Awards
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Trailblazing Indigenous artist Bart Willoughby is the recipient of the 2024 Ted Albert Award for Outstanding Services to Australian Music.
The prestigious honor will be presented at the 2024 APRA Music Awards, to be held May 1 at ICC Sydney, on Gadigal land.
Willoughby was a founding member and the driving force behind No Fixed Address, Australia’s first and arguably most influential First Nations reggae-rock band, and the first Aboriginal band to sign a major label deal.
The group’s 1981 protest song “We Have Survived” continues to resonate and is preserved in the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.
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Willoughby’s “fusion of reggae with traditional Indigenous influences is a testament to the richness and diversity of Australia’s original cultural identity,” reads a statement from the PRO. “His illustrious career has garnered numerous accolades, yet his influence transcends music, encompassing roles as a cultural ambassador, a master storyteller, a nurturing mentor, and a steadfast advocate for truth within Indigenous communities nationwide.”
The Ted Albert Award is one of the Australian music industry’s highest decorations, and is decided by the APRA board of writer and publisher directors.
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Previous recipients include the late Mushroom Group chairman Michael Gudinski, Paul Kelly, The Seekers, Cold Chisel, former Alberts CEO Fifa Riccobono and last year’s honoree, Colin Hay of Men at Work.
“I am very proud to receive the Ted Albert Award for my services to Australian music,” comments Willoughby, a Kokatha and Mirning man. “The best advice I received as a young musician was from Aunty Leila Rankin at CASM whilst I was preoccupied practising; she kindly opened the door and forced me out telling me ‘I’ll learn my craft on the road, it’s been a Long Road.’”
Ahead of this year’s APRAs, Taylor Swift and co-writer Jack Antonoff win most performed international work for “Anti-Hero,” her hit lead single from her chart-topping 10th studio album Midnights. “Anti-Hero” wins from a shortlist that included songs by Ed Sheeran, Miley Cyrus, Sam Smith, and David Guetta.As previously reported, Sarah Aarons leads the pack heading into 2024 APRAs, with Troye Sivan, Budjerah, Ainslie Wills, Styalz Fuego, Amy Shark, The Kid LAROI, James Johnston and MAY-A close behind.
Established in 1982, the Australasian Performing Right Association’s annual songwriters’ ceremony is one of the Australian music industry’s most treasured events, a worthy counterpart to Britain’s Ivor Novello Awards.
Today (Apr. 17), the Latin Grammys announced their return to Miami to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the award show, set to take place Thursday, Nov. 14.
It’s the second big announcement by the Latin Academy in the past few weeks. In late March, the Academy announced it was adding new categories to the awards: best contemporary Mexican music album and best Latin electronic music performance.
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Addition of the best contemporary Mexican music album in particular was heralded by many as a positive reaction to longstanding criticism that the Latin Grammys don’t fairly represent regional Mexican artists and music, particularly in the “Big Four” categories: album, record and song of the year and best new artist.
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The new category also highlights how the Academy can respond swiftly to changes in the market. In the past 12 months, regional Mexican music (or Música Mexicana), as many use to refer to the many genres of Mexican music, has flooded the Billboard charts (including the Hot 100). Much of the activity has come from particularly new and often very young artists, whose brand of music reflects a more “contemporary” artistic and personal outlook.
The Academy made another major change, stating that if a category does not get enough entries, its status can change. This brings the Latin Grammys in line with the regular Grammys, which has long had such a rule.
In order to have the standard five nominees, each category needs at least 40 distinct artist entries. “If a category receives between 25 and 39 entries, only three recordings will receive nominations in that year,” the rules now read. “Should there be fewer than 25 entries in a category, that category will immediately go on hiatus for the current year and entries will be screened into the next most logical category. If a category receives fewer than 25 entries for three consecutive years, the category will be discontinued, and submissions will be entered in the next most appropriate category.”
That change, buried underneath news of the new categories, is actually crucial, as it ensures competitiveness for the entire field of nominees. With that in mind, here are three other arenas where the Latin Academy would benefit from additional change.
1. Reduce the number of nominations in the “Big Four” categories.
In 2012, the Latin Grammys bumped the number of nominees in each of their Big Four categories from five to 10. We see little value in this increase. The result is a bloated list of nominees that often reads like a list of trying to please everyone, which effectively dilutes the merits of the big nominees. The Latin Grammys’ jump from five to 10 was emulated by the Recording Academy in 2022, when it also raised the number of Big Four nominees from eight to 10 (the categories only had five nominees up until 2017). That experiment lasted all of two years: In 2023, the Academy announced it was going back to eight nominees in each of the big categories — still way too much, but better than the 10 that make our eyes glaze over at the Latin Grammys.
2. How about those nominating committees?
In 2021, the Grammys eliminated their controversial nominations review committees, leaving them in place only for “craft” categories that require special know-how (think categories like best music film or best engineered album).
But the Latin Grammys have not eliminated the vast majority of its committees, leaving the fate of many nominations in the hands of a select few. The Latin Academy’s website states that “in craft and other specialized categories, final nominations are determined by national nomination review committees comprised of voting members in the U.S. and International.” If the criteria for a nomination committee is “specialization,” why are there still committees deciding the fate of the Big Four categories?
With very limited exceptions (i.e. very specific categories like flamenco or vallenato), the rank and file of voters should decide who final nominees are.
3. Change the requirements for best classical music album category.
Classical music is universal, with the same repertoire performed by accomplished musicians around the globe. And yet, the requirements for this category state: “For the Latin Recording Academy, Classical Music albums are those in which participants are predominantly Latino composers, directors or performers in any of its forms: composition, performance, direction.” The Academy should modify this description by dropping the requirement that performers or directors be predominantly Latino, and instead focus on the importance of the composition itself as of Iber-American origin.
Narrowing this award to artists of Latin origin, regardless of the repertoire, dilutes the importance of both the award and its recipients. Latin artists should compete on equal footing — as, for example, Gustavo Dudamel, the conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, has successfully done in the Grammy awards.
BMI celebrated songwriter, composer and producer David Foster at the 74th annual BMI/NAB Dinner held Tuesday (April 16) at Encore Las Vegas. The private event was sponsored by Xperi.
BMI President & CEO Mike O’Neill presented Foster with the award, praising Foster’s “extraordinary creativity and the singular impact he’s made as a songwriter, a producer, an artist, a mentor and a philanthropist.” Foster joined BMI in 1978.
The annual BMI/NAB dinner recognizes the mutually supportive relationship between the songwriting community and the broadcast industry. Past recipients of the BMI honor include Paul Anka, John Fogerty, Graham Nash, Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Mike Post, Carlos Santana, Paul Simon, Carrie Underwood and John Williams.
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Following a video of career highlights, Foster performed. He was joined on stage by his wife, singer-actress Katharine McPhee, and classically trained vocalist Daniel Emmet.
Foster has received many accolades over the years, including 16 Grammy Awards, a Primetime Emmy and three Oscar nods for best original song.
His Grammys include three wins for producer of the year (non-classical), three for album of the year and two for record of the year. He has won 11 of his 16 Grammys for producing, four for arranging and one for songwriting (his first Grammy, for co-writing Earth, Wind & Fire’s 1979 smash “After the Love Has Gone,” which was voted best R&B song). His other Grammys are for work with Jennifer Holliday (on the Dreamgirls cast album), Chicago, Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole, Celine Dion, Whitney Houston and Michael Bublé.
His Emmy was for co-writing a song for The Concert for World Children’s Day, an ABC special in 2003. He has been nominated three times for outstanding music direction for those endlessly replayed Great Performances specials on PBS.
Foster was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2010. He was honored as a BMI Icon the following year. He has won 42 BMI Awards and was named BMI pop songwriter of the year three times.
The 2024 Latin Grammys are set to take place in Miami on Nov. 14, the Latin Recording Academy announced on Wednesday (April 17) during a press conference. The 25th Annual Latin Grammy Awards will be held in Miami at the Kaseya Center, in partnership with Miami-Dade County and the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau […]
The 31st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards will be held on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. The two-hour ceremony will stream live coast-to-coast on Netflix at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. This will mark the show’s second consecutive year streaming live on Netflix.
The SAG Awards annually celebrates the year’s outstanding motion picture and television performances. Voted on by SAG-AFTRA’s membership of 119,000-plus performers, the SAG Awards has the largest voting body on the awards circuit.
The SAG Awards have proven to be a solid – but not infallible – Oscar indicator. At this year’s SAG Awards, the trophies for film acting went to Cillian Murphy for Oppenheimer, Lily Gladstone for Killers of the Flower Moon, Robert Downey Jr. for Oppenheimer and Da’vine Joy Randolph for The Holdovers. All but one repeated those wins at the Oscars. (The exception was Gladstone, who lost at the Oscars to Emma Stone for Poor Things.)
The SAG Awards give their members ample time – more than five weeks – to vote in the final round. Voting is set to open on Wednesday, Jan. 15, and to close on Friday, Feb. 21 – just two days before the awards are announced. This timetable ensures that the voting is fresh and up-to-the-minute. At some other awards shows, voting closes a full month before the awards are announced.
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Eligible performances must air or premiere between Jan. 1, 2024, and Dec. 31, 2024. All submissions must be submitted online via the SAG Awards’ website.
Here are deadlines and events leading up to the 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards:
Monday, Aug. 29: submissions open
Friday, Nov. 1: submissions close at 5 p.m. PT
Monday, Dec. 16: nominations voting opens
Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025: nominations voting closes at 5 p.m. PT
Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025: nominations announced
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025: final voting opens
Friday, Feb. 21, 2025: final voting closes at 12:00 noon PT
Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025: 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards air live on Netflix
Diplo, Ellie Goulding and Italian singing legend Andrea Bocelli and his wife, Veronica, were honored at The Playing for Change Foundation’s 2024 Impact Awards, held on Saturday, April 13, at the Rubell Museum in Miami.
“It’s very humbling to receive this acknowledgment from the Playing for Change Foundation,” said Diplo. “Music has the incredible ability to break down barriers and uplift people, and I’m proud to stand alongside fellow artists in using our platforms to make a difference.”
Goulding also accepted her award in person. The Bocellis received theirs virtually.
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Diplo is a three-time Grammy winner. Goulding and Bocelli have both been Grammy-nominated, but have yet to win.
The lineup included Playing for Change Foundation (PFCF) partner program Young Musicians Unite, DJ and producer Note Marcato, as well as Hip-Hop Kidz, who performed a mashup of the honorees’ music. An afterparty, held at Superblue Miami and presented in partnership with MGM+, featured performances by Diplo and Sofi Tukker.
The event highlighted the foundation’s global impact, with PFCF CEO Jake Groshong reminding attendees of the foundation’s work in more than 60 locations across 21 countries.
PFCF’s mission is to help youth rise up through their own culture using music education. The organization reports employing more than 300 staff, teachers and community leaders locally across program locations, including Mali, Morocco, Ghana, Rwanda, South Africa, Uganda, Jordan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Thailand, Mexico, Brazil, Costa Rica, Colombia, Panama, Peru and Argentina, as well as South Dakota and Miami.
The evening also shined a spotlight on an online charity auction. To participate in the auction, which runs through April 18, go here.
Carol Burnett will be honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 49th Annual Gracie Awards Gala on May 21 at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif. The award recognizes a woman whose work in media honors the legacy of Gracie Allen, a pioneering force in the industry and the award’s namesake. The awards are presented by the Alliance for Women in Media Foundation (AWMF).
Rachel Platten, who had a top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2015 with “Fight Song” and who won a Daytime Emmy the following year for a performance on Good Morning America, will perform at the gala.
“Carol Burnett is a true icon of television and entertainment, whose impact spans decades and resonates with audiences of all ages,” Becky Brooks, president of the AWMF, said in a statement. “Her groundbreaking work on The Carol Burnett Show set a standard for excellence in comedy and storytelling.”
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Burnett won her seventh competitive Emmy Award in January for outstanding variety special (pre-recorded) for Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love. The two-hour NBC special featured such pals as Julie Andrews and Cher and a performance by Katy Perry of “I’m So Glad We Had This Time Together,” the theme song to The Carol Burnett Show.
That award gave Burnett a 61-year span of Primetime Emmys. She won her first such award in 1962 for outstanding performance in a variety or musical program for The Gary Moore Show.
In 2017, Burnett won a Grammy for best spoken word album for In Such Good Company: Eleven Years of Laughter, Mayhem & Fun in the Sandbox.
In 1985, Burnett became just the second woman (after Lucille Ball) to be inducted into the Television Hall of Fame. Her many other honorary awards include the Kennedy Center Honors (2003), the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2005), the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor (2013), and the life achievement award from the Screen Actors Guild (2015). In 2019, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association created The Carol Burnett Award which is an honorary Golden Globe to celebrate outstanding contributions to television. Burnett was the first recipient.
Burnett co-stars in the new series Palm Royal for Apple TV, which premiered March 20. The cast includes Kristin Wiig, Allison Janney, Laura Dern, Ricky Martin and Josh Lucas.
As a non-profit organization, AWMF is committed to developing educational programs, charitable activities and scholarship initiatives that directly benefit women in the media.
April 16 marks the centennial of Henry Mancini’s birth. The composer won album of the year at the inaugural Grammy Awards in 1959 (for The Music From Peter Gunn) and was the first composer to win back-to-back Oscars for best original song (for “Moon River” and “Days of Wine and Roses,” both written with lyricist Johnny Mercer).
The Mancini family is celebrating the centennial on multiple fronts, and has announced The Henry Mancini 100th Sessions – Henry Has Company. The album, with a title that nods to Ray Charles’ posthumous 2004 hit Genius Loves Company, will be available June 21 via Primary Wave. The first single, “Peter Gunn” — featuring Quincy Jones, John Williams, Herbie Hancock, and Arturo Sandoval — is out now.
On being asked to contribute to the upcoming album, Michael Bublé said: “When the Mancini family calls and asks you to be a part of honoring the legacy of a genius, you say, ‘Thank you so very much. I would love to be there.’ … You say yes!”
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Here’s the full track list for The Henry Mancini 100th Sessions – Henry Has Company.
“Peter Gunn” feat. Quincy Jones, John Williams, Herbie Hancock, and Arturo Sandoval
“Pink Panther” feat. Lizzo and Sir James Galway
“Moon River” feat. Michael Bublé with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
“Lujon (Slow Hot Wind)” feat. Pat Metheny
“Days of Wine and Roses” feat. Take 6 & Monica Mancini
“Baby Elephant Walk” feat. Snarky Puppy
“Moon River / Audrey’s Letter,” feat. Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Los Angeles Master Chorale, Stevie Wonder, and Audrey Hepburn
On June 23, The Hollywood Bowl Orchestra and special guests Bublé, Cynthia Erivo and Monica Mancini will raise the curtain on the Bowl’s 2024 season with a 100th birthday celebration for Henry Mancini conducted by Thomas Wilkins.
The Henry Mancini 100th Sessions
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Additionally, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on Tuesday unveiled an installation on behalf of Mancini’s 100th birthday in its Cleveland Rocks gallery. The installation features Mancini’s Grammy for album of the year, a bomber jacket with embroidered “Hank” from the Pink Panther Tour, a handwritten score of Peter Gunn and more.
TCM will honor Mancini’s birthday Tuesday with a lineup of programming dedicated to the late composer. The full 24-hour schedule will feature classics that he scored, including The Pink Panther, Breakfast at Tiffany’s and Two for the Road.
This past Valentine’s Day, Tiffany’s in New York displayed a handwritten letter from Audrey Hepburn, the star of Breakfast at Tiffany’s, to Mancini. Last week, Tiffany’s in Tokyo unveiled its display of Mancini’s two Oscars for the film (best original song and best original score) as well as Hepburn’s dress from the film. The exhibition is open to the public until June 23.
CBS Sunday Morning has aired two tribute episodes on the Mancini centennial, with a third episode to be aired prior to the release of the album.
On Aug. 4, music director, conductor and arranger Kevin Stites will explore Mancini’s music at the annual Gala Benefit Evening at the Ravinia Festival. Curated and hosted by actor Rob Lindley, “Mancini at 100: The Music of Henry Mancini” features Broadway vocalists Jessie Mueller, Norm Lewis and Karen Mason.
This fall, The Extraordinary Life of Henry Mancini: Official Graphic Novel will hit shelves. This new graphic novel, written by David Calcano and illustrated by the studio Fantoons, illustrates every step in Mancini’s journey.
Mancini’s songs have been covered by a broad range of artists, including Beyoncé, Carpenters, Frank Ocean, Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Elton John and R.E.M.
“Moon River” ranked No. 4 on AFI’s 2004 list AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs, behind “Over the Rainbow” from The Wizard of Oz, “As Time Goes By” from Casablanca and “Singin’ in the Rain” from the movie of the same name. (Of these four songs, only “Moon River” and Over the Rainbow” were written for those films.)
“Days of Wine and Roses” ranked No. 39 on that list. Mancini’s score for The Pink Panther ranked No. 20 on AFI’s 2005 list AFI’s 100 Years of Film Scores.
Mancini was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1984. He received a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy posthumously in 1995.
Mancini seemed to have a charmed life and career, except for dying at the relatively young age of 70 of pancreatic cancer. He died in Los Angeles on June 14, 1994, while he was working on the Broadway adaptation of Victor/Victoria. He had won his fourth Oscar for that 1982 film.
SZA will receive the Hal David Starlight Award at the 2024 Songwriters Hall of Fame Induction and Awards dinner on Thursday, June 13, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City.
The award, named after the late lyricist and SHOF chairman emeritus, is presented to “gifted young songwriters who are making a significant impact in the music industry with their original songs,” according to the announcement.
It is meant as a balance to the Johnny Mercer Award, the organization’s top award, which is a career-capping honor. This year’s Mercer Award will be presented to Diane Warren. This marks only the second time that both the Mercer Award and the Hal David Starlight Award will be presented to female artists. In 2019, Carole Bayer Sager took the Mercer prize, while Halsey won the Starlight Award.
SZA will become the second Black woman to receive the honor, following Alicia Keys in 2005.
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SZA and Warren competed for an Academy Award for best original song in 2019. SZA was nominated for co-writing “All the Stars” from Black Panther; Warren for writing “I’ll Fight” from RBG, a documentary about Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Neither song won. The award went to “Shallow” from A Star Is Born.
The “Snooze” singer was the most nominated artist at the 66th annual Grammy Awards, with nine nods. She won three Grammys in February for her sophomore album SOS, though she lost the top prize, album of the year, to Taylor Swift (the 2010 recipient of the Hal David Starlight Award).
“This is such an exciting time for songwriters and music,” SHOF chairman Nile Rodgers said in a statement. “Phenomenal artists like Beyoncé and Taylor Swift are pushing the envelope of what success looks like, but who could argue that the last two years belong to SZA. Incredible songwriting, incredible performances, incredible artistry. She so deserves to be the 2024 recipient of the Hal David Starlight Award!”
SOS topped the all-genre Billboard 200 for 10 weeks and headed Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart for 24 weeks. “Kill Bill” and “Snooze” reached No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts.
Previously announced 2024 inductees are Hillary Lindsey; Timothy Mosley (aka Timbaland); Dean Pitchford; R.E.M. (Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe) and Steely Dan (Donald Fagen and the late Walter Becker).
Here’s the complete list of recipients of the Hal David Starlight Award.
2004: Rob Thomas (Matchbox Twenty)
2005: Alicia Keys
2006: John Mayer
2007: John Legend
2008: John Rzeznik (Goo Goo Dolls)
2009: Jason Mraz
2010: Taylor Swift
2011: Drake
2012: Ne-Yo
2013: Benny Blanco
2014: Dan Reynolds (Imagine Dragons)
2015: Nate Ruess (fun.)
2016: Nick Jonas (Jonas Brothers)
2017: Ed Sheeran
2018: Sara Bareilles
2019: Halsey
2022: Lil Nas X
2023: Post Malone
2024: SZA
04/16/2024
Lily Tomlin’s This Is a Recording joins the list this year. As her character Ernestine would say, ‘One ringy-dingy, two ringy-dingy.’
04/16/2024