Juno Awards of 1978

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Juno Awards of 1978
Date29 March 1978
VenueHarbour Castle Hilton Hotel, Toronto, Ontario
Hosted byDavid Steinberg
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBC
← 1977 · Juno Awards · 1979 →

The Juno Awards of 1978, representing Canadian music industry achievements of the previous year, were awarded on 29 March 1978 in Toronto at a ceremony hosted for a second consecutive year by David Steinberg at the Harbour Castle Hilton Convention Centre. A 2-hour broadcast of the ceremonies was available nationally on CBC Television. 1500 people were present at the ceremonies.

At a news conference following the awards, on 31 March 1978, Stompin' Tom Connors announced he would return his Juno trophies to awards organiser CARAS as a protest against rewarding "Juno jumpers" or artists who do not maintain a residence or presence in Canada. Connors earlier withdrew his nomination as Country Male Vocalist of the Year.

Nominees and winners[edit]

Female Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Patsy Gallant

Other nominees:

Male Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Dan Hill

Other nominees:

Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Lisa Dalbello

Other nominees:

Most Promising Male Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: David Bradstreet

Other nominees:

Group of the Year[edit]

Winner: Rush

Other nominees:

Most Promising Group of the Year[edit]

Winner: Hometown Band

Other nominees:

Composer of the Year[edit]

Winner: Dan Hill (Co-composer), "Sometimes When We Touch"

Country Female Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Carroll Baker

Other nominees:

Country Male Vocalist of the Year[edit]

Winner: Ronnie Prophet

Other nominees:

Multiple Juno winner Stompin' Tom Connors withdrew his nomination to protest Junos given to expatriate Canadians.(Green and King, CanadianEncyclopedia.ca)

Country Group or Duo of the Year[edit]

Winner: The Good Brothers

Folk Singer of the Year[edit]

Winner: Gordon Lightfoot

Other nominees:

Instrumental Artist of the Year[edit]

Winner: André Gagnon

Other nominees:

Producer of the Year (single)[edit]

Winner: Matthew McCauley/Fred Mollin, "Sometimes When We Touch" by Dan Hill

Producer of the Year (album)[edit]

Winner: Matthew McCauley/Fred Mollin, Longer Fuse by Dan Hill

Recording Engineer of the Year[edit]

Winner:(tie)

Canadian Music Hall of Fame[edit]

Winners:

Nominated and winning albums[edit]

Best Selling Album[edit]

Winner: Longer Fuse, Dan Hill

Other nominees:

Best Album Graphics[edit]

Winner: Dave Anderson, Short Turn by Short Turn

Best Classical Album of the Year[edit]

Winner: Three Borodin Symphonies, Toronto Symphony Orchestra

Best Selling International Album[edit]

Winner: Rumours, Fleetwood Mac

Best Jazz Album[edit]

Winner: Big Band Jazz, Rob McConnell & The Boss Brass

Nominated and winning releases[edit]

Best Selling Single[edit]

Winner: Sugar Daddy, Patsy Gallant

Other nominees:

Best Selling International Single[edit]

Winner: "When I Need You", Leo Sayer

References[edit]

  • "The Junos: Hill and Cummings the frontrunners". The Globe and Mail. 23 March 1978. p. 15.
  • Godfrey, Stephen (30 March 1978). "Dan Hill takes three top Junos". The Globe and Mail. p. 13.
  • "Stompin' Tom awaits industry blacklist". The Globe and Mail. 1 April 1978. p. 32.

External links[edit]