Jump to content

Juno Awards of 1985

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Explicit (talk | contribs) at 11:53, 18 July 2018 (Recording Engineer of the Year: Unlinked unintended subject.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Juno Awards of 1985
Date4 November 1985
VenueHarbour Castle Hilton Hotel, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byAndrea Martin, Martin Short
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1984 · Juno Awards · 1986 →

The Juno Awards of 1985, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 4 November 1985 in Toronto. The ceremony was hosted by Andrea Martin and Martin Short at the Harbour Castle Hilton Hotel.

New categories for R&B/Soul and Reggae/Calypso were introduced this year. Nominations in secondary categories (children's, video, producer, recording engineer, classical and jazz) were announced 27 September 1985.

The ceremonies were broadcast nationally on CBC Television from 7pm Eastern Time. These included performances by Liberty Silver, Kim Mitchell and a duet of Tina Turner and Bryan Adams. Prime Minister Brian Mulroney was also in attendance.

Earlier in 1985, most major Canadian music artists joined each other to create the benefit single "Tears Are Not Enough". It was not represented among the year's Juno nominations although it demonstrated strength in the Canadian music industry.

Nominees and winners

Winner: Luba

Other nominees:

Winner: Bryan Adams

Other nominees:

Winner: k.d. lang

Other nominees:

Winner: Paul Janz

Other nominees:

Winner: Parachute Club

Other nominees:

Winner: Idle Eyes

Other nominees:

Winner: Bryan Adams and Jim Vallance

Other nominees:

Winner: Anne Murray

Other nominees:

Winner: Murray McLauchlan

Other nominees:

Winner: The Family Brown

Other nominees:

Winner: Canadian Brass

Other nominees:

Winner: David Foster, Chicago 17 by Chicago

Other nominees:

Winner: Hayward Parrott, Underworld by The Front

Other nominees:

Winner: Wilf Carter

Winner: A. Hugh Joseph

Nominated and winning albums

Winner: Reckless, Bryan Adams

Other nominees:

Winner: Rob MacIntyre and Dimo Safari, Strange Animal by Gowan

Other nominees:

Winner: Murmel Murmel Munsch, Robert Munsch

Other nominees:

Winner: W.A. Mozart-String Quartets, The Orford String Quartet

Other nominees:

Winner: Ravel: Ma Mere L'oye/Pavane Pour un Infante Debunte/Tombeau de Couperin And Valses Nobles et Sentimentales, l'Orchestre symphonique de Montreal, Charles Dutoit conductor

Other nominees:

Winner: Born in the U.S.A., Bruce Springsteen

Other nominees:

Winner: A Beautiful Friendship, Don Thompson

Other nominees:

Nominated and winning releases

Winner: "Never Surrender", Corey Hart

Other nominees:

Winner: "I Want to Know What Love Is", Foreigner

Other nominees:

Winner: "Lost Somewhere Inside Your Love", Liberty Silver

Other nominees:

Winner: "Heaven Must Have Sent You", Liberty Silver and Otis Gayle

Other nominees:

Winner: Rob Quartly, "A Criminal Mind" by Gowan

Other nominees:

References

  • "Jazz, classical records up for Junos". The Globe and Mail. 28 September 1985. p. 15.
  • Lacey, Liam (2 November 1985). "Juno who's who". The Globe and Mail. pp. D1.
  • Lacey, Liam (2 November 1985). "Jolt of Juno power could do the trick". The Globe and Mail. pp. D3.