The Juno Awards were originally called the
RPM Gold Leaf Awards named after RPM Magazine. The winners would be announced in RPM magazine before awards night. The first ceremony was held on February 23, 1970, to honour the musical accomplishments of performers for the year 1969, and the trophy resembled a
metronome. But the name was changed in honour of
Pierre Juneau, the first president of the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) and former president of the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). Juneau was an outspoken advocate for Canadian content regulations. In 1964
RPM magazine began polling its readers to determine which artists and groups they considered the best in Canada.
RPM announced the results of these polls each December. There were no formal award ceremonies. Record label owner
Stan Klees met with
RPM founder
Walt Grealis to plan a formal music industry awards ceremony. Instead of merely publishing the award results in
RPM, presentations would be made at a physical venue. The first ceremony was the
Gold Leaf Awards which took place on 23 February 1970 in
Toronto, Ontario. Later that year
RPM invited its readers to suggest a new name for these awards. The name "Juneau" was submitted, in honour of Pierre Juneau, the first head of the CRTC. Juneau was instrumental in establishing Canadian content regulations for broadcasters to promote Canadian musicians. From 1970 to 1973,
RPM announced the winners before the awards night. From 1974, the award winners were not made public until the Juno ceremonies. Music industry representatives formed an advisory committee for the Junos in 1974 which became the Canadian Music Awards Association the following year. This organization assumed full management and operation of the Juno Awards from 1977 and became the
Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS). The Junos were first televised across Canada in
1975 on
CBC Television. Primary ceremonies continued to be broadcast on CBC until
2001, moving to
CTV Television Network (CTV) from
2002 to
2017 inclusive. The broadcast returned to CBC from
2018 onward. The Canadian Music Hall of Fame was introduced in 1978. In 1979, the statuette's name was officially changed from RPM Annual Gold Leaf Award to the Juno Award, and featured then-Prime Minister of Canada
Pierre Trudeau as a presenter.
Joni Mitchell was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame by Pierre Trudeau in 1982. In 1991, the awards were hosted in Vancouver, the first time the Juno ceremonies were conducted outside Toronto. That year also marked the introduction of a category for
rap recordings. For the first time the 1995 Awards, held in Hamilton's
Copps Coliseum, were open to the public. This marked the 25th anniversary of the Junos. CARAS transferred the broadcast rights to the Juno Awards from the CBC to
CTV for the 2002 ceremonies. 2006 marked the first time the Junos were broadcast internationally through
MTV2 in the United States and several affiliated MTV channels in other nations. The telecast of the 2006 Juno Awards was available to approximately 250 million people. The
Allan Waters Humanitarian Award honouring media icon
Allan Waters was inaugurated in 2006. The first artist to be given this honour was
Bruce Cockburn. At the 2007 ceremony, host
Nelly Furtado made Juno history by being the first nominee with multiple nominations to win every award for which she was nominated. These included the two most prestigious honours, Album of the Year and Artist of the Year. Launched in January 2013, Juno TV is a digital channel featuring original and archival content specific to the Juno Awards and its nominated artists and Canadian celebrities such as Alanis Morissette, The Weeknd, Lights, and
Rush. Juno TV delivers new content weekly, presenting content on a year-round basis. On 18 April 2017, CARAS president Allan Reid announced that the ceremonies would return to CBC for the first time since 2002, for at least the next six years. He said he wanted to collaborate with the CBC to bolster a year-round presence for the Juno Awards as a platform for promoting Canadian music. The 2020 event was cancelled because of the
COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, but later replaced by an online ceremony on June 29. All honours earned by
Buffy Sainte-Marie were rescinded by CARAS on March 7, 2025, after she confirmed she never attained Canadian citizenship. ==Trophy==