The Juno Awards (representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year ) from 1992, were awarded on 29th of March in Toronto at a ceremony in the O'Keefe Centre. Rick Moranis was the host for the ceremonies, which were broadcast on CBC Television from 9 pm Eastern.

Juno Awards of 1992
Date29 March 1992
VenueO'Keefe Centre, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byRick Moranis
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1991 · Juno Awards · 1993 →

Nominations were announced on 12 February 1992. Bryan Adams was nominated in 7 categories setting a Juno record, while Tom Cochrane received nominations in 6.

Adams sparked controversy in the Canadian music industry several months earlier when he openly criticised Canadian content regulations when his album project, Waking Up the Neighbours, was disqualified as Canadian for radio airplay purposes. That album was created largely with the help of non-Canadian producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange, therefore the songs fell below the legal Canadian content threshold. However, Adams qualified for the 1992 Juno nominations as an individual Canadian citizen. The 1992 Juno Awards thus became viewed as a showdown between Adams and Tom Cochrane, as the latter met Canadian content requirements.

When all the 1992 Juno Awards were presented, Tom Cochrane was the major winner with 4 Junos, compared to 3 for Adams. 1992's awards also featured an unprecedented three-way tie for winners in the Best Jazz Album category.

Nominees and winners

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Determined by public ballot.

Winner: Bryan Adams

Other Nominees:

Winner: Celine Dion

Other Nominees:

Winner: Tom Cochrane

Other Nominees:

Winner: Alanis

Other Nominees:

Note: Julie Masse was originally nominated here but was disqualified prior to the awards because her album was deemed to have been released 21 August 1990. Juno rules had set 1 September 1990 as the earliest date for which an album could qualify for the 1992 awards. Masse's nomination for this category was replaced by Meryn Cadell.[1]

Winner: Keven Jordan

Other Nominees:

Winner: Crash Test Dummies

Other Nominees:

Winner: Infidels

Other Nominees:

Winner: Tom Cochrane

Other Nominees:

Winner: Cassandra Vasik

Other Nominees:

Winner: George Fox

Other Nominees:

Winner: Prairie Oyster

Other Nominees:

Winner: Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet

Other Nominees:

Winner: Garth Brooks

Other Nominees:

Winner: Bryan Adams (with Robert John "Mutt" Lange), "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" and "Can't Stop This Thing We Started"

Other Nominees:

Winner: Mike Fraser, "Thunderstruck" and "Money Talks" by AC/DC

Other Nominees:

Winner: Ian and Sylvia Tyson

Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award

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Winner: (posthumous) Harold Moon

Nominated and winning albums

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Winner: Mad Mad World, Tom Cochrane

Other Nominees:

Winner: Vivaldi's Ring of Mystery, Classical Kids, producer Susan Hammond

Other Nominees:

  • Children of the Morning, Jack Grunsky
  • Happy Feet, Fred Penner
  • Rendezvous Soleil, Claire de Lune
  • Swing on a Star, Claire de Lune

Winner: Liszt: Années De Pelerinage, Louis Lortie piano

Other Nominees:

  • Ravel: Music for Four Hands, Louis Lortie and Helene Mercier
  • Maurice Ravel: Piano Works Vol. 1, André Laplante
  • Alessandro Scarlatti: Cantatas, Nancy Argenta
  • Smetana: Complete Czech Dances, Antonin Kubelek

Winner: Debussy: Pelleas et Melisande, Montreal Symphony Orchestra, conductor Charles Dutoit

Other Nominees:

Winner: Hugh Syme, Roll The Bones by Rush

Other Nominees:

Winner: To The Extreme, Vanilla Ice

Other Nominees:

Winners (3-way tie):

Other Nominees:

  • Climbing, Barry Elmes
  • Gliding, Stan Samole

Winner: Sauvez mon âme, Luc de Larochellière

Other Nominees:

Note: Julie Masse was originally nominated here but was disqualified prior to the awards because her album was deemed to have been released 21 August 1990. Juno rules had set 1 September 1990 as the earliest date for which an album could qualify for the 1992 awards. Masse's nomination for this category was replaced by Kathleen.[1]

Winner: Roll the Bones, Rush

Other Nominees:

Winners (tie):

Other Nominees:

Nominated and winning releases

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Winner: "Life Is a Highway", Tom Cochrane

Other Nominees:

Winner: Concerto For Piano & Chamber Orchestra, Michael Conway Baker

Other Nominees:

Winner: "More Than Words", Extreme

Other Nominees:

Winner: Call My Name, Love & Sas

Other Nominees:

Winner: My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style, Dream Warriors

Other Nominees:

Winner: The Gathering, various artists

Other Nominees:

Winner: "Everyone's a Winner" (Chocolate Movement mix), Bootsauce

Other Nominees:

Winner: Phil Kates, "Into The Fire" by Sarah McLachlan

Other Nominees:

References

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  1. ^ a b Canadian Press (18 February 1992). "Vocalist's album ruled ineligible for Juno award due to technicality". Calgary Herald. p. F5.
  • Taylor, Kate (13 February 1992). "Adams collects 7 Juno nominations (Rocker sets record for individual artist)". The Globe and Mail. pp. C1, C3.
  • Dafoe, Chris (23 March 1992). "Lang long on torch, short on twang (multi-topic article)". The Globe and Mail. pp. C1.
  • Dafoe, Chris (30 March 1992). "Adams philosophical about Juno losses (Cochrane walks off with four awards)". The Globe and Mail. pp. A1.
  • Taylor, Kate (30 March 1992). "Cochrane wins shootout at Juno corral (Public votes for Adams as entertainer of the year, but music industry snubs Vancouver star)". The Globe and Mail. pp. C1.
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