Juno Awards of 2005

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Juno Awards of 2005
Date3 April 2005
VenueMTS Centre, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Hosted byBrent Butt
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCTV
← 2004 · Juno Awards · 2006 →

The Juno Awards of 2005 were held 3 April at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba and were hosted by comedian Brent Butt. Avril Lavigne and k-os won three awards each, while Billy Talent and Feist won 2 apiece.

Nominations were announced 7 February 2005.

The Tragically Hip were this year's Canadian Music Hall of Fame recipient. Dan Aykroyd was originally scheduled to present this honour, but inexplicably cancelled several days before the awards ceremony. Sarah Harmer presented the Hall of Fame award in his place. Both Aykroyd and Harmer have ties to the Kingston, Ontario community in which The Tragically Hip are based.

Neil Young was scheduled to appear at these awards, based on a promise that he would attend if the ceremonies were held in Winnipeg. But the 1982 Canadian Music Hall of Fame inductee cancelled his appearance shortly before the Juno ceremonies following surgery to correct a brain aneurysm.

Other Juno Weekend events included the JunoFest concert series held at venues around the city, the Songwriters’ Circle on Sunday afternoon, and the Juno Fan Fare autograph session with Keshia Chanté, Great Big Sea, Kardinal Offishall, The Tea Party, Thornley, and other Canadian bands and artists.

The following awards were presented during the primary ceremonies, with other categories awarded at a non-televised ceremony the previous night:

  • Group of the Year
  • New Artist of the Year
  • Juno Fan Choice Award
  • Songwriter of the Year
  • Album of the Year
  • Adult Alternative Album of the Year
  • Rap Recording of the Year
  • Single of the Year

Nominees and winners[edit]

Artist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Avril Lavigne

Other Nominees:

New Artist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Feist

Other Nominees:

Group of the Year[edit]

Winner: Billy Talent

Other Nominees:

Juno Fan Choice Award[edit]

Winner: Avril Lavigne

Other Nominees:

New Group of the Year[edit]

Winner: Alexisonfire

Other Nominees:

Songwriter of the Year[edit]

Winner: Ron Sexsmith, "Whatever It Takes", "Not About to Lose", "Hard Bargain"

Other Nominees:

  • Buck 65 "Wicked and Weird", "463", "Sore" (all co-written with T.O.A.B. La Rone)
  • Marc Jordan, "Let's Waste Some Time" and "Shot Down My Heart" (both co-written by Steve MacKinnon), "Tears of Hercules" (co-written by Stephan Moccio)
  • Avril Lavigne, "Don't Tell Me" (co-written by Evan Taubenfeld), "My Happy Ending" (co-written by Butch Walker), "Nobody's Home" (co-written by Ben Moody)
  • Gordie Sampson, "Sunburn" and "Paris" (both co-written by Blair Daly and Troy Verges), "You (Or Somebody Like You)"

Jack Richardson Producer of the Year[edit]

Winner: Bob Rock, "Welcome to My Life" by Simple Plan and "Some Kind of Monster" by Metallica

Other Nominees:

Recording Engineer of the Year[edit]

Winner: L. Stu Young, "What Do You Want" and "Man in Your Life" by Prince, Musicology

Other Nominees:

  • Vic Florencia, "Shot Down My Heart" and "When Rita Takes the 'A' Train" by Marc Jordan, Make Believe Ballroom
  • John MacLean, Sheldon Zaharko, "Jumbo Jet Headache" by Limblifter, I/O
  • Peter Prilesnik, "Lucky Me" and "Day One" by Sarah Slean, Day One
  • Bob Rock, "Welcome to My Life" and "Me Against the World" by Simple Plan, Still Not Getting Any

Canadian Music Hall of Fame[edit]

Winner: The Tragically Hip

Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award[edit]

Winner: Allan Slaight

Nominated and winning albums[edit]

Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Billy Talent, Billy Talent

Other Nominees:

Adult Alternative Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: All of Our Names, Sarah Harmer

Other Nominees:

Alternative Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Let It Die, Feist

Other Nominees:

Best Blues album[edit]

Winner: I'm Just A Man, Garrett Mason

Other Nominees:

Children's Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: A Poodle in Paris, Connie Kaldor

Other Nominees:

  • Angela May's Magnificent Musical Menagerie, Angela Kelman
  • The 5 Elements, Rick Scott and Harry Wong
  • MathJam K, Judy & David
  • Songs for You, Jennifer Gasoi

Classical Album of the Year (Solo or Chamber Ensemble)[edit]

Winner: Bach: The English Suites, Angela Hewitt

Other nominees:

Classical Album of the Year (Large Ensemble or Soloist(s) with Large Ensemble Accompaniment)[edit]

Winner: Dardanus/Le temple de la Gloire: Music of Jean-Philippe Rameau, Jeanne Lamon, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra

Other nominees:

Classical Album of the Year (Vocal or Choral Performance)[edit]

Winner: Cleopatra, Isabel Bayrakdarian, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra

Other nominees:

Best Album Design[edit]

Winner: Vincent Marcone, It Dreams by Jakalope

Other nominees:

Contemporary Christian/Gospel Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Here to Stay, Greg Sczebel

Other nominees:

Country Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: One Good Friend, George Canyon

Other nominees:

Best Selling Francophone album[edit]

Winner: Marie-Élaine Thibert, Marie-Élaine Thibert

Other nominees:

Instrumental Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Mi Destino/My Destiny, Oscar Lopez

Other nominees:

  • Celtic Reverie, Loretto Reid and Dan Gibson
  • Mediterranean Nights, Vehkavaara & Piltch
  • Rest & Relaxation, Montgomery Smith
  • A Warrior's Journey, Longhouse

International Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: American Idiot, Green Day

Other nominees:

Traditional Jazz Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Vivid: The David Braid Sextet Live, David Braid

Other nominees:

  • Deep Cove, Ryga/Rosnes Quartet
  • Elenar, François Théberge
  • Exponentially Monk, John Stetch
  • Extra Time, The Mike Murley Quintet

Contemporary Jazz Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: New Danzon, Hilario Durán Trio

Other nominees:

Vocal Jazz Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: The Girl in the Other Room, Diana Krall

Other nominees:

Pop Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Under My Skin, Avril Lavigne

Other nominees:

Rock Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Chuck, Sum 41

Other nominees:

Roots and Traditional Album of the Year – Group[edit]

Winner: 40 Days, The Wailin' Jennys

Other nominees:

Roots and Traditional Album of the Year – Solo[edit]

Winner: Hopetown, Jenny Whiteley

Other nominees:

World Music Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: African Guitar Summit, Mighty Popo, Madagascar Slim, Donne Robert, Alpha Ya Ya Diallo, Adam Solomon, Pa Joe

Other nominees:

Nominated and winning releases[edit]

Single of the Year[edit]

Winner: "Crabbuckit", k-os

Other nominees:

Aboriginal Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: Taima, Taima

Other nominees:

Best Classical Composition[edit]

Winner: "The Tents of Abraham", István Anhalt

Other nominees:

Dance Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: "All Things (Just Keep Getting Better)", Widelife with Simone Denny

Other nominees:

  • "All of My Life", Aluna
  • "Feel Love", DJ's Rule
  • "Ghetto Love, Extended Original Version", Original 3
  • "Money Shot", Hatiras

Music DVD of the Year[edit]

Winner: Ron Mann, In Stereovision by Blue Rodeo

Other nominees:

  • Barbara Barde, David Langer, Casablanca Media Television Inc., The Barenaked Truth by Barenaked Ladies
  • John Small, Hallway Entertainment, Great Big DVD by Great Big Sea
  • Michael Fischer-Ledenice, Scott Morin, A Night in Vienna by Oscar Peterson
  • Marty Callner, Jake Cohl, Michael Cohl, Randy Gladstein, Stephen Howard, David Kines, Fred Nicolaidis, Dave Russell, Toronto Rocks by various artists

Rap Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: Joyful Rebellion, k-os

Other nominees:

Best R&B/Soul Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: Keshia Chanté, Keshia Chanté

Other nominees:

Reggae Recording of the Year[edit]

Winner: WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get), Sonia Collymore

Other nominees:

Video of the Year[edit]

Winner: The Love Movement, with k-os, Micah Meisner, "B-Boy Stance" by k-os

Other nominees:

References[edit]

  • Pacienza, Angela (8 February 2005). "Lavigne's change of tune earns most Juno nominations". The Vancouver Sun. p. C1.
  • "Aykroyd pulls out of Juno night". The Gazette. 29 March 2005. p. D5.
  • Saxberg, Lynn (2 April 2005). "Junos determined to rock even as Neil Young cancels". The Vancouver Sun. p. D2.
  • Whig-Standard (4 April 2005). "The Juno Award winners are...". Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 14.

External links[edit]