemporary Jazz Album of the Year
Winner: Embracing Voices, Jane Bunnett
Other nominees:
- A Bend in the River, Roberto Occhipinti
- Existential Detective, Barry Romberg’s Random Access Large Ensemble
- Rasstones, François Bourassa Quartet
- The Sicilian Jazz Project, Michael Occhipinti
Traditional Jazz Album of the Year
Winner: Second Time Around, Oliver Jones
Other nominees:
- For Kenny Wheeler, Don Thompson Quartet
- Small Wonder, Brad Turner Quartet
- Solo, Chris Donnelly
- TV Trio, John Stetch
Vocal Jazz Album of the Year
Winner: Lucky, Molly Johnson
Other nominees:
- Ella...Of Thee I Swing, Nikki Yanofsky
- If the Moon Turns Green..., Diana Panton
- Ima, Yvette Tollar
- Parkdale, Elizabeth Shepherd
Roots and Traditional Album of the Year (Solo)
Winner: Proof of Love, Old Man Luedecke
Other nominees:
- The Contradictor, Ndidi Onukwulu
- Ghost Notes, Matthew Barber
- Happy Here, Suzie Vinnick
- Tinderbox, Fred Eaglesmith
Roots and Traditional Album of the Year (Group)
Winner: Chic Gamine, Chic Gamine
Other nominees:
- Fast Paced World, The Duhks
- Highway Prayer, Twilight Hotel
- Mountain Meadows, Elliott Brood
- XOK, NQ Arbuckle
World Music Album of the Year
Winner: Africa to Appalachia, Jayme Stone and Mansa Sissoko
Other nominees:
- The Art of the Early Egyptian Qanun, George Dimitri Sawa
- Cairo to Toronto, Maryem & Ernie Tollar
- Contrabanda, Lubo and Kaba Horo
- Shivaboom, Eccodek
Classical Composition of the Year
Winner: "Flanders Fields Reflections", John Burge
Other nominees:
- "From the Dark Reaches", T. Patrick Carrabré
- "Manhattan Music", Bramwell Tovey
- "Notes Towards A Poem That Can Never Be Written", Timothy Corlis
- "Song of Songs", Sid Robinovitch
Dance Recording of the Year
Winner: "Random Album Title", Deadmau5
Other nominees:
- "Everything’s Gonna Be Alright", James Doman
- "Get Blahsted", Hatiras and MC Flipside
- "Move For Me", Deadmau5 vs. Kaskade
- "Yes We Can", House Music United
Music DVD of the Year
Winner: Blue Road (Blue Rodeo)
Other nominees:
- Here Is What Is (Daniel Lanois)
- It All Started With A Red Stripe (Moneen)
- Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... (Céline Dion)
- A MultiMedia Life (Buffy Sainte-Marie)
R&B/Soul Recording of the Year
Winner: The Love Chronicles, Divine Brown
Other nominees:
- Elise Estrada, Elise Estrada
- Money, Zaki Ibrahim
- The Promise, Deborah Cox
- TONY, Ivana Santilli
Reggae Recording of the Year
Winner: "Everything", Humble
Other nominees:
- "Jah Lift Me Up", Blessed
- "Renegade Rocker", Dubmatix
- "The Peacemaker’s Chauffeur", Jason Wilson
- "Truth Will Reveal", Souljah Fyah
Video of the Year
Winner: Anthony Seck, "Honey Honey" (Feist)
Other nominees:
- Davin Black, "Blond Kryptonite" (Saint Alvia)
- Wendy Morgan, "Going On" (Gnarls Barkley)
- Dave Pawsey, "Detroit '67" (Sam Roberts)
- Dave Pawsey, "Them Kids" (Sam Roberts)
Compilation CD
A compilation album for the awards was released in March 2009
References
- "Vancouver Rolls Out the Red Carpet for The 2009 JUNO Awards" (PDF). CARAS. 12 February 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
- "Juno Awards gala to hit Vancouver in 2009". CBC News. 12 February 2008. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- "Sarah McLachlan, Loverboy to be honoured at Junos". CBC News. 20 November 2008. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- "Fred Sherratt Receives the 2009 Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award" (PDF). CARAS. 2 December 2008. Retrieved 12 February 2009.
- "2009 Juno Awards weekend events". Junoawards.ca. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
- "Field wide open after bulk of Juno Awards handed out at private ceremony". The Canadian Press. 28 March 2009. Retrieved 29 March 2009.
- "The 2009 JUNO Awards to be Broadcast at Vancouver's General Motors Place" (PDF). CARAS/CTV. 9 September 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
- "Double Trouble! Russell Peters Makes Triumphant Return to Host The 2009 JUNO Awards, March 29 on CTV" (PDF). CARAS/CTV. 18 November 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- "Ready to Rock – City and Colour, Nickelback and Simple Plan set to Perform at the 2009 Juno Awards" (PDF). CARAS/CTV. 3 February 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 12 February 2009.
- "The Official Performers for the 2009 Juno Awards". Upvenue.com. Archived from the original on 28 March 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
- "Nickelback on top with five Juno Award nominations" (PDF). CARAS. 3 February 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
- "Cancer Bats, Guns N'Roses, and Metallica for Canadian awards". Idiomag.com. 4 February 2009. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
- Farquharson, Vanessa (5 February 2009). "Debate over Nickelback rages on". Regina Leader-Post. Archived from the original on 7 July 2009. Retrieved 15 February 2009.