1989 Soul Train Music Awards
1989 Soul Train Music Awards | |
---|---|
Date | April 13, 1989 |
Location |
Shrine Auditorium (Los Angeles, California, US) |
Host |
Dionne Warwick Patti LaBelle Ahmad Rashad |
Television/Radio coverage | |
Network | WGN America |
Runtime | 180 min. |
The 1989 Soul Train Music Awards was held at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California and aired live in select cities on April 13, 1989 (and was later syndicated in other areas), honoring the best in R&B, soul, rap, jazz, and gospel music from the previous year.[1] The show was hosted by Patti LaBelle, Ahmad Rashad and Dionne Warwick.
Special awards
Heritage Award for Career Achievement
Sammy Davis Jr. Award for Entertainer of the Year
Winners and nominees
Winners are in bold text with an asterisk (*).
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Song of The Year
- "Giving You the Best That I Got" - Anita Baker*
- "Don't Be Cruel" - Bobby Brown
- "Man in the Mirror" - Michael Jackson
- "I Want Her" - Keith Sweat
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary New Artist
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Music Video
- "Parents Just Don't Understand" - DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince
- "Man in the Mirror" - Michael Jackson*
- "Wild Wild West" - Kool Moe Dee
- "Skeletons" - Stevie Wonder
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Single, Male
- "My Prerogative" - Bobby Brown
- "Man in the Mirror", Michael Jackson*
- "Just Got Paid" - Johnny Kemp
- "Make It Last Forever" - Keith Sweat (ft. Jacci McGhee)
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Album of the Year, Male
- Don't Be Cruel - Bobby Brown*
- Simple Pleasures - Bobby McFerrin
- In Effect Mode - Al B. Sure
- Any Love - Luther Vandross
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Album of the Year, Group Band or Duo
- Guy - Guy
- Just Coolin' - Levert
- Heartbreak - New Edition*
- Who?- Tony, Toni, Tone
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Single, Female
- "Giving You the Best That I Got" - Anita Baker*
- "Where Do Broken Hearts Go"? - Whitney Houston
- "Superwoman" - Karyn White
- "The Right Stuff" - Vanessa Williams
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Album of the Year, Female
- Giving You the Best That I Got - Anita Baker*
- Tracy Chapman - Tracy Chapman
- Stronger Than Pride - Sade
- The Right Stuff - Vanessa Williams
Best R&B/Urban Contemporary Single, Group Band or Duo
- "It Takes Two" - Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock
- "Da Butt" - E.U.*
- "Groove Me" - Guy
- "Can You Stand the Rain?" - New Edition
Best Gospel Album
- Live in Chicago - Shirley Caesar
- Conqueror - The Clark Sisters
- Inspired - James Cleveland
- Take 6 - Take 6*
Best Jazz Album
- Silhouette - Kenny G*
- Simple Pleasures - Bobby McFerrin
- Day by Day - Najee
- Stronger Than Pride - Sade
Best Rap Album
- It Takes Two - Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock
- He's the DJ, I'm the Rapper - DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince*
- It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back - Public Enemy
- A Salt With a Deadly Pepa - Salt-N-Pepa
Performances
- Ashford & Simpson -
- Sheena Easton - "The Lover in Me"
- Levert feat. Heavy D & The Boyz - "Just Coolin'"
- Bobby Brown - "My Prerogative"
- Patti LaBelle - "I Just Can't Stop Loving You"
- Dionne Warwick -
- New Edition feat. Rob Base - "Crucial"
- Shirley Caesar, The Clark Sisters, Thelma Houston, BeBe & CeCe Winans, Vickie Winans and The Winans - "Lean on Me"
References
- ↑ "Pop/rock". Los Angeles Times. 3 March 1989. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
External links
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, September 26, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.