Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Juno Awards of 1983

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Date
  
5 April 1983

Network
  
CBC

Venue
  
Harbour Castle Hilton, Toronto, Ontario

Hosted by
  
Burton Cummings, Alan Thicke

The Juno Awards of 1983, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 5 April 1983 in Toronto at a ceremony hosted by Burton Cummings and Alan Thicke at the Harbour Castle Hilton in the Metropolitan Ballroom.

Contents

Western Canadian artists have proven to be a major force in the music industry in the 1980s with 1983 Juno winners such as Bryan Adams, Loverboy and the Payola$.

Awards ceremony

The Juno ceremonies were broadcast as a two-hour special on CBC Television from 7pm Eastern Time. Interest in the telecast was growing substantially, with 3.2 million viewers in 1982, and 4.4 million for this year's edition.

During their opening co-hosts Cummings and Thicke introduced the Compact Disc to the viewing audience, likely the first introduction to the new media for many people. Columbia Records had just released their first ever batch of titles on CD about one month before the broadcast. As Cummings recalled: "Alan held up Toto IV, and it was also the first time I held one in my hand. I don't think Alan had seen one before that night... It felt like 'show and tell' and it was pretty cool for that to happen on national TV."

Payola$ were the top band this year with three awards including "Most Promising Group" and "Best Selling Single" for "Eyes of a Stranger". Bob Rock was absent (ironically he was mixing Loverboy's next album) and so band-mate Paul Hyde accepted their awards. For the "Most Promising Group" award he remarked "Somebody told us that to get this award is the kiss-off. Nobody's going to kiss us off."

Loverboy continued their winning streak by taking both the "Group of the Year" and "Album of the Year" awards for the second year in a row, this time for their sophomore effort Get Lucky. Other repeat winners for the same awards from the 1982 Juno's included Liona Boyd, Anne Murray and The Good Brothers.

Bryan Adams won his first ever Juno award but was unable to accept it in person as he was touring in the U.S., so his manager Bruce Allen accepted it on his behalf.

The "Canadian Music Hall of Fame" award was posthumously given to Glenn Gould who had died the previous year. Gould's award was presented by then Governor General Edward Schreyer and accepted by Gould's former manager John Roberts. Gould was also nominated twice in the same category for "Best Classical Album" and won this award for his 1981 re-recording of Bach: The Goldberg Variations.

Nominees and winners

Similar to the 1981 Juno's, the category for "Best Comedy Album" was not awarded this year.

Female Vocalist of the Year

Winner: Carole Pope

Other nominees:

  • Jessie Burns
  • Joni Mitchell
  • Anne Murray
  • Shari Ulrich
  • Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Bryan Adams

    Other nominees:

  • Burton Cummings
  • Gordon Lightfoot
  • Murray McLauchlan
  • Aldo Nova
  • Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Lydia Taylor

    Other nominees:

  • Lee Aaron
  • Terry Crawford
  • Luba
  • Mary Lu Zahalan
  • Most Promising Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Kim Mitchell

    Other nominees:

  • Lawrence Gowan
  • David Roberts
  • Leroy Sibbles
  • David Wilcox
  • Group of the Year

    Winner: Loverboy

    Other nominees:

  • April Wine
  • Chilliwack
  • Rush
  • Saga
  • Most Promising Group of the Year

    Winner: Payola$

    Other nominees:

  • Doug and the Slugs
  • Headpins
  • The Spoons
  • Strange Advance
  • Composer of the Year

    Winner: Bob Rock and Paul Hyde, "Eyes of a Stranger" by the Payolas

    Other nominees:

  • Robert Buckley and David Sinclair, "Letting Go" by Straight Lines
  • Paul Dean and Mike Reno, "Working for the Weekend" by Loverboy
  • Geoff Iwamoto and Michael Roth, "Your Daddy Don't Know" by Toronto
  • Neil Peart, "New World Man" by Rush
  • Country Female Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Anne Murray

    Other nominees:

  • Carroll Baker
  • Marie Bottrell
  • Cathy Chambers
  • Laura Vinson
  • Country Male Vocalist of the Year

    Winner: Eddie Eastman

    Other nominees:

  • Harold MacIntyre
  • Lee Marlow
  • Paul Weber
  • Diamond Joe White
  • Country Group or Duo of the Year

    Winner: The Good Brothers

    Other nominees:

  • Family Brown
  • Garry Lee and Showdown
  • Midnite Rodeo Band
  • The Rovers
  • Instrumental Artist of the Year

    Winner: Liona Boyd

    Other nominees:

  • All-Star Swing Band
  • The Emeralds
  • Frank Mills
  • The Spitfire Band
  • Producer of the Year

    Winner: Bill Henderson and Brian MacLeod, "Whatcha Gonna Do" and "Secret Information" by Chilliwack

    Other nominees:

  • Terry Brown, "Subdivisions" & "Chemistry" by Rush
  • Bruce Fairbairn, "Worlds Away" & "She Controls Me" by Strange Advance
  • Claire Lawrence, "You're Makin Me Nervous" & "The One and Only" by Shari Ulrich
  • Peter Mann, "That Kind of Man" & "Prince of Darkness" by The Nylons
  • Recording Engineer of the Year

    Winner: Bob Rock, No Stranger to Danger by the Payola$

    Other nominees:

  • Gary Gray, Shaking the Foundations by Rough Trade
  • Lindsay Kidd / Bob Rock, Worlds Away by Strange Advance
  • Dave Slagter, Opus X by Chilliwack
  • Paul Northfield, Power Play by April Wine
  • Canadian Music Hall of Fame

    Winner: Glenn Gould (posthumous)

    Album of the Year

    Winner: Get Lucky, Loverboy

    Other nominees:

  • Aldo Nova, Aldo Nova
  • Christmas Wishes, Anne Murray
  • Signals, Rush
  • Turn it Loud, Headpins
  • Best Album Graphics

    Winner: Dean Motter, Metal on Metal by Anvil

    Other nominees:

  • Tom Powell, Streetheart by Streetheart
  • Hugh Syme, One False Move by Harlequin
  • Hugh Syme, Signals by Rush
  • Scott Thornley, Rise and Shine by Raffi
  • Best Children's Album

    Winner: When You Dream a Dream, Bob Schneider

    Other nominees:

  • Jim and Rosalie... At the Music Factory, Jim and Rosalie
  • Junior Jug Band, Chris Whiteley and Ken Whiteley
  • Valdy's Kids' Record, Valdy
  • Wake Up Mr Dressup!, Ernie Coombs
  • Best Classical Album of the Year

    Winner: Bach: The Goldberg Variations, Glenn Gould (1981 re-recording)

    Other nominees:

  • Haydn: The Six Last Sonatas - Glenn Gould
  • Ravel: Bolero, La Valse, Rapsodie Espagnole, Alborada Del Gracioso - Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal Conducted by Charles Dutoit
  • Stravinsky: The Firebird 1910 Version - Toronto Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Kazuyoshi Akiyama
  • Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel, Salome's Dance, Death and Transfiguration - Vancouver Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Kazuyoshi Akiyama
  • International Album of the Year

    Winner: Business As Usual, Men at Work

    Other nominees:

  • 4, Foreigner
  • Freeze Frame, The J. Geils Band
  • Hooked on Classics, Louis Clark & Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
  • Physical, Olivia Newton-John
  • Best Jazz Album

    Winner: I Didn't Know About You, Fraser MacPherson and Oliver Gannon

    Other nominees:

  • Bells - Don Thompson and Rob Piltch
  • Blues Tales in Time - Paul Cram
  • Sometime in Another Life - Peter Leitch and George McFetridge
  • Time Warp - Time Warp
  • Best Selling Single

    Winner: "Eyes of a Stranger", Payolas

    Other nominees:

  • "Letting Go", Straight Lines
  • "New World Man", Rush
  • "Working for the Weekend", Loverboy
  • "Your Daddy Don't Know", Toronto
  • International Single of the Year

    Winner: "Eye of the Tiger", Survivor

    Other nominees:

  • "Abracadabra", Steve Miller Band
  • "Da Da Da", Trio
  • "I Love Rock 'n' Roll", Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
  • "Physical", Olivia Newton-John
  • References

    Juno Awards of 1983 Wikipedia