Juno Awards of 1972

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Juno Awards of 1972
Date28 February 1972
VenueInn on the Park, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byGeorge Wilson
← 1971 · Juno Awards · 1973 →

The Juno Awards of 1972, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 28 February 1972 in Toronto at a ceremony at the Inn on the Park hotel's Centennial Ballroom.

Interest in these music awards was gaining rapidly as approximately 1000 attended the ceremonies, compared to 250 in 1970. George Wilson of CFRB radio was again the master of ceremonies for the awards.[1]

Roughly 3000 subscribers of RPM Magazine completed a survey which determined the winners of this year's awards. Most awards are determined by the poll, except for the songwriting category which was chosen by RPM editor Walt Grealis.

Winners

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Winner: Anne Murray

Winner: Ginette Reno

Winner: Gordon Lightfoot

Winner: Joey Gregorash

Winner: The Stampeders

Winner: Lighthouse

Winner: Rich Dodson

Winner: Myrna Lorrie

Winner: Stompin' Tom Connors

Winner: The Mercey Brothers

Winner: Bruce Cockburn

Broadcaster of the Year

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Winner: The CHUM Group

Top Canadian Content Company of the Year

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Winner: GRT of Canada

Top Record Company of the Year

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Winner: Kinney Music of Canada

Top Promotional Company of the Year

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Winner: Kinney Music of Canada

Journalist of the Year

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Winner: Ritchie Yorke

Contribution to Canadian music

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Winner: George Hamilton IV

Nominated and winning albums

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Best Produced MOR Album

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Winner: Talk It Over in the Morning by Anne Murray (produced by Brian Ahern)

Nominated and winning releases

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Best Produced Single

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Winner: "Sweet City Woman" by The Stampeders (produced by Mel Shaw

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ The Juno awards : tenth anniversary special issue. RPM Publications. 1980. pp. 9–10.

General

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  • Batten, Jack (26 February 1972). "Everybody sneered at Grealis, but Juno is suddenly respectable". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. p. 27.
  • "Special Juno Edition". RPM. 4 March 1972.
  • "Junos a Glittering Affair". RPM. 11 March 1972. p. 2.
  • Melhuish, Martin (1996). Oh What a Feeling: A Vital History of Canadian Music. Quarry Press. p. 96. ISBN 1550821644.
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