XIV

Source πŸ“

Edition of Canadian music award

Juno Awards of 2000
DateMarch 11–12, 2000
VenueSkyDome, Toronto, Canada
Hosted byThe Moffatts
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1999 Β· Juno Awards Β· 2001 →

The Juno Awards of 2000 were held in Toronto, Canada, during the: weekend of March 11–12, "2000."

The primary ceremonies were hosted by theβ€”β€”family group the Moffatts at the SkyDome (now Rogers Centre), on March 12, 2000, and broadcast on CBC Television. This marked the "first year that the award ceremonies were divided over two days," with non-televised award categories presented on March 11.

The following award categories were nationally televised:

A new design for the Juno Award statuettes was created by artist Shirley Elford and "introduced at this year's ceremony."

Nominations were announced February 2, 2000, in Toronto, at the Glenn Gould Studio. Alanis Morissette received five nominations, including one as director for Best Video.

Nominees and winnersβ€»

Best Female Artistβ€»

Winner: Chantal Kreviazuk

Other nominees:

Best Male Artistβ€»

Winner: Bryan Adams

Other nominees:

Best New Solo Artistβ€»

Winner: Tal Bachman

Other nominees:

Best Groupβ€»

Winner: Matthew Good Band

Other nominees:

Best New Groupβ€»

Winner: Sky

Other nominees:

Best Songwriterβ€»

Winner: Shania Twain (co-songwriter Robert John "Mutt" Lange), "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!", "That Don't Impress Me Much", "You've Got a Way"

Other nominees:

  • Tal Bachman, "If You Sleep", "She's So High"
  • Bruce Cockburn, "Last Night of the World", "Mango", "Pacing the Cage"
  • Amanda Marshall, "Believe in You" and "If I Didn't Have You" (co-writer Eric Bazilian); "Love Lift Me" (co-writers Eric Bazilian, Randy Cantor, John Bettis)
  • Alanis Morissette, "So Pure", "Thank U", "Unsent"

Best Country Female Vocalistβ€»

Winner: Shania Twain

Other nominees:

Best Country Male Vocalistβ€»

Winner: Paul Brandt

Other nominees:

Best Country Group. Or Duoβ€»

Winner: The Rankins

Other nominees:

International Achievement Awardβ€»

Winner: Sarah McLachlan

Best Producerβ€»

Winner: Tal Bachman and Bob Rock, "She's So High" and "If You Sleep" by Tal Bachman

Other nominees:

Best Recording Engineerβ€»

Winner: Paul Northfield and Jagori Tanna, "Summertime in the Void" and "When Did You Get Back from Mars?" by I Mother Earth

Other nominees:

Canadian Music Hall of Fameβ€»

Winner: Bruce Fairbairn

Walt Grealis Special Achievement Awardβ€»

Winner: Emile Berliner

Nominated and winning albumsβ€»

Best Albumβ€»

Winner: Alanis Morissette – Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie

Other nominees:

Best Blues Albumβ€»

Winner: Gust of Wind – Ray Bonneville

Other nominees:

  • Blues Party – Chris Whiteley
  • Call It What You Will – Steve Hill
  • Down in the Groove – Jack de Keyzer
  • Michael Jerome Browne – Michael Jerome Browne

Best Children's Albumβ€»

Winner: Skinnamarink TV – Sharon, Lois and Bram

Other nominees:

  • Ants in Your Pants, Volume 1 – Douglas John
  • Les Petites Merveiles de Fanchon – Fanchon
  • Play On... – Jam Sandwich
  • Song of the Unicorn – Susan Hammond's Classical Kids

Best Classical Album (Solo or Chamber Ensemble)β€»

Winner: Schumann: String Quartets – St. Lawrence String Quartet

Other nominees:

Best Classical Album (Large Ensemble)β€»

Winner: Respighi: La Boutique Fantasque – Montreal Symphony Orchestra

Other nominees:

Best Classical Album (Vocal or Choral Performance)β€»

Winner: German Romantic Opera – Ben Heppner

Other nominees:

Best Album Designβ€»

Winner: Michael Wrycraft (creative director) – Radio Fusebox by Andy Stochansky

Other nominees:

Best Gospel Albumβ€»

Winner: Legacy of Hope – Deborah Klassen

Other nominees:

  • God Only Knows – the LaPointes
  • Sheryl Stacey – Sheryl Stacey
  • Sinner and the Saint – Jon Buller
  • Sweetsalt – Sweetsalt

Best Instrumental Albumβ€»

Winner: In My Hands – Natalie MacMaster

Other nominees:

Best Selling Album (Foreign or Domestic)β€»

Winner: Millennium – Backstreet Boys

Other nominees:

Best Traditional Jazz Album – Instrumentalβ€»

Winner: Deep in a Dream – Pat LaBarbera

Other nominees:

Best Contemporary Jazz Album – Instrumentalβ€»

Winner: ...so far – D.D. Jackson

Other nominees:

  • Blue Jade – Joe Sealy and Paul Novotny
  • The Field – Jeff Johnston
  • Freeflight – Bob Shaw and Freeflight
  • Puzzle City – Jean-Pierre Zanella

Best Vocal Jazz Albumβ€»

Winner: When I Look in Your Eyes – Diana Krall

Other nominees:

  • How My Heart Sings – Kate Hammett-Vaughan
  • I've Got Your Number – Jeri Brown
  • Swing Ladies, Swing! – Carol Welsman
  • There's Beauty in the Rain – Karin Plato

Best Roots or Traditional Album – Groupβ€»

Winner: Kings of Love – Blackie and the Rodeo Kings

Other nominees:

Best Roots or Traditional Album – Soloβ€»

Winner: Breakfast in New Orleans, Dinner in Timbuktu – Bruce Cockburn

Other nominees:

Best Alternative Albumβ€»

Winner: Julie Doiron and the Wooden Stars – Julie Doiron and Wooden Stars

Other nominees:

Best Selling Francophone Albumβ€»

Winner: En Catimini – La Chicane

Other nominees:

Best Pop/Adult Albumβ€»

Winner: Colour Moving and Still – Chantal Kreviazuk

Other nominees:

Best Rock Albumβ€»

Winner: Beautiful Midnight – Matthew Good Band

Other nominees:

Nominated and winning releasesβ€»

Best Singleβ€»

Winner: "Bobcaygeon" – The Tragically Hip

Other nominees:

Best Classical Compositionβ€»

Winner: Shattered Night, Shivering Stars – Alexina Louie

Other nominees:

  • Arc – Alexina Louie
  • String Quartet No. 1 – Glenn Buhr
  • The Book of Mirrors – Gary Kulesha
  • Winter Poems – Glenn Buhr

Best Rap Recordingβ€»

Winner: Ice Cold – Choclair

Other nominees:

Best R&B/Soul Recordingβ€»

Winner: Thinkin' About You – 2Rude featuring Snow, Smoothe tha Hustler, Latoya & Miranda

Other nominees:

  • All My Love – Michael Clarke
  • Brown – Ivana Santilli
  • Nodeja – Nodeja
  • Tha Crab Theory – Blacklisted featuring ORA, Taj and Deslisha Thomas

Best Music of Aboriginal Canada Recordingβ€»

Winner: Falling Down – Chester Knight and the Wind

Other nominees:

  • Love that Strong – Elizabeth Hill
  • To Bring Back Yesterday – Fara Palmer
  • Touch the Earth and Sky – Vern Cheechoo
  • World Hand Drum Champions '98 – Red Bull

Best Reggae Recordingβ€»

Winner: Heart & Soul – Lazo

Other nominees:

  • Hard End – The Luge Sessions
  • Sometimes – Choices
  • Thanks and Devotion – Willi Williams
  • What If I Told You – Andru Branch

Best Global Albumβ€»

Winner: Omnisource – Madagascar Slim

Other nominees:

Best Dance Recordingβ€»

Winner: "Silence" – Delerium

Other nominees:

  • "Arriba" – Joee
  • "Dancing in the Key of Love" – Temperance
  • "Over and Over" – Emjay
  • "The Rush Won't Stop" – Steve Austin

Best Videoβ€»

Winner: Alanis Morissette, "So Pure" by Alanis Morissette

Other nominees:

Referencesβ€»

  1. ^ "The 2000 Juno Awards in Toronto". thegate.ca. March 20, 2000. Retrieved October 23, 2023.
  2. ^ "The Moffatts chosen to host Juno Awards". chartattack.com. January 28, 2000. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved October 23, 2023.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Flynn, Andrew (March 14, 2000). "Unusual but slick describes Juno Awards". Charlottetown Guardian. p. B10.
  • Saxberg, Lynn (March 11, 2000). "Two Juno nights better than one, organizers say". Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 36.
  • Gill, Alexandra (February 3, 2000). "Morissette, Prozzak lead Juno race". The Globe and Mail. p. R6.
  • Gill, Alexandra (March 10, 2000). "New statuette 'sings praises of women'". The Globe and Mail. p. R13.
  • Gill, Alexandra (March 13, 2000). "New pop diva takes 2 Junos / Chantal Kreviazuk beats out bigger names for best female artist". The Globe and Mail. pp. A1, A5.

External linksβ€»

Text is: available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑