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American Music Awards

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American Music Awards
Current: American Music Awards of 2022
Logo as of 2019
Awarded forOutstanding achievements for American artists
CountryUnited States
First awardedFebruary 19, 1974; 50 years ago (1974-02-19)
Websitetheamas.com
Television/radio coverage
NetworkABC
Produced byDick Clark Productions

The American Music Awards (AMAs) is an annual American music awards show, generally held in the fall, created by Dick Clark in 1973 for ABC when the network's contract to air the Grammy Awards expired, and currently produced by Dick Clark Productions.[1] From 1973 to 2005, both the winners and the nominations were selected by members of the music industry, based on commercial performance, such as sales and airplay. Since 2006, winners have been determined by a poll of the public and fans, who can vote through the AMAs website.[2]

History and overview

Most recent American Music Award winners
← 2020 November 21, 2021 2022 →
 
Award Artist of the Year New Artist of the Year
Winner BTS Olivia Rodrigo
 
Award Collaboration of the Year Favorite Music Video
Winner Doja Cat featuring SZA
("Kiss Me More")
Lil Nas X
("Montero (Call Me by Your Name)")

Previous Artist of the Year

Taylor Swift

Artist of the Year

BTS

Conception

The AMAs was created by Dick Clark in 1973 to compete with the Grammy Awards after the move of that year's show to Nashville, Tennessee led to CBS (which has broadcast all Grammy Award shows since then) picking up the Grammy telecasts after its first two in 1971 and 1972 were broadcast on ABC. In 2014, American network Telemundo acquired the rights to produce a Spanish-language version of the American Music Awards and launched the Latin American Music Awards in 2015.[3][4]

From 1973 to 2005, both the winners and the nominations were selected by members of the music industry, based on commercial performance, such as sales and airplay. Since 2006, winners have been determined by a poll of the public and fans, who can vote through the AMAs website, while nominations have remained based on sales, airplay, now including activity on social networks, and video viewing. Before 2010, had nominations based only on sales and airplay and nominated every work, even if old. The Grammys have nominations based on vote of the Academy and only nominate a work from their eligibility period that changes often.[5][6][7]

The award statuette is manufactured by New York firm Society Awards.[8]

Hosts

The first hosts for the first telecast of the AMAs were Helen Reddy, Roger Miller, and Smokey Robinson. Helen Reddy not only hosted the show but also became the first female artist to win an AMA for Favorite Pop/Rock Female artist. For the first decade or so, the AMAs had multiple hosts, each representing a genre of music. For instance, Glen Campbell would host the country portion (Campbell, in fact, has co-hosted the AMAs more times than any other host or co-host), while other artists would co-host to represent their genre. In recent years, however, there has been one single host.

In 1991, Keenen Ivory Wayans became the first Hollywood actor to host the AMAs.

From its inception in 1973 through 2002, the AMAs were held in mid- to late-January, but were moved to November (usually the Sunday before Thanksgiving) beginning in 2003 so as not to further compete with other major awards shows (such as the Golden Globe Awards and the Academy Awards) and allows for ABC to have a well-rated awards show during November sweeps.

For the 2008 awards, Jimmy Kimmel hosted for the fourth consecutive year. In 2009–2012, there was no host for the first time in history. Instead, the AMAs followed the Grammys' lead in having various celebrities give introductions. However, rapper Pitbull hosted the 2013 ceremony and 2014 ceremony. Jennifer Lopez hosted the 2015 show.[9] Gigi Hadid and Jay Pharoah hosted the 2016 show. Tracee Ellis Ross hosted the show in 2017 and 2018. Ciara hosted the 2019 show.[10]

Between 2012 and 2014, as part of a marketing strategy for Samsung, the American Music Awards used the lock screen wallpaper of Samsung Galaxy smartphones rather than envelopes to reveal winners. A magnetic screen cover on each phone kept the wallpaper image with the winner's name secret until opened.[11]

In August 2018, Dick Clark Productions announced a two-year sponsorship and content partnership with YouTube Music.[12]

Ceremonies

Year Date Host Venue
1 February 19, 1974 Roger Miller, Helen Reddy, Smokey Robinson Earl Carroll Theatre
2 February 18, 1975 Roy Clark, Helen Reddy, Sly Stone Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
3 January 31, 1976 Glen Campbell, Aretha Franklin, Olivia Newton-John
4 January 31, 1977 Glen Campbell, Helen Reddy, Lou Rawls
5 January 16, 1978 Glen Campbell, Natalie Cole, David Soul
6 January 12, 1979 Glen Campbell, Helen Reddy, Donna Summer
7 January 18, 1980 Elton John, Toni Tennille, Natalie Cole ABC Studios
8 January 30, 1981 Mac Davis , Crystal Gayle, Teddy Pendergrass
9 January 25, 1982 Glen Campbell , Sheena Easton, Donna Summer Shrine Auditorium
10 January 17, 1983 Mac Davis , Aretha Franklin, Melissa Manchester
11 January 16, 1984 Lionel Richie
12 January 28, 1985
13 January 27, 1986 Diana Ross
14 January 26, 1987
15 January 25, 1988 Barry Gibb, Maurice Gibb, Mick Fleetwood, Robin Gibb and Whitney Houston
16 January 30, 1989 Anita Baker, Debbie Gibson, Kenny Rogers and Rod Stewart
17 January 22, 1990 Alice Cooper, Anita Baker, Gloria Estefan, Naomi Judd and Wynonna Judd
18 January 28, 1991 Keenen Ivory Wayans
19 January 27, 1992 MC Hammer, Reba McEntire
20 January 25, 1993 Bobby Brown, Gloria Estefan and Wynonna Judd
21 February 7, 1994 Meat Loaf, Reba McEntire and Will Smith
22 January 30, 1995 Queen Latifah, Tom Jones, Lorrie Morgan
23 January 29, 1996 Sinbad
24 January 27, 1997
25 January 26, 1998 Drew Carey
26 January 11, 1999 Brandy & Melissa Joan Hart
27 January 17, 2000 Norm Macdonald
28 January 8, 2001 Britney Spears and LL Cool J
29 January 9, 2002 Jenny McCarthy and Sean Combs
30 January 13, 2003 Jack Osbourne, Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne
31 November 16, 2003 Jimmy Kimmel
32 November 14, 2004
33 November 22, 2005 Cedric the Entertainer
34 November 21, 2006 Jimmy Kimmel
35 November 18, 2007 Microsoft Theater
36 November 23, 2008
37 November 22, 2009
38 November 21, 2010
39 November 20, 2011
40 November 18, 2012
41 November 24, 2013 Pitbull
42 November 23, 2014
43 November 22, 2015 Jennifer Lopez
44 November 20, 2016 Gigi Hadid and Jay Pharoah
45 November 19, 2017 Tracee Ellis Ross
46 October 9, 2018
47 November 24, 2019 Ciara
48 November 22, 2020 Taraji P. Henson
49 November 21, 2021 Cardi B
50 November 20, 2022 Wayne Brady[13]

Categories

Current award categories

Artist of the Year
New Artist of the Year
Collaboration of the Year
Favorite Music Video
Tour of the Year
Favorite Pop Male Artist
Favorite Pop Female Artist
Favorite Pop Duo or Group
Favorite Pop Album
Favorite Pop Song
Favorite R&B Male Artist
Favorite R&B Female Artist
Favorite R&B Album
Favorite R&B Song
Favorite Country Male Artist
Favorite Country Female Artist
Favorite Country Duo or Group
Favorite Country Album
Favorite Country Song
Favorite Hip-Hop Artist
Favorite Hip-Hop Album
Favorite Hip-Hop Song
Favorite Latin Artist
Favorite Latin Duo or Group
Favorite Latin Album
Favorite Latin Song
Favorite Rock Artist
Favorite Rock Song
Favorite Rock Album
Favorite Inspirational Artist
Favorite Gospel Artist
Favorite Dance/Electronic Artist
Favorite Afrobeats Artist
Favorite K-Pop Artist
Favorite Soundtrack

Past award categories

Category Award Year
General Single of the Year 2013–2015
Fan's Choice Award 2003 (January)–2003 (November)
Favorite Social Artist 2018–2020
Favorite Trending Song 2021
Pop/Rock Favorite Pop/Rock Video 1984–1988
Favorite Pop/Rock Male Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Pop/Rock Female Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Pop/Rock Band/Duo/Group Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Pop/Rock New Artist 1989–2003 (January)
Soul/R&B Favorite Soul/R&B Band/Duo/Group 1974–2003 (November), 2005–2006, 2009
Favorite Soul/R&B Video 1984–1988
Favorite Soul/R&B Male Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Soul/R&B Female Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Soul/R&B Band/Duo/Group Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Soul/R&B New Artist 1989–2003 (January)
Country Favorite Country Video 1984–1988
Favorite Country Male Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Country Female Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Country Band/Duo/Group Video Artist 1985–1987
Favorite Country New Artist 1989–2003 (January)
Rap/Hip-Hop Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Band/Duo/Group 2003 (January)–2008
Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop New Artist 1990–1994
Other Favorite Disco Male Artist 1979
Favorite Disco Female Artist 1979
Favorite Disco Band/Duo/Group 1979
Favorite Disco Album 1979
Favorite Disco Song 1979
Favorite Heavy Metal/Hard Rock Artist 1989–1997
Favorite Heavy Metal/Hard Rock Album 1989–1992
Favorite Heavy Metal/Hard Rock New Artist 1990–1993
Favorite Dance Artist 1990–1992
Favorite Dance Song 1990–1992
Favorite Dance New Artist 1990–1992
Favorite Adult Contemporary Artist 1992–2020
Favorite Adult Contemporary Album 1992–1994
Favorite Adult Contemporary New Artist 1992–1994

Most wins

The record for most American Music Awards won is held by Taylor Swift, who has amassed thirty-seven awards.[14] The record for most American Music Awards won by a male artist belongs to Michael Jackson, who has collected twenty-six awards.[15] The record for most American Music Awards won by a group belongs to Alabama, who have collected eighteen awards.[16] [dead link]

Rank Artist Number of awards
1 Taylor Swift 37
2 Michael Jackson 26
3 Whitney Houston 22
4 Kenny Rogers 19
5 Alabama 18
Justin Bieber
6 Carrie Underwood 17
Garth Brooks
Lionel Richie
7 Reba McEntire 14
8 Rihanna 13
9 Beyoncé 11
Bruno Mars
Janet Jackson
Stevie Wonder
10 Mariah Carey 10
Randy Travis
Tim McGraw

Most wins in a single ceremony

The record for the most American Music Awards won in a single year is held by Michael Jackson (in 1984) and Whitney Houston (in 1994), each with 8 awards to their credit (including the Award of Merit, with which both artists were honored in the respective years).

Most wins by category

The following list shows the artists with most wins in each category, adapted from the AMAs official website.[17]

The Song of the Year record holder accounts for all previous single category winners.

The Favorite Artist – Rap/Hip-Hop record holder accounts for all previous Favorite Male Artist – Rap/Hip-Hop and Favorite Female Artist – Rap/Hip-Hop category winners.

Special awards

Award of Merit

The American Music Award of Merit has been awarded to thirty two artists, the latest being Sting (2016).[18]

International Artist Award of Excellence

The International Artist Award of Excellence is described as "an award which recognizes artists whose popularity and impact cross national boundaries and is only given when there is a deserving recipient who is worthy of recognition for their accomplishments" and has been awarded to seven artists:[19]

Icon Award

The AMAs' producer Larry Klein stated: "The first-ever Icon Award was created to honor an artist whose body of work has made a profound influence over pop music on a global level."[20]

Dick Clark Award for Excellence

At the 2014 award ceremony, the Dick Clark Award for Excellence was given for the first time.[21] It was created to recognize "an artist who achieves a groundbreaking feat or creates a landmark work. It is to be bestowed upon someone whose spirit and excellence capture the visionary passion that Dick Clark himself incorporated into everything he did."[22]

Award of Achievement

Lifetime Achievement Award

Artist of the Decade

In 2000, the year Brooks won the award, the AMAs held a poll to elect the Artist of the Decade for each previous decade of the Rock & Roll era. According to some sources, the result of this poll is not counted in the total of AMAs won by these artists.[26][27][28] The results were Elvis Presley (1950s), The Beatles (1960s), Stevie Wonder (1970s), and Michael Jackson (1980s).

Poll
  • 1950s: Elvis Presley
  • 1960s: The Beatles
  • 1970s: Stevie Wonder
  • 1980s: Michael Jackson

Artist of the Century

Michael Jackson won the Artist of the Century award in the 29th American Music Awards held on January 9, 2002.[29]

Ratings

Year Day Date Household rating 18–49 rating Viewers
(in millions)
Ref.
Rating Share Rating Share
1974 Tuesday February 19 26.0 38 [30]
1975 February 18 21.3 32 [31]
1976 Saturday January 31 20.5 39 [32]
1977 Monday January 31 24.1 36 [33]
1978 January 16 25.9 38 [34]
1979 Friday January 12 22.8 35 [35]
1980 January 18 17.3 28 [36]
1981 January 30 14.4 32 [37]
1982 Monday January 25 21.5 32 [38]
1983 January 17 24.4 36 [39]
1984 January 16 27.4 41 [40]
1985 January 28 25.8 37 [41]
1986 January 27 20.4 30 [42]
1987 January 26 22.2 32 [42]
1988 January 25 18.1 35 [42]
1989 January 30 21.0 32 33.10 [43]
1990 January 22 20.0 30 32.40 [44]
1991 January 28 20.4 31 34.40 [45]
1992 January 27 18.3 28 29.90 [46]
1993 January 25 21.6 33 [47]
1994 February 7 16.0 24 24.50 [48]
1995 January 30 15.4 23 24.50 [49]
1996 January 29 13.8 21 21.60 [50]
1997 January 27 13.2 21 19.72 [30][51]
1998 January 26 12.1 19 8.1 20 18.36 [52][53]
1999 January 11 10.3 16 15.60 [54][55]
2000 January 17 10.4 16 7.2 17 16.68 [56][57]
2001 January 8 10.4 16 7.3 17 16.20 [58][59]
2002 Wednesday January 9 9.9 16 7.3 18 16.02 [60][61]
2003 Monday January 13 8.4 12 5.7 13 12.90 [61][62]
2003 Sunday November 16 8.1 12 5.5 13 12.77 [56][61]
2004 November 14 7.9 12 5.7 13 12.90 [56][61]
2005 Tuesday November 22 7.4 11 4.4 11 11.68 [56][61]
2006 November 21 7.0 11 4.7 13 10.85 [56][61]
2007 Sunday November 18 7.4 11 4.8 12 11.81 [56][61]
2008 November 23 7.3 11 5.1 12 12.20 [56][61]
2009 November 22 8.6 14 5.5 14 14.24 [56][61]
2010 November 21 6.7 11 4.3 10 11.72 [56][61]
2011 November 20 6.8 10 4.3 10 12.07 [56][61]
2012 November 18 5.5 8 3.4 8 9.52 [56][61]
2013 November 24 7.6 11 4.5 11 13.14 [56][61]
2014 November 23 6.6 11 3.8 10 11.61 [56][61]
2015 November 22 6.3 10 3.5 10 11.01 [56][61]
2016 November 20 4.7 8 2.4 7 8.18 [63]
2017 November 19 5.2 9 2.4 8 9.15 [64]
2018 Tuesday October 9 4.1 8 1.8 8 6.59 [65]
2019 Sunday November 24 3.9 8 1.7 7 6.68 [66]
2020 November 22 2.4 5 1.0 6 4.01 [67]
2021 November 21 1.0 7 4.01 [68]

See also

Notes

References

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