Regina Leader-Post

Awards show a creative collaborat­ion

- By Shawn Conner

When Alessia Cara hosts this year’s JUNO Awards on March 15, the 23-yearold will be one of the youngest hosts ever. This makes the Brampton, Ontario-raised singer-songwriter’s input into the awards show especially valuable, says executive producer Lindsay Cox. “When we first started talking to her, her observatio­ns were really smart,” said Cox, from Insight Production­s who produces The JUNO Awards Broadcast. “She wasn’t going to just let the show happen around her, she was going to be a part of making it happen. The host has such an important role in setting the tone, and I think that mattered to Alessia. We wanted to know what her generation wants to see on television. So we really encouraged her to think that way. And she does think that way. She knows her audience.” Cara performed on the awards show for the first time in 2016, the year she won her first JUNO Award for Breakthrou­gh Artist of the Year Sponsored by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s Private Radio Broadcaste­rs, followed by Pop Album of the Year in 2017 for her debut fulllength Know-it-all and a GRAMMY for Best New Artist in 2018. “We’ve watched her grow up,” says Allan Reid, President & CEO of CARAS (The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences)/ The JUNO Awards & Musicounts. This year, the young singer is the JUNOS’ most nominated artist, with her name appearing in six categories (including Album of the Year Presented by Music Canada for her second full-length, The Pains of Growing). “First, she’s an incredible musician, and very focused on what she’s doing musically,” Reid said. “But she’s also an incredibly smart as well as humble person. And in what she talks about, what she writes about, she’s become an incredible role model for young women.” Cox and her team fielded suggestion­s from the young singer for the show. “When you think of how social media grabs people, it’s in little snippets, little bites, and she asked how could she do that, along with taking on a more traditiona­l hosting role.” Along with hosting, Cara is scheduled to perform. Other scheduled performers include JUNO Award nominees Daniel Caesar (R&b/soul Recording of the Year), The Glorious Sons (Rock Album of the Year), Lennon Stella (Breakthrou­gh Artist of the Year Sponsored by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s Private Radio Broadcaste­rs and Single of the Year), Tory Lanez (five nomination­s, including twice in R&b/soul Recording of the Year), Jann Arden and more. Arden, who hosted the program in 1997 and co-hosted alongside Jon Montgomery in 2016, will be inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. This marks a milestone for not just the singer-songwriter but for CARAS’ Reid. Back when he was an A&R man for Universal Music Canada, Reid signed Arden to a record deal. She was his first signing. “To come full circle with her now, to see her go into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame almost 30 years later, is pretty special,” he said. The JUNOS have evolved from an industry awards event to a week-long festival in the host city. After a 13-year hiatus, the JUNOS are thrilled to be returning to Saskatoon. “You rarely see these artists all come through at one time in these smaller markets,” Cox said. “And that’s exciting. We’re finding such enthusiasm for supporting the show.” Local talent up for awards this year include The Dead South (Traditiona­l Roots Album of the Year) and Foxwarren (Alternativ­e Album of the Year Presented by Long & Mcquade), both from Regina, and the Hunter Brothers. The latter are five siblings from the town of Shaunavon, and are nominated for Breakthrou­gh Group of the Year Sponsored by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s Private Radio Broadcaste­rs and Country Album of the Year. Once this year’s JUNOS are behind them, Reid, Cox and their respective teams will focus on 2021 and the show’s 50th anniversar­y, to be held in Toronto for the first time in a decade. “The 50th will be a very special celebratio­n, where we’re not just looking forward but looking back on decades of Canadian music,” Reid said. This year’s fast-rising host, Alessia Cara, may be part of that celebratio­n as well.

 ?? PHOTO CREDIT: OLIVIA AITA ?? ALESSIA CARA
PHOTO CREDIT: OLIVIA AITA ALESSIA CARA

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