Juno Awards of 1989

Summary

The Juno Awards of 1989, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 12 March 1989 in Toronto at a ceremony in the O'Keefe Centre. André-Philippe Gagnon was the host for the ceremonies, which were broadcast on CBC Television.

Juno Awards of 1989
Date12 March 1989
VenueO'Keefe Centre, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byAndré-Philippe Gagnon
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1987 · Juno Awards · 1990 →

Blue Rodeo won in three of its five nominations: Best Group, Best Single and Best Video. k.d. lang and Robbie Robertson were also notable winners in 1989.

The previous Juno Awards ceremonies were conducted on 2 November 1987. There was no awards event in 1988 due to a decision to restore the Juno scheduling to the earlier portion of each year. The awards had been conducted early each year from its 1970 inception until 1984.

Nominees and winners edit

Canadian Entertainer of the Year edit

(This award was chosen by a national poll rather than by Juno organisers CARAS.)

Winner: Glass Tiger

Other Nominees:

Best Female Vocalist edit

Winner: Céline Dion

Other Nominees:

Best Male Vocalist edit

Winner: Robbie Robertson

Other Nominees:

Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year edit

Winner: Sass Jordan

Other Nominees:

Most Promising Male Vocalist of the Year edit

Winner: Colin James

Other Nominees:

Best Group edit

Winner: Blue Rodeo

Other Nominees:

Most Promising Group of the Year edit

Winner: Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts

Other Nominees:

Composer of the Year edit

Winner: Tom Cochrane

Other Nominees:

Country Female Vocalist of the Year edit

Winner: k.d. lang

Other Nominees:

Country Male Vocalist of the Year edit

Winner: Murray McLauchlan

Other Nominees:

Instrumental Artist of the Year edit

Winner: David Foster

Other Nominees:

International Entertainer of the Year edit

Winner: U2

Other Nominees:

Producer of the Year edit

Winner: Daniel Lanois and Robbie Robertson, "Showdown at Big Sky" & "Somewhere Down the Crazy River" from Robbie Robertson by Robbie Robertson

Other Nominees:

Recording Engineer of the Year edit

Winner: Mike Fraser, "Calling America" & "Different Drummer" from Victory Day by Tom Cochrane&Red Rider

Other Nominees:

Canadian Music Hall of Fame edit

Winner: The Band

Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award edit

Winner: Sam Sniderman

Lifetime Achievement Award edit

Winner: Pierre Juneau

Nominated and winning albums edit

Album of the Year edit

Winner: Robbie Robertson - Robbie Robertson

Other Nominees:

Best Children's Album edit

Winner (tied): Fred Penner's Place - Fred Penner and Lullaby Berceuse - Connie Kaldor and Carmen Campagne

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Album: Solo or Chamber Ensemble edit

Winner: Schubert: Arpeggione Sonata - Ofra Harnoy

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Album (Large Ensemble) edit

Winner: Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta - Montreal Symphony Orchestra, Charles Dutoit conductor

Other Nominees:

Best Album Graphics edit

Winner: Hugh Syme, Levity by Ian Thomas

Other Nominees:

  • Taras Chornowol, Beyond Benghazi by Paul Cram Orchestra
  • J. Don Blair, Celebration by various artists
  • Thomas Balint, Vertigo Tango by The Spoons
  • James O'Mara, Walking Through Walls by Body Electric

International Album of the Year edit

Winner: Dirty Dancing soundtrack - various artists

Other Nominees:

Best Jazz Album edit

Winner: Looking Up - The Hugh Fraser Quintet

Other Nominees:

  • Beyond Benghazi - Paul Cram Orchestra
  • Contredanse - Karen Young and Michael Donato
  • In Dew Time - Jane Bunnett
  • Jean Beaudet Quartet - Jean Beaudet Quartet

Best Roots & Traditional Album edit

Winner: The Return of the Formerly Brothers - Amos Garrett, Doug Sahm and Gene Taylor

Other Nominees:

Nominated and winning releases edit

Single of the Year edit

Winner: "Try" - Blue Rodeo

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Composition edit

Winner: Songs of Paradise - Alexina Louie

International Single of the Year edit

Winner: "Pump Up the Volume" - MARRS

Other Nominees:

Best R&B/Soul Recording of the Year edit

Winner: Angel - Erroll Starr

Other Nominees:

  • Crying For Love - Lorraine Scott
  • Dancing Under a Latin Moon - Candi
  • Private Property - Liberty Silver
  • Secret Love - Debbie Johnson and Demo Cates

Best Reggae/Calypso Recording edit

Winner: Conditions Critical - Lillian Allen

Other Nominees:

  • Give Peace a Chance - Errol Blackwood
  • I Like Calypso - Elsworth James
  • Shadrock - Chester Miller
  • War on Drugs - Devon Haughton

Best Video edit

Winner: Michael Buckley, "Try" - Blue Rodeo

Other Nominees:

References edit

  • Bastien, Mark (2 February 1989). "Blue Rodeo tops Juno list". The Globe and Mail. pp. C5.
  • Dafoe, Chris (13 March 1989). "Robertson, Blue Rodeo and a tearful k.d. lang top list of Juno winners". The Globe and Mail. pp. D7.

External links edit

  • Juno Awards site