Scribe
dominates NZ Music Awards
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Scribe
won seven categories |
By
RUSSELL BAILLIE
Scribe carved his name with pride into Kiwi pop history
tonight with a near clean sweep of the 2004 New Zealand Music
Awards.
At
Auckland's Aotea Centre, the hip-hop star - who last year
became the first New Zealand artist to have an album and single
at number one in the local charts - won seven of the nine
categories in which he was nominated in the wake of his 2003
debut album The Crusader and the hit Stand Up.
His
wins included best album, single of the year, best male solo
artist, best urban/hip-hop album, best songwriter (shared
with P-Money, Con Psy and Savage for Not Many, the Remix),
and the publicly-voted People's Choice Award.
The
only categories where Scribe was a non-winning finalist were
International Achievement and Highest Selling Album (predictably
won by classical-pop teen star Hayley Westenra) and highest
selling single (won by NZ Idol Ben Lummis).
The
two Tuis won by Westenra, who has sold more than 1.5 million
copies of her second album Pure worldwide, equalled those
of the night's other major winners - Brooke Fraser and Dimmer.
Singer-songwriter
Fraser won best female solo artist and breakthrough artist
from her six nominations.
While
Dimmer, the solo project by alternative rock veteran Shayne
Carter, cleaned up both rock categories of best album and
best group.
In
the other contemporary music category, Salmonella Dub again
won the best electronic/dance music prize for their 2003 album
One Drop East.
It
was one the night's few surprises considering the showing
of fellow finalist Concord Dawn's Uprising at the b.Net awards
earlier - and the fact the Concord Dawn album had as its guests
vocalists Scribe and Salmonella Dub's Tiki Taane.
Salmonella
Dub won the same award last year for Outside the Dub Plates.
The
Chris Graham-directed live-action clip for Scribe's Stand
Up won the best video award ahead of it computer animated
competition, Dimmer's Getting What You Give and Misfits of
Science's Fools Love.
In
other categories John Psathas, the Wellington composer behind
the opening music for the Athens Olympics won the best classical
album for his Psathas: Fragments ahead of works by the New
Zealand Symphony Orchestra and the New Zealand Quartet.
Judges
voted the The Rodger Fox Big Band's A Rare Connection as jazz
album of the year, a 30th anniversary present for the group
led by the trombonist-arranger.
Previous
winner and nominee Ruia Aperahama won the Best Maori Album
award for his fourth set Hawaiki, his earlier album releases
Waiata of Bob Marley Volume 1 and 2 having both received nominations
for Tuis with Volume 1 winning Best Mana Reo Album in 2002.
Globe-trotting
group Te Vaka won the Best Pacific Music Album category for
its fourth album Tutuki.
The
39th New Zealand Music Awards 2004 screens on C4 tomorrow
night, presented by Jackie Brown and Mikey Havoc.
NZ
Music Award winners:
Album
Of The Year
Scribe - The Crusader
Single
Of The Year
Scribe - Stand Up
Best
Group
Dimmer - You've Got To Hear The Music
Breakthrough
Artist Of The Year
Brooke Fraser - What To Do With Daylight
Best
Male Solo Artist
Scribe - The Crusader
Best
Female Solo Artist
Brooke Fraser - What To Do With Daylight
Songwriter
Of The Year
Scribe, P-Money, Con Psy & Savage - Not Many The
Remix!
Highest
Selling New Zealand Album
Hayley Westenra - Pure
Highest
Selling New Zealand Single
Ben Lummis - They Cant Take That Away
Best
Rock Album
Dimmer - You've Got To Hear The Music
Best
Urban/Hip-Hop Album
Scribe - The Crusader
Best
Dance / Electronica Album
Salmonella Dub - One Drop East
Best
Music Video
Chris Graham - Stand Up (Scribe)
People's
Choice Award
Scribe |
|
Best
Jazz Album
The Rodger Fox Big Band - A Rare Connection
Best
Maori Album
Ruia - Hawaiki
Best
Pacific Music Album
Te Vaka - Tutuki
Best
Classical Album
John Psathas - Psathas: Fragments
Best
Gospel/Christian Album
Magnify - In Wonder
International
Achievement Award
Hayley Westenra
Airplay
Record Of The Year
Goldenhorse - Maybe Tomorrow
Lifetime
Achievement Award
Shaun Joyce
Awards
presented earlier:
Best
Country Music Album
Donna Dean - Money
Best
Country Music Song
Donna Dean - Work It Out
Best
Folk Album
Brendyn Montgomery & Mike Considine - Mountain Air
Best
Album Cover
Ben Sciascia - Postage (Supergroove)
Best
Engineer
Chris van de Geer - Passenger (Carly Binding)
Best
Producer
P-Money - The Crusader (Scribe) |
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links thanks to Dave Ludlow
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