Juno Awards of 2007

Juno Awards of 2007
Date 31 March-1 April 2007
Venue Credit Union Centre, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Host Nelly Furtado
Television/Radio coverage
Network CTV

The Juno Awards of 2007 were hosted in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada on the weekend ending 1 April 2007. These ceremonies honoured music industry achievements in Canada during most of 2006. The event was well known for a possible tape delay by the CTV television network so the network could syndicate The Amazing Race.

Ceremonies

Most winners were announced at the Juno Gala Dinner and Awards ceremony on 31 March. This was a non-televised event conducted at TCU Place.[1] At this event, Tom Jackson received the 2007 Humanitarian Award[2] and Montreal-based music business veteran Donald K. Tarlton received the Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award.[3] Gregory Charles, a Quebec-based musician, hosted this gala.[4]

The primary ceremonies of the major awards originated from the Credit Union Centre on 1 April and televised throughout Canada on CTV. Host Nelly Furtado was also the most successful artist this year, winning in five categories: Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, Juno Fan Choice Award, Pop Album of the Year and Single of the Year.

Winners in the following categories were announced during the primary ceremonies:

Telecast

CTV originally planned to provide a tape-delayed broadcast from 22:00 Eastern Daylight Time to accommodate an episode of the American version of The Amazing Race. However, the network relented due to opposition over the late timing, and scheduled the broadcast live from Ontario and eastward (19:00-21:00 Eastern) and tape delayed in western provinces (21:00-23:00 local time in British Columbia, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, 19:00-21:00 in Alberta). Quickly afterwards, the network made yet another change, allowing Saskatchewan viewers to watch the ceremony live (17:00 Central Standard) in addition to its previously-scheduled timeslot.[5][6]

National ratings for the Juno telecast were measured by BBM Nielsen at 912 000 viewers, an inferior result compared to the 966 000 viewers for Global's broadcast of The Simpsons or the 1.03 million viewers CBC gained from its airing of At Bertram's Hotel, an adaptation of the Agatha Christie mystery.[7]

Nominees and winners

Nominees were announced on 6 February 2007.

Artist of the Year

Winner: Nelly Furtado

Other nominees:

Group of the Year

Winner: Billy Talent

Other nominees:

New Artist of the Year

Winner: Tomi Swick

Other nominees:

New Group of the Year

Winner: Mobile

Other nominees:

Jack Richardson Producer of the Year

Winner: Brian Howes, "Trip" (Hedley) and "Lips of an Angel" (Extreme Behavior)

Other nominees:

Recording Engineer of the Year

Winner: John "Beetle" Bailey, "Rain" (Molly Johnson) and "Sisters of Mercy" (Serena Ryder)

Other nominees:

Songwriter of the Year

Winner: Gordie Sampson, "Jesus Take the Wheel", "Words Get in the Way" and "Crybaby"

Other nominees:

Fan Choice Award

Winner: Nelly Furtado

Other nominees:

Nominated albums

Album of the Year

Winner: Loose, Nelly Furtado

Other nominees:

Aboriginal Recording of the Year

Winner: Sedzé, Leela Gilday

Other nominees:

Adult Alternative Album of the Year

Winner: The Light That Guides You Home, Jim Cuddy

Other nominees:

Alternative Album of the Year

Winner: Sometimes, City and Colour

Other nominees:

Blues Album of the Year

Winner: House of Refuge, Jim Byrnes

Other nominees:

CD/DVD Artwork Design of the Year

Winner: Chloe Lum and Yannick Desranleau, The Looks (MSTRKRFT)

Other nominees:

Children's Album of the Year

Winner: My Beautiful World, Jack Grunsky

Other nominees:

Contemporary Christian/Gospel Album of the Year

Winner: Wide-Eyed and Mystified, Downhere

Other nominees:

Classical Album of the Year (large ensemble)

Winner: Mozart: Violin Concerti, James Ehnes and the Mozart Anniversary Orchestra

Other nominees:

Classical Album of the Year (solo or chamber ensemble)

Winner: Piazzolla, Jean-Marie Zeitouni and Les Violons du Roy

Other nominees:

Classical Album of the Year (vocal or choral performance)

Winner: Mozart: Arie e Duetti, Isabel Bayrakdarian, Michael Schade and Russell Braun with the Canadian Opera Company Orchestra

Other nominees:

Francophone Album of the Year

Winner: Il était une fois dans l'est, Antoine Gratton

Other nominees:

Instrumental Album of the Year

Winner: Run Neil Run, Sisters Euclid

Other nominees:

International Album of the Year

Winner: Taking the Long Way, Dixie Chicks

Other nominees:

Contemporary Jazz Album of the Year

Winner: From the Heart, Hilario Duran and his Latin Jazz Big Band

Other nominees:

Traditional Jazz Album of the Year

Winner: Avenue Standard, Jon Ballantyne

Other nominees:

Vocal Jazz Album of the Year

Winner: From This Moment On, Diana Krall

Other nominees:

Pop Album of the Year

Winner: Loose, Nelly Furtado

Other nominees:

Rock Album of the Year

Winner: Billy Talent II, Billy Talent

Other nominees:

Roots and Traditional Album of the Year (Solo)

Winner: Yellowjacket, Stephen Fearing

Other nominees:

Roots and Traditional Album of the Year (Group)

Winner: Bloom, The McDades

Other nominees:

World Music Album of the Year

Winner: Kaba Horo, Lubo Alexandrov

Other nominees:

Nominated releases

Single of the Year

Winner: "Promiscuous", Nelly Furtado featuring Timbaland

Other nominees:

Classical Composition of the Year

Winner: "Clere Vénus", Denis Gougeon

Other nominees:

Country Recording of the Year

Winner: Somebody Wrote Love, George Canyon

Other nominees:

Dance Recording of the Year

Winner: Sexor, Tiga

Other nominees:

Music DVD of the Year

Winner: Escarpment Blues, Sarah Harmer

Other nominees:

R&B/Soul Recording of the Year

Winner: mySOUL, jacksoul

Other nominees:

Rap Recording of the Year

Winner: Black Magic, Swollen Members

Other nominees:

Reggae Recording of the Year

Winner: Xrated, Korexion

Other nominees:

Video of the Year

Winner: Dave Pawson and Jonathan Legris, "Bridge to Nowhere" (Sam Roberts)

Other nominees:

Compilation CD

A compilation album of the awards was released in 2007 Tracklist 1 –Nelly Furtado Feat. Timbaland Promiscuous 4:03 2 –k-os Sunday Morning 3:47 3 –Chantal Kreviazuk All I Can Do 3:36 4 –Sam Roberts Bridge To Nowhere 3:10 5 –Billy Talent Devil In A Midnight Mass 2:54 6 –Mobile Montreal Calling 3:07 7 –Nickelback Far Away 3:59 8 –Melissa O'Neil Speechless 4:04 9 –Diana Krall Little Girl Blue 5:39 10 –Loreena McKennitt Caravanserai 3:54 11 –Pierre Lapointe Deux Par Deux Rassemblés 3:50 12 –Jim Cuddy Pull Me Through 4:45 13 –Eva Avila Meant To Fly 3:27 14 –Stabilo Flawed Design 3:47 15 –The Tragically Hip In View 3:59 16 –Hedley Gunnin' 4:11 17 –Three Days Grace Animal I Have Become 3:52 18 –Alexisonfire This Could Be Anywhere In The World 4:02

References

  1. "The Countdown Begins! Preparations for 2007 Juno Weekend well underway as major events and venues announced" (PDF). CARAS/Juno Awards. 20 September 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-01. (55.7 KiB)
  2. "Tom Jackson to receive 2007 Humanitarian Award for his Unwavering Support to Canada’s Hungry and Underprivileged" (PDF). CARAS/Juno Awards. 5 December 2006. Archived from the original (pdf) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-01. (46.2 KiB)
  3. "Canadian Entertainment Mogul Donald K Tarlton to Receive 2007 Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award" (PDF). CARAS/Juno Awards. 5 December 2007. Archived from the original (pdf) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-01. (45.1 KiB)
  4. "Thirty-two Awards Handed Out at 2007 JUNO Gala Dinner & Awards Ceremony in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan" (pdf). CARAS/Juno Awards. 31 March 2007. (34.2 KiB)
  5. "CTV backs down on Juno air time". CBC News. 29 March 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  6. Fuller, Cam (29 March 2007). "Showtime switch / Awards show moves to 5 p.m.; will air live in Saskatchewan". The StarPhoenix. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  7. "JUNO show fails to attract big audience". Canada.com. 3 April 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-01.

External links


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