Juno Awards of 2001

Summary

The Juno Awards of 2001 were held in Hamilton, Ontario Canada during the weekend of 3–4 March 2001.

Juno Awards of 2001
Date3–4 March 2001
VenueCopps Coliseum, Hamilton, Ontario
Hosted byRick Mercer
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 2000 · Juno Awards · 2002 →

The primary ceremonies were hosted by Rick Mercer at Copps Coliseum on 4 March 2001 and broadcast on CBC Television. Performers during the telecast included: Deborah Cox, Nelly Furtado, The Guess Who, Jacksoul, Michie Mee, The Moffatts and Treble Charger.

Nominations were announced 24 January 2001. Nelly Furtado received five nominations and won four of these.

The 2001 awards were the last Junos broadcast on CBC Television until 2018. From 2002 to 2017, the awards would move to CTV. Up to 2001, every primary Juno ceremony had been aired on the CBC since the first Juno telecast in 1975.

Nominees and winners edit

Best Female Artist edit

Winner: Jann Arden

Other Nominees:

Best Male Artist edit

Winner: Neil Young

Other Nominees:

Best New Solo Artist edit

Winner: Nelly Furtado

Other Nominees:

Best Group edit

Winner: Barenaked Ladies

Other Nominees:

Best New Group edit

Winner: Nickelback

Other Nominees:

Best Songwriter edit

Winner: Nelly Furtado, "Turn Off The Light", "I'm Like A Bird", "...On the Radio (Remember the Days)"

Other Nominees:

Best Country Female Artist edit

Winner: Terri Clark

Other Nominees:

Best Country Male Artist edit

Winner: Paul Brandt

Other Nominees:

Best Country Group or Duo edit

Winner: The Wilkinsons

Other Nominees:

Best Producer edit

Winner: Gerald Eaton, Brian West and Nelly Furtado, "I'm like a Bird" and "Turn off the Light" both by Nelly Furtado

Other Nominees:

Best Recording Engineer edit

Winner: Jeff Wolpert, "Make It Go Away" and "Romantically Helpless" both by Holly Cole

Other Nominees:

  • Chad Irschick, "One Turn Deserves Another" and "Stand Up" both by Susan Aglukark
  • Adam Messinger, "I Wish" and "Drive My Car", both by Cadence
  • Randy Staub, "Just Another Phase" and "Antifreeze & Aeroplanes" both by The Moffatts
  • Brian West and Brad Haehnel, "I'm like a Bird" and "Turn off the Light" both by Nelly Furtado

Canadian Music Hall of Fame edit

Winner: Bruce Cockburn

Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award edit

Winner: Daniel Caudeiron

Nominated and winning albums edit

Best Album edit

Winner: Maroon, Barenaked Ladies

Other Nominees:

Best Blues Album edit

Winner: Love Comin' Down, Sue Foley

Other Nominees:

Best Children's Album edit

Winner: Sing & Dance, Jack Grunsky

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Album (Solo or Chamber Ensemble) edit

Winner: Bach: The Six Sonatas & Partitas for Solo Violin, James Ehnes

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Album (Large Ensemble or Soloist(s) with Large Ensemble Accompaniment) edit

Winner: Sibelius: Lemminkainen Suite, Night Ride and Sunrise, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, conductor Jukka-Pekka Saraste

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Album (Vocal or Choral Performance) edit

Winner: G.F. Handel: Apollo e Dafne Silete Venti, Karina Gauvin, Russell Braun, Les Violons du Roy

Other Nominees:

Best Album Design edit

Winner: Stuart Chatwood, James St. Laurent, Margaret Malandruccolo, Antoine Moonen, Nick Sarros, Tangents: The Tea Party Collection by The Tea Party Other Nominees:

  • Bendit Aquin, Yann Gamblin, Sebastien Toupin, Du Coq à l'âme by Lynda Lemay
  • Tchi, Sebastien Toupin, Anne Vivien, Projet Orange by Projet Orange
  • Michael Wrycraft, Six Strings North of the Border, Volume 1 by various artists
  • Martin Tielli, Michael Wrycraft, The Story of Harmelodia by Rheostatics

Best Gospel Album edit

Winner: Simple Songs, Steve Bell

Other Nominees:

  • Jake, Jake
  • Mark Masri, Mark Masri
  • Mon Seul Espoir, La Chorale du Conservatoire de Musique Moderne
  • Naked Soul, Kelita Haverland

Best Instrumental Album edit

Winner: Free Fall, Jesse Cook

Other Nominees:

Best Selling Album (Foreign or Domestic) edit

Winner: The Marshall Mathers LP, Eminem

Other Nominees:

Best Traditional Jazz Album - Instrumental edit

Winner: Rob McConnell Tentet, Rob McConnell Tentet

Other Nominees:

Best Contemporary Jazz Album - Instrumental edit

Winner: Compassion, François Carrier Trio + 1

Other Nominees:

Best Vocal Jazz Album edit

Winner: Both Sides Now, Joni Mitchell

Other Nominees:

Best Roots or Traditional Album - Group edit

Winner: Tri-Continental, Tri-Continental (Bill Bourne, Lester Quitzau, Madagascar Slim)

Other Nominees:

Best Roots or Traditional Album - Solo edit

Winner: Jenny Whiteley, Jenny Whiteley

Other Nominees:

Best Alternative Album edit

Winner: Mass Romantic, The New Pornographers

Other Nominees:

Best Selling Francophone Album edit

Winner: Un Grand Noël d'amour, Ginette Reno

Other Nominees:

Best Pop Album edit

Winner: Maroon, Barenaked Ladies

Other Nominees:

Best Rock Album edit

Winner: Music @ Work, The Tragically Hip

Other Nominees:

Nominated and winning releases edit

Best Single edit

Winner: "I'm like a Bird", Nelly Furtado

Other Nominees:

Best Classical Composition edit

Winner: From the Diary of Anne Frank, Oskar Morawetz

Other Nominees:

Best Rap Recording edit

Winner: Balance, Swollen Members

Other Nominees:

Best R&B/Soul Recording edit

Winner: Sleepless, jacksoul

Other Nominees:

Best Music of Aboriginal Canada Recording edit

Winner: Nipaiamianan, Florent Vollant

Other Nominees:

Best Reggae Recording edit

Winner: Lenn Hammond, Lenn Hammond

Other Nominees:

Best Global Album edit

Winner: Ritmo + Soul, Jane Bunnett and the Spirits of Havana

Other Nominees:

  • Dancing on Water, Finjan
  • Esprit, Quartango
  • Free Fall, Jesse Cook
  • Morumba Cubana, Puentes Brothers

Best Dance Recording edit

Winner: Into the Night, Love Inc.

Other Nominees:

Best Video edit

Winner: Rob Heydon, "Alive" by Edwin

Other Nominees:

References edit

  • Everett-Green, Robert (25 January 2001). "Nelly scores five Juno nods". The Globe and Mail. p. R3.
  • Caldwell, Rebecca (5 March 2001). "Furtado takes home four big ones". The Globe and Mail. p. A13.
  • Bliss, Karen (5 March 2001). "Furtado Tops Junos". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2 October 2007. Retrieved 4 September 2006.

External links edit

  • Juno Awards site