The Juno Awards of 2012 honoured Canadian music industry achievements in the latter part of 2010 and in most of 2011. The awards were presented in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada during the weekend of 31 March and 1 April 2012. A week of related events began on 26 March 2012.[1][2]
Juno Awards of 2012 | |
---|---|
Date | 31 March – 1 April 2012 |
Venue | Scotiabank Place, Ottawa, Ontario |
Hosted by | William Shatner |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | CTV |
Blue Rodeo was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.[3] Broadcast executive Gary Slaight was designated the 2012 recipient of the Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award.[4][5][6]
Ottawa's bid for the awards became known in March 2011 when it was revealed the province of Ontario allocated $100,000 in funding towards the city's 2012 Juno Awards bid.[7] The bid was jointly supported by the city, the province and the National Capital Commission. Ottawa hosted the awards on one other occasion, in 2003.[8]
Montreal was also considered as a 2012 host city. There was a bid from Victoria, British Columbia for the 2013 awards which was since granted to Regina. Victoria then planned a bid for 2014.[9]
The Juno Cup charity hockey game between a team of musicians and a team of former National Hockey League players was held at Nepean Sportsplex on 30 March.[10]
Winners of most award categories were announced at a private gala on 31 March at the Ottawa Convention Centre.[11]
On 1 April, prior to the main ceremony, Dan Mangan hosted a songwriters' event at Centrepointe Theatre featuring Kiran Ahluwalia, Terri Clark, David Francey, Max Kerman of Arkells, Kardinall Offishall and Lindi Ortega.[12]
William Shatner hosted the main ceremony at Scotiabank Place.[13] The following artists performed:[14][15]
Nominations for the various award categories were announced on 7 February 2012. Most awards were announced at the private gala on 31 March.[17] The remaining eight categories were announced the following day on the main televised ceremony. Two Christmas holiday albums were nominated for the Album of the Year award: Christmas by Michael Bublé and Under the Mistletoe by Justin Bieber.[18] A Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year category was introduced for the 2012 awards.[13]
Winner: Jeff Harrison (Designer) and Kim Ridgewell (Illustrator) for Rest of the Story (Chris Tarry)
Juno Awards 2012 | |
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Compilation album by various artists | |
Released | 13 March 2012 |
Label | Universal Music Canada |
Universal Music Canada released a compilation album of songs from the year's Juno nominees on 13 March 2012. It debuted on the Canadian Albums Chart at number 32.[20]
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "When We Stand Together" | Nickelback | |
2. | "What The Hell" | Avril Lavigne | |
3. | "Hold On" | Michael Bublé | |
4. | "Invincible" | Hedley | |
5. | "Pray" | Justin Bieber | |
6. | "Headlines" | Drake | |
7. | "Sofi Needs a Ladder" | Deadmau5 | |
8. | "Toes" | Lights | |
9. | "She's Dope" | Down With Webster | |
10. | "Haven't Had Enough" | Marianas Trench | |
11. | "Alone Again" | Alyssa Reid (with P. Reign) | |
12. | "Let’s Go Higher" | Johnny Reid | |
13. | "I Don't Know" | The Sheepdogs | |
14. | "Unkind" | Sloan | |
15. | "Whistleblower" | Arkells | |
16. | "Zero Orchestra" | Matthew Good | |
17. | "I Feel You" | Sam Roberts Band | |
18. | "Fragile Bird" | City and Colour | |
19. | "Row of Houses" | Dan Mangan | |
20. | "How Come You Never Go There" | Feist |
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