Jump to content

Juno Awards of 1986

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 10:36, 7 May 2024 (Altered pages. Formatted dashes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Whoop whoop pull up | #UCB_webform 1388/1428). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Juno Awards of 1986
Date10 November 1986
VenueHarbour Castle Hilton Hotel, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byHowie Mandel
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1985 · Juno Awards · 1987 →

The Juno Awards of 1986, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 10 November 1986 in Toronto at a ceremony hosted by Howie Mandel at the Harbour Castle Hilton Hotel. CBC Television broadcast the ceremonies nationally.

Labour problems at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation overshadowed plans for the awards broadcast. NABET complained about CBC plans to hire two American technical workers to assist with a special effect during the broadcast. NABET was renegotiating a labour contract with CBC and felt that Canadians should have been hired instead.

Meanwhile, CBC workers with the CUPE stopped work on 7 November. This strike was temporary, but interrupted the work of some Juno stage hands who were members of that union. weekend. CUPE's workers returned to work on the day of the Junos broadcast, as this particular union action was not planned to continue past the weekend.

1600 public tickets were made available, but all were sold late September, approximately one month after the $170 CAD tickets were offered for sale.

Gordon Lightfoot entered Canadian Music Hall of Fame, and was introduced at the ceremonies by Bob Dylan who made a surprise appearance.

Nominees and winners

[edit]

Winner: Luba

Other nominees:

Winner: Bryan Adams

Other nominees:

Winner: Kim Richardson

Other nominees:

Winner: Billy Newton-Davis

Other nominees:

Winner: Honeymoon Suite

Other nominees:

Winner: Glass Tiger

Other nominees:

Winner: Jim Vallance

Other nominees:

Winner: Anne Murray

Other nominees:

Winner: Murray McLauchlan

Other nominees:

Winner: Prairie Oyster

Other nominees:

Winner: David Foster

Other nominees:

Winner: David Foster, St. Elmo's Fire Soundtrack by various artists

Other nominees:

Winner: Joe and Gino Vannelli, Black Cars by Gino Vannelli

Other nominees:

Winner: Gordon Lightfoot

Winner: Jack Richardson

Nominated and winning albums

[edit]

Winner: The Thin Red Line, Glass Tiger

Other nominees:

Winner: Hugh Syme and Dimo Safari, Power Windows by Rush

Other nominees:

Winner: 10 Carrot Diamond, Charlotte Diamond

Other nominees:

Winner: Stolen Gems, James Campbell (clarinet)

Other nominees:

  • Au Verd Boys/To The Greenwood, New World Consort
  • La Chanson Francaise, Songs of Medieval & Renaissance France, The Toronto Consort
  • Louis Lortie Plays Maurice Ravel, Louis Lortie
  • Vickers, Jon Vickers (tenor)

Winner: Holst: The Planets, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Davis - Conductor]]

Other nominees:

Winner: Brothers in Arms, Dire Straits

Other nominees:

Winner: Lights of Burgundy, Oliver Jones

Other nominees:

Nominated and winning releases

[edit]

Winner: "Don't Forget Me (When I'm Gone)", Glass Tiger

Other nominees:

Winner: "Live Is Life", Opus

Other nominees:

Winner: "Love is a Contact Sport", Billy Newton-Davis

Other nominees:

Winner: Revolutionary Tea Party, Lillian Allen

Other nominees:

  • Free South Africa, Jayson
  • Moonlight Lover, Ras Lee
  • Night Rider, Messenjah
  • No One Can Love Me Like You Do, George Banton

Winner: Greg Masuak, "How Many (Rivers To Cross)" by Luba

Other nominees:

References

[edit]
  • Hawthorn, Tom (29 August 1986). "Catch Juno high jinks for only $170 a pop". The Globe and Mail. pp. D9.
  • Lacey, Liam (26 September 1986). "Riff Rap: Vancouver band has little patience for 'lifestyle' music". The Globe and Mail. pp. D13. (multi-topic article - mention of Juno tickets sold out)
  • O'Connor, Tim (7 November 1986). "Union outraged by use of U.S. technicians". The Globe and Mail. pp. C10.
  • Delacourt, Susan (8 November 1986). "Two-day walkout at CBC will put new announcers on TV and radio". The Globe and Mail. pp. A1–A2.
  • Wilson, Deborah (10 November 1986). "Major strike inevitable unless CBC gives way, unions warn". The Globe and Mail. pp. A4.
  • O'Connor, Tim (11 November 1986). "Glass Tiger sweeps Junos". The Globe and Mail. pp. D7.
  • Kelly, Deirdre (11 November 1986). "A night for sequins and heart-throbs". The Globe and Mail. pp. D7.
[edit]