Jessie Reyez, Ali Gatie, JP Saxe, Tate McRae will perform at the 2021 Juno Awards
Organizers said on Thursday that musicians Jessie Reyez, Ali Gatie, JP Saxe, Tate McRae and William Prince will attend the Juno awards ceremony next month.
Reyez and Gatie both won the Canadian Music Awards for Singer of the Year, while Saxe and McRae competed for Breakthrough Singer of the Year. Gatie will perform with McRae and Saxe will share the stage with songwriter Julia Michaels.The two collaborated in the breakthrough craze in 2020
If the world is about to end, Nominated once a year.
And William Prince who was born in Manitoba –
Where: Winnipeg
We sure don’t rock in B.C. But this place is classical.
At least that is the conclusion of the folks nomination committee for the 2021 Western Canadian Music Awards, which allotted all five “classical composer of the year” spots to British Columbia composers. Conversely, not a single country act from these parts could even merit a pot to twang in, as Alberta and Saskatchewan acts dominated the category.
That said, frequent country music award-winners Washboard Union earned a “producer of the year” credit for its chart-topping work on Everbound. That album has probably already passed the combined sales figures of all the “country artist of the year” nominees combined. The band is up for recording of the year.
Mark the end of Black History Month with a Motown performance by this B C vocal powerhouse cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photo Credit: SOCAN Foundation
The inaugural SiriusXM Black Canadian Music Awards were announced on Jan. 11 and the five winners are hip-hop artist Tobi, rapper Naya Ali, and R&B singer-songwriters Raahiim, Hunnah and Dylan Sinclair.
The new award was announced in September 2020 by the SOCAN Foundation to “recognize and celebrate the artistic merit demonstrated by Black music creators (songwriters, composers, producers, etc.) in all genres.”
SOCAN said the awards were created in recognition of systemic racism within society, and to “acknowledge and denounce history’s injustices by celebrating the talent of Black Canadian music creators.”
More than 300 applications from Canadian artists were submitted for the award.
in all genres of music from across Canada
TORONTO, Jan. 11, 2021 /CNW/ - The SOCAN Foundation today announced the recipients of the inaugural
SiriusXM Black Canadian Music Awards, an award created to recognize and celebrate the artistic merit demonstrated by Black music creators. The five winners will each receive $5,000, made possible by SiriusXM Canada.
More than 300 applications from artists across Canada covering a wide variety of musical genres were submitted for the 2020 Awards.
BCMAs Winners (CNW Group/SOCAN Foundation) Congratulations to all the winners for their extraordinary talent in music creation, said Charlie Wall-Andrews, Executive Director of the SOCAN Foundation. The musical pieces submitted are indicative of the extent of the contributions made by the Canadian Black music community that is enriching Canadian culture while contributing in a significant way to social and economic inclusion.