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ARIA Music Awards | |
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Current: 2024 ARIA Music Awards | |
Awarded for | Excellence and innovation in all genres of Australian music. |
Country | Australia |
Presented by | Australian Recording Industry Association |
First awarded | 1987 |
Last awarded | Current |
Website | ariaawards |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | Network Ten (1992–2000, 2002–08, 2010, 2014–16) Nine Network (2001, 2009, 2017–present) GO! (2011–13) YouTube (2021–present) Stan (2023–)[1] |
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The Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards (commonly known informally as ARIA Music Awards, ARIA Awards, or simply the ARIAs) is an annual series of awards nights celebrating the Australian music industry, put on by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). The event has been held annually since 1987 and encompasses the general genre-specific and popular awards (these are what is usually being referred to as "the ARIA awards") as well as Fine Arts Awards and Artisan Awards (held separately from 2004), Achievement Awards and ARIA Hall of Fame – the latter were held separately from 2005 to 2010 but returned to the general ceremony in 2011. For 2010, ARIA introduced public voted awards for the first time.
Winning, or even being nominated for, an ARIA award results in a lot of media attention and publicity on an artist, and usually increases recording sales several-fold, as well as chart significance – in 2005, for example, after Ben Lee won three awards, his album Awake Is the New Sleep jumped from No. 31 to No. 5 in the ARIA Charts, its highest position. In October 1995 singer-songwriter Tina Arena became the first woman to win Album of the Year for Don't Ask (1994) and Song of the Year for "Chains". Before the ceremony the album had achieved 3× platinum (for shipment of 210,000 copies) and by year's end it was 8× platinum (560,000 copies) and had topped the end of year albums chart.[2][third-party source needed]
In 1983, the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) was established by the six major record companies then operating in Australia, EMI, Festival Records, CBS (now known as Sony Music), RCA (now known as BMG), WEA (now known as Warner Music) and PolyGram (now known as Universal) replacing the Association of Australian Record Manufacturers (AARM) which was formed in 1956.[3] It later included smaller record companies representing independent acts/labels and has over 100 members.[3]
Australian TV pop music show Countdown presented its own annual awards ceremony, Countdown Music and Video Awards, which were co-produced by Carolyn James (also known as Carolyn Bailey) from 1981 to 1984 and, in the latter two years, in collaboration with ARIA.[4][5][6] ARIA provided peer voting for some awards, while Countdown provided coupons in the related Countdown Magazine for viewers to vote for populist awards.[7] At the 1985 Countdown awards ceremony, held on 14 April 1986, fans of INXS and Uncanny X-Men scuffled during the broadcast and as a result ARIA decided to hold their own awards.[6] Australian music journalist, Anthony O'Grady, described the fans of Uncanny X-Men, "screeching dismay and derision every time their heroes were denied a prize. Finally, when INXS were announced Best Group and Michael Hutchence walked towards the stage, X-Men fans unfurled a 2-metre banner reading: '@*l! OFF POCK FACE'".[8]
After that ceremony ARIA withdrew their support for the Countdown awards. Meanwhile, four music industry representatives had met in Sydney: a talent manager Peter Rix and three record company executives Brian Harris, Peter Ikin and Gil Robert. Rix summarised the outcome, "the industry deserved a peer-voting Awards night and it needed to be sanctioned by" ARIA.[8] Its "primary purpose was to strive for some sort of objective overview of excellence in recording."[8] Rather than the ARIA board pay the entire cost of the event, "we cooked up a scheme whereby the ARIA Awards would be funded by individual record companies buying tickets for a dinner."[8] Rix and his group approached ARIA board members, Paul Turner (also managing director of WEA) and Brian Smith (BMG's managing director) then-chairperson of ARIA. After several months of arguing for the change, Rix was appointed chair of "a committee to convene the inaugural ARIA Awards".[8]
Starting with the first ceremony, on 2 March 1987, ARIA administered its own entirely peer-voted ARIA Music Awards,[9] to "recognise excellence and innovation in all genres of Australian music" with an annual ceremony.[10][11] Initially included in the same awards ceremonies, it established the ARIA Hall of Fame in 1988, it held separate annual ceremonies from 2005 to 2010, the Hall of Fame returned to the general ceremony in 2011. The ARIA Hall of Fame "honours Australian musicians' achievements [that] have had a significant impact in Australia or around the world".[12]
The first ceremony, in 1987, featured Elton John as the compere and was held at the Sheraton Wentworth Hotel, Sydney.[13][14] There were no live performances at the early ARIAs, music for both walk on/walk off was supplied by a nightclub dj, Rick Powell. All subsequent ceremonies were held in Sydney except the 1992 event at World Congress Centre, Melbourne.[13][14] For 2010, ARIA introduced public voted awards for the first time.[15] Winning, or even being nominated for, an ARIA award results in a lot of media attention and publicity on an artist, and may increase recording sales several-fold, as well as chart significance – in 2005, for example, after Ben Lee won three awards, his album Awake Is the New Sleep jumped from No. 31 to No. 5 in the ARIA Charts, its highest position.[16]
The first five ARIA Awards were not televised, at the very first award ceremony on 2 March 1987, the host, Elton John, advised the industry to keep them off television "if you want these Awards to stay fun".[13][14] In June of that year Countdown still had its own awards ceremony, which was televised, "so there was no thought of going to TV."[8] The first televised ARIA Awards ceremony occurred in 1992, all subsequent ceremonies were televised.[14] They were broadcast on Network Ten from 2002 to 2008 and returned in 2010.[15] Nine Network aired the ceremony on 26 November 2009, its digital channel, GO!, aired the 2011 ARIA Music Awards on 27 November 2011. In 2023, the ceremony will air live on Stan with a delayed broadcast on Nine Network and YouTube.
At the 1988 ceremony a fracas developed between band manager, Gary Morris, accepting awards for Midnight Oil, and former Countdown compere, Ian "Molly" Meldrum, who was presenting. They conflicted over visiting United Kingdom artist, Bryan Ferry, who had also presented an award. Morris objected to Ferry's presence and insulted him, Meldrum defended Ferry and then scuffled with Morris.[14] Also in that year Midnight Oil were nominated for Best Indigenous Record for Diesel and Dust despite having no Indigenous members.[17] Morris objected to that decision by ARIA, "an Indigenous Award should go to an indigenous band."[17] In 1995 electronic music group, Itch-E and Scratch-E, won the inaugural award for "Best Dance Release" for their single, "Sweetness and Light". Band member, Paul Mac thanked Sydney's ecstasy dealers for their help.[14] One of the sponsors of the awards, that year, was the National Drug Offensive. In 2005 Mac explained that he did not expect to win and so had not prepared a speech.[14] His speech was bleeped for the TV broadcast.
During the 2004 voting process, former 3RRR radio DJ Cousin Creep (also known as Craig Barnes), published his user name and password on a music site, Rocknerd, allowing public votes, before being removed from voting two days later.[18][19] The 2007 ARIA Awards telecast was marred by controversy after it was revealed by the ABC's Media Watch programme that Network Ten had used subliminal advertising during the course of the broadcast, which under the Australian Media and Broadcasting rules is illegal. Network Ten disputed the finding; however, their basis for defence was criticised by Media Watch, demonstrating an ignorance of the rules.
Tony Cohen, a record producer and audio engineer for Nick Cave and the Cruel Sea, who won three Artisan Awards in mid-1990s, described the ARIA Board's determination of general award winners, "I find them a bit hypocritical those ARIAs. I mean, the awards for the technical people are quite honest but the ones for the actual artists, basically the record companies just sit down at a meeting and decide which one of their acts are going to win this year and all, that sort of thing. It's like a promotion thing."[20] He specifically pointed to Gabriella Cilmi's winning six trophies in 2008, "like that girl who won everything... who only had one song. It's a great song but, I mean, I'd rather see a little longevity first... I wish her luck and everything but you just don't, especially with kids that young."[20]
The 2010 telecast was criticised in media reports: Crikey's Neil Walker decried the "infamously shambolic Sydney Opera House fiasco",[21] The Punch's Rebekah Devlin speculated on it being the worst ever telecast, "it felt like we'd stumbled into some raging A-list party and we definitely weren't invited [...] Guests who were there said it was a great night, but it reignites the debate of what the Arias are actually all about… is it an event staged for the musicians and the people there, or is it for a TV audience?",[22] while Daily Telegraph's Kathy McCabe felt the "underlying problem with the past two years' telecasts is they have tried to be all things to all people and do way too much" and advised that ARIA should get "professionals to do the job professionally, give them ample time to rehearse and allow them to protest when the words just don't work".[23] In 2011 Dallas Crane's vocalist and guitarist, Dave Larkin hoped for improvement from ARIA and the telecast, "[s]o gross was last year's 'stubby-on-the-opera-house-steps' screaming match, that it still burns a brutal reflux just thinking what horrible depths our embattled industry and its unfortunate viewership plummeted to on that grievous evening of small screen hell" and felt their main flaw was that the "ARIAs never seem to take enough time or pride educating the masses on our local industry legends ... There never seems to be enough reference or homage paid to great Aussie pop and rock trailblazers who made and continue to make Australian music what it is today".[24]
To be eligible, a release must be commercially available within the specified period for a given year. Material must be previously unrecorded, thus ruling out most live albums. A recording can be nominated within multiple categories, but only one genre category (for example, an album could not be simultaneously nominated for Best Pop Release and Best Dance Release). Re-released recordings are not eligible and compilations are not eligible.
Artists must either be Australian citizens, or have applied for or attained permanent resident status and have resided in Australia for at least six months within the specified period. For bands, at least half the members of the group must meet this requirement. If a recording refers to both an individual and a band (for example, Dan Kelly & the Alpha Males), it must be nominated only the basis of the individual or the band, not mixed or both.
Some categories have further requirements as specified below:
Sales awards are judged by an independent audit. The Hall of Fame and Lifetime Achievement awards are awarded at the discretion of the ARIA Board. Genre categories are judged by "voting schools" that consist of 40–100 representatives from that genre. The remaining generalist categories are the "voting academy", which, in 2009, consisted of 1106 representatives from across the music industry.[25]
Members of the academy are kept secret. Membership is by invitation only. An individual record company may have up to eight members on the academy. The only artists eligible to vote are winners and nominees from the previous year's awards.[25]
The ARIA Awards are given in four fields: ARIA Awards (for general and genre categories), Fine Arts, Artisan and Public Vote. With the exception of the Public Vote field, all award winners and nominees are determined by either a "voting academy" or a "judging school"; the nominees for the public voted categories are determined by ARIA with the public choosing the winner.[26] In the following tables, all the categories are listed in order of the year they were first given; any box in the "last awarded" column that says "N/A" is a current award. The years are linked to their corresponding ceremony and the ordinal numbers beside the year correspond to the order they were presented.
Category | First awarded | Notes |
---|---|---|
General Awards | ||
Album of the Year | 1987 (1st) | Originally named Best Australian Album (1987–1998) |
Best Group | Originally named Best Australian Group (1987–1998) | |
Best Adult Contemporary Album | Originally named Best Australian Adult Contemporary Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Adult Contemporary Release (1995–1998) | |
Best Country Album | Originally named Best Australian Country Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Country Release (1995–1998) | |
Best Children's Album | 1988 (2nd) | Originally named Best Australian Children's Record (1988–1994) and Best Australian Children's Release (1995–1998). This award was presented in the Fine Arts field from 1988 to 2000. |
Best Independent Release | 1989 (3rd) | Originally named Best Australian Independent Record (1989–1994) and Best Australian Independent Release (1995–1998) |
Best Pop Release | 1994 (8th) | Originally named Best Australia Pop Dance Record (1994) and Best Australian Pop Release (1995–1998) |
Best Dance Release | 1995 (9th) | Originally named Best Australian Dance Release (1995–1998) and Best Dance Artist Release (1999–2003) |
Best Rock Album | 1998 (12th) | Originally named Best Australian Rock Release (1998) |
Best Blues and Roots Album | 1999 (13th) | |
Breakthrough Artist – Release | 2010 (24th) | Originally named Breakthrough Artist (2010), then Breakthrough Artist – Release (2012–2013) and in 2014, it returned to its current title. Not presented in 2011 but reinstated in the following year. |
Best Hard Rock or Heavy Metal Album | ||
Best Hip Hop Release | 2019 (33rd) | |
Best Soul/R&B Release | ||
Best Artist | 2021 (35th) | Originally named Best Male Artist and Best Female Artist (1987-2020) |
Fine Arts Awards | ||
Best Classical Album | 1987 (1st) | Originally named Best Australian Classical Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Classical Release (1995–1998) |
Best Jazz Album | Originally named Best Australian Jazz Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Jazz Release (1995–1998) | |
Best Original Soundtrack, Cast or Show Album | Originally named Best Australian Soundtrack/Cast/Show Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Soundtrack/Cast/Show Release (1995–1998); between 1999 and 2003, separate awards were given for Best Original Soundtrack Album and Best Original Show/Cast Album. Since 2017 it was named Best Original Soundtrack or Musical Theatre Cast Album. | |
Best World Music Album | 1995 (9th) | Originally named Best Folk/World/Traditional Release (1995–1998) |
Artisan Awards | ||
Best Cover Art | 1987 (1st) | Originally named Best Australian Cover Artwork (1987–1998) |
Engineer of the Year | Originally named Best Australian Engineer (1987–1998) | |
Producer of the Year | Originally named Best Australian Producer (1987–1998) | |
Public Voted Awards | ||
Single of the Year/Song of the Year | 1987 (1st) | Originally named Best Australian Single (1987–1998) and Record of the Year (1999-2001). Winners and nominees were determined by peer voting (in the general field) until 1998 when it was discontinued under the name Song of the Year (Songwriter). The accolade was re-introduced in 2012 as a public-voted category and was changed to Song of the Year.[27][nb 1] |
Best Video | Originally named Best Australian Video (1987–1998); From 1987 to 2011, Best Video was a peer voted accolade in the artisan field. From 2012 onward, the winners are public-voted from ten nominees.[30] | |
Best International Artist | 2010 (24th) | Originally named Most Popular International Artist (2010–2011) |
Best Australian Live Act | 2011 (25th) | Originally named Most Popular Australian Live Artist (2011) |
Music Teacher of the Year | 2017 (31st) |
Category | First awarded | Last awarded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
General Awards | |||
Song of the Year (Songwriter) | 1987 (1st) | 1998 (12th) | It was named Australian Song of the Year (1987–1998) when the category was for song-writing until it was discontinued |
Best Indigenous Release | Originally named Best Australian Indigenous Record (1987–1994) and Best Aboriginal/Islander Release (1995). Some nominated bands had no Indigenous Australian members | ||
Best New Talent | Originally named Best Australian New Talent (1987–1998) | ||
Highest Selling Album | 2011 (25th) | Originally named Highest Selling Australian Album (1987–1998). Not presented in 2010.[31][32] | |
Highest Selling Single | Originally named Highest Selling Australian Single (1987–1998). Not presented in 2010. | ||
Breakthrough Artist – Album | 1989 (3rd) | 2011 (25th) | Originally named Best Australian Debut Album (1989–1998) and Best New Artist – Album (1999–2003). Not presented in 2010. |
Breakthrough Artist – Single | Originally named Best Australian Debut Single (1989–1998) and Best New Artist – Single (1999–2003). Not presented in 2010. | ||
Best Adult Alternative Album | 1994 (8th) | 2016 (30th) | Originally named Best Australian Alternative Record (1994), Best Australian Alternative Release (1995–1998) and Best Alternative Release (1999–2001). After being discontinued during 2002–2009, the award was re-introduced as Best Adult Alternative Album in 2010. Award was discounted again during 2012–2015. |
Best Urban Release | 2004 (18th) | 2018 (32nd) | Originally named Best Urban Release (2004-2009) changed to Best Urban Album (2010–2017), and then in 2018, it returned to original name as Best Urban Release, but after the retirement, it was split in two categories, Best Soul/R&B Release and Best Hip Hop Release.[33] |
Best Male Artist | 1987 (1st) | 2020 (34th) | Originally named Best Australian Male Artist (1987–1998), merged into Best Artist in 2021 |
Best Female Artist | Originally named Best Australian Female Artist (1987–1998), merged into Best Artist in 2021 | ||
Best Comedy Release | Originally named Best Australian Comedy Record (1987–1994) and Best Australian Comedy Release (1995–1998) | ||
Fine Arts Awards | |||
Best Music DVD | 2004 (18th) | 2011 (25th) | Originally held in the general ceremony from 2004 to 2010, in 2011, it was held early at the nominations event. |
Public Voted Awards | |||
Most Popular Australian Album | 2010 (24th) | 2010 (24th) | |
Most Popular Australian Single |
ARIA Hall of Fame inductees have been installed annually from the category's inception, as from 1988 except 2000 and 2021 (no inductees), ARIA Outstanding Achievement Awards (periodically, first in 1988), ARIA Special Achievement Awards (periodically, first awarded in 1989), ARIA Lifetime Achievement Awards (periodically, first awarded in 1991) and ARIA Icon Awards (first in 2013).
Originally artists were inducted into the Hall of Fame at the same ceremony as the ARIA Awards, in 2005 the inaugural ARIA Icons: Hall of Fame ceremony was held separately with another inductee at the later ARIA Awards ceremony — from 2008 to 2010 the ARIA Hall of Fame ceremony was a stand-alone event with no later inductees.[35] From 2011 the Hall of Fame ceremony was held at the same time as the ARIA Awards.[36][37]
The ARIA award trophy, used since 1990, is a tall triangular pyramid made of solid stainless steel.[38] The 1987–1989 trophies were designed by Philip Mortlock, while the 1990 design was by Mark Denning.[38] The Channel V award which is V-shaped, and silver, or in the case of the award of 2008, red. As from 2005, The Hall of Fame trophy, from the Denning design, was golden coloured metal with ARIA printed in black near the base on two sides, on the third side is the award title (ARIA ICONS: HALL OF FAME), awardee name and date printed on a plaque.[39]
To see the full article for a particular year, please click on the year link.
1 ^ Rolf Harris was stripped of his induction in 2014 after being convicted for indecent assault.[53]
Highest number of awards received by an artist with the number of their nominations:
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