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Juno Awards of 1981

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Date
  
5 February 1981

Network
  
CBC

Hosted by
  
Multiple (see article)

Venue
  
O'Keefe Centre, Toronto, Ontario

The Juno Awards of 1981, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 5 February 1981 in Toronto at a ceremony hosted by multiple co-presenters at the O'Keefe Centre. The first co-hosts were Andrea Martin and John Candy of SCTV fame, then Frank Mills and Ginette Reno, and finally Ronnie Hawkins and Carroll Baker.

Contents

Ceremonies were broadcast nationally on CBC Television from 7pm Eastern Time. More capacity was now available at the O'Keefe Centre and tickets were made available to the public at $15 each. The television show was seen by an estimated 1,880,000 viewers .

Juno awards organiser CARAS announced the major nominees 6 January 1981, with additional nominees in classical, jazz and album graphics announced 20 January 1981.

The Emeralds, previously nominated four times for the Country Group award, were not nominated this year. Controversy ensued when a committee declared to CARAS that the band was a polka band that should not be nominated in a country category. A reported attempt to file their nomination in a folk category was rejected due to a relative lack of sales. The Emeralds then looked to the courts to stop CARAS from issuing ballots that omitted their group. The group's legal challenge was unsuccessful, but the settlement required the Juno awards to mention the band and its previous nominations during the broadcast.

Performers during the broadcast included Frank Mills on piano with Ginette Reno singing "The Poet and I", Ronnie Hawkins and Carrol Baker singing "Hey, Bo Diddley", Graham Shaw singing his hit "Can I Come Near", and single songs each from Diane Tell, Shari Ulrich and the Powder Blues Band.

Although she received four awards, Anne Murray was once again absent from this year's show. Joni Mitchell's entry into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame was introduced by then Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. During her acceptance speech, Mitchell quipped that she felt like hockey star Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion for receiving this honour.

The "Single of the Year" award was a tie between Anne Murray and Martha and the Muffins, and is the only time a tie for this award has occurred in the history of the Juno's.

Female Vocalist of the Year

Winner: Anne Murray

Other nominees:

  • Carroll Baker
  • Claudja Barry
  • Susan Jacks
  • Joni Mitchell
  • Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Bruce Cockburn

    Other nominees:

  • Burton Cummings
  • Gordon Lightfoot
  • Gino Vannelli
  • Neil Young
  • Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Carole Pope

    Other nominees:

  • Dianne Heatherington
  • Michaele Jordana
  • Shari Ulrich
  • Laura Vinson
  • Most Promising Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Graham Shaw

    Other nominees:

  • Bryan Adams
  • Long John Baldry
  • B. B. Gabor
  • Wayne Rostad
  • Group of the Year

    Winner: Prism

    Other nominees:

  • April Wine
  • Harlequin
  • Max Webster
  • Rush
  • Most Promising Group of the Year

    Winner: Powder Blues Band

    Other nominees:

  • Loverboy
  • Martha and the Muffins
  • Red Rider
  • Toronto
  • Composer of the Year

    Winner: Eddie Schwartz, "Hit Me with Your Best Shot" by Pat Benatar

    Other nominees:

  • Doug Bennett, "Too Bad - The Move" by Doug and the Slugs
  • Burton Cummings, "Fine State of Affairs"
  • Mark Gane, "Echo Beach" by Martha and the Muffins
  • Lindsay Mitchell, Allen Harlow, "Young and Restless" by Prism
  • Country Female Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Anne Murray

    Other nominees:

  • Carroll Baker
  • Marie Bottrell
  • Iris Larratt
  • Laura Vinson
  • Country Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Eddie Eastman

    Other nominees:

  • Wilf Carter
  • Dallas Harms
  • Wayne Rostad
  • Hank Snow
  • Country Group or Duo of the Year

    Winner: The Good Brothers

    Other nominees:

  • Carlton Showband
  • Family Brown
  • R. Harlan Smith and Chris Nielsen
  • 6 Cylinder
  • Folk Artist of the Year

    Winner: Bruce Cockburn

    Other nominees:

  • Gordon Lightfoot
  • Murray McLauchlan
  • The Rovers
  • Valdy
  • Instrumental Artist of the Year

    Winner: Frank Mills

    Other nominees:

  • Liona Boyd
  • Hagood Hardy
  • Moe Koffman
  • Claire Lawrence
  • Producer of the Year

    Winner: Gene Martynec, "Tokyo" by Bruce Cockburn and "High School Confidential" by Rough Trade

    Other nominees:

  • Bruce Fairbairn, "Young & Restless" and "Satellite", Prism
  • Claire Lawrence, "Long Nights" and "Bad, Bad Girl", Shari Ulrich
  • Jack Richardson, "Battle Scar", Max Webster and "Heads Are Gonna Roll", Straight Lines
  • George Semkiw, "Hot Spikes" and "What Am I To Do", Fist
  • Recording Engineer of the Year

    Winner: Mike Jones, "Factory" and "We're OK", Instructions

    Other nominees:

  • Terry Brown, "Metropolitan Life", B. B. Gabor
  • Gary Gray, "What About the Bond", Bruce Cockburn and "High School Confidential", Carole Pope and Rough Trade
  • David Greene, "Battle Scar", Max Webster
  • Gord Paton, "The Invisible Man" and "Oh No", Zero One
  • Canadian Music Hall of Fame

    Winner: Joni Mitchell

    Album of the Year

    Winner: Greatest Hits, Anne Murray

    Other nominees:

  • Permanent Waves, Rush
  • Uncut, Powder Blues
  • Woman Love, Burton Cummings
  • Young and Restless, Prism
  • Best Album Graphics

    Winner: Jeanette Hanna, We Deliver by Downchild Blues Band

    Other nominees:

  • Doug Bennett, Cognac and Bologna by Doug and the Slugs
  • Dean Motter, Loverboy (self-titled)
  • James O'Mara, Straight Lines (self-titled)
  • Hugh Syme, Michael Gray, Lookin' for Trouble by Toronto
  • Best Children's Album

    Winner: Singing 'n' Swinging, Sharon, Lois & Bram

    Other nominees:

  • The Cat Came Back, Fred Penner
  • Listen To Me, Jim & Rosalie
  • Merry-Go-Round, The Travellers
  • You've Got To Be A Kid To Get In, The Free Rose Corporation
  • Best Classical Album of the Year

    Winner: Stravinsky - Chopin Ballads, Arthur Ozolins

    Other nominees:

  • Bach Toccatas, Vol 2, Glenn Gould
  • The Village Band, Canadian Brass
  • Orford String Quartet (self-titled)
  • Francois Dompierre (self-titled)
  • International Album of the Year

    Winner: The Wall, Pink Floyd

    Other nominees:

  • Against the Wind, Bob Seger
  • Glass Houses, Billy Joel
  • Greatest Hits, Kenny Rogers
  • The Game, Queen
  • Best Jazz Album

    Winner: Present Perfect, Rob McConnell & The Boss Brass

    Other nominees:

  • The Book of the Heart, Glen Hall
  • Circles, Don Thompson
  • Entre Amis, Bob Stroup
  • Live in Jazz City, Bob Stroup
  • Tommy Ambrose at Last, Tommy Ambrose with the Doug Riley Band
  • Single of the Year

    Winner (tie):

  • "Could I Have this Dance", Anne Murray
  • "Echo Beach", Martha and the Muffins
  • Other nominees:

  • "Fine State of Affairs", Burton Cummings
  • "Too Bad - The Move", Doug and the Slugs
  • "Wasn't That a Party", The Rovers
  • International Single of the Year

    Winner: "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)", Pink Floyd

    Other nominees:

  • "Another One Bites the Dust", Queen
  • "Funkytown", Lipps Inc.
  • "It's Still Rock and Roll to Me", Billy Joel
  • "Rapper's Delight", Sugar Hill Gang
  • References

    Juno Awards of 1981 Wikipedia