Juno Award for Recording Engineer of the Year
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Juno Award for “Recording Engineer of the Year” has been awarded since 1976, as recognition each year for the best recording engineer in Canada.[citation needed]
Winners[edit]
Recording Engineer of the Year (1976 – 1998)[edit]
- 1976 – Michel Ethier, Dompierre (album)|Dompierre by François Dompierre
- 1977 – Paul Pagé, Are You Ready For Love by Patsy Gallant
- 1978 – (tie) Terry Brown, Hope by Klaatu AND David Greene, Big Band Jazz by The Boss Brass
- 1979 – Ken Friesen, Let’s Keep It That Way by Anne Murray
- 1980 – David Greene, Concerto for Contemporary Violin by Paul Hoffert
- 1981 – Mike Jones, “Factory”” and “We’re OK” by Instructions
- 1982 – (tie) Gary Gray, “Attitude” & “For Those Who Think Young”” by Rough Trade AND Keith Stein / Bob Rock, “When It’s Over” & “It’s Your Life” by Loverboy
- 1983 – Bob Rock, No Stranger To Danger by Payolas
- 1984 – John Naslen, Stealing Fire by Bruce Cockburn
- 1985 – Hayward Parrott, Underworld by The Front
- 1986 – Joe Vannelli / Gino Vannelli, Black Cars
- 1987 – Gino Vannelli / Joe Vannelli, “Wild Horses” & “Young Lover”
- 1989 – Mike Fraser, “Calling America” & “Different Drummer” by Tom Cochrane & Red Rider
- 1990 – Kevin Doyle, Alannah Myles
- 1991 – Gino Vannelli / Joe Vannelli, “The Time of Day” & “Sunset On LA”
- 1992 – Mike Fraser, “Thunderstruck” & “Moneytalks” by AC/DC
- 1993 – Jeff Wolpert / John Whynot, “The Lady of Shallott” by Loreena McKennitt
- 1994 – Kevin Doyle, “Old Cape Cod” & “Cry Me a River” by Anne Murray
- 1995 – Lenny DeRose, “Lay My Body Down” & “Charms” by The Philosopher Kings
- 1996 – Chad Irschick, “O Siem” by Susan Aglukark
- 1997 – Paul Northfield, “Another Sunday” by I Mother Earth, “Leave It Alone” by Moist
- 1998 – Michael Phillip Wojewoda, “Armstrong and the Guys” & “Our Ambassador” by Spirit of the West
Best Recording Engineer (1999 – 2002)[edit]
Recording Engineer of the Year (2003 – present)[edit]
- 2003 – Denis Tougas, “Double Agent” & “Everybody’s Got A Story” by Amanda Marshall
- 2004 – Mike Haas / Dylan Heming / Jeff Wolpert, “Heat Wave” and “Something Cool” by Holly Cole
- 2005 – L. Stu Young, “What Do U Want Me 2 Do?” and “If Eye Was the Man in Ur Life” by Prince
- 2006 – Vic Florencia, “Everyday Is a Holiday” and “Melancholy Melody” by Esthero
- 2007 – John “Beetle” Bailey, “Rain” by Molly Johnson and “Sisters of Mercy” by Serena Ryder
- 2008 – Kevin Churko, Black Rain by Ozzy Osbourne
- 2009 – Kevin Churko, “Disappearing” and “The Big Bang” (Simon Collins, U-Catastrophe)
- 2010 – Dan Brodbeck, “Apple Of My Eye” and “Be Careful” (Dolores O’Riordan, No Baggage)
- 2011 – Kevin Churko, “Let It Die”, “Life Won’t Wait” (Ozzy Osbourne, Scream)
- 2012 – George Seara, “A Little Bit of Love”, Michael Kaeshammer and “Let Go”, Laila Biali
- 2013 – Kevin Churko / (co-engineer Kane Churko), “Blood” from Blood by In This Moment; “Coming Down” from American Capitalist by Five Finger Death Punch
- 2014 – Eric Ratz, “Sweet Mountain River” and “The Lion” from Furiosity by Monster Truck
- 2015 – Eric Ratz, “Ghosts” from Ghosts by Big Wreck and “Satellite Hotel” from Black Buffalo by One Bad Son
- 2016 – Shawn Everett, “Don’t Wanna Fight”, “Gimme All Your Love” from Sound & Color by Alabama Shakes
- 2017 – Jason Dufour, “Push + Pull”, “Beck + Call” from Touch by July Talk
- 2018 – Riley Bell, “Get You” by Daniel Caesar feat. Kali Uchis, “We Find Love” by Daniel Caesar
- 2019 – Shawn Everett, “Slow Burn”, “Space Cowboy” (Kacey Musgraves, Golden Hour)
- 2020 – John “Beetle” Bailey – “Dividido” (Alex Cuba feat. Silvana Estrada), “Shotgun” (Monkey House)
- 2021 – Serban Ghenea – “Blinding Lights” (The Weeknd); “Positions” (Ariana Grande)[1]
- 2022 – Hill Kourkoutis — “Howler” (SATE), “The Drought” (Tania Joy)
- 2023 – Serban Ghenea — “That’s What I Want” (Lil Nas X), “Unholy” (Sam Smith feat. Kim Petras)[2]
References[edit]
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