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Polaris Music Prize

The Polaris Music Prize is an annual music award given to the best full-length Canadian album based on artistic merit, regardless of genre, sales, or record label. The award was established in 2006 with a $20,000 cash prize, which was increased to $30,000 in 2011. The prize was increased to $50,000 in May 2015 by Slaight Music. Second-place prizes for the nine other acts on the shortlist also increased from $2,000 to $3,000. Polaris officials announced the Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize, an award that "will annually honour five albums from the five decades before Polaris launched in 2006."

Jury and selection
There is no submission process or entry fee for the prize, The Polaris Music Prize board of directors selects the jurors Former CBC Q host and first Polaris Gala host Jian Ghomeshi was quietly removed from the juror pool on November 3, 2014. == Winners and shortlists==
Winners and shortlists
==Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize==
Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize
The Polaris jury introduced the Polaris Heritage Prize (later known as the Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize), an annual award program to honour classic Canadian albums released before the creation of the Polaris Prize, in 2015. Heritage Prizes, selected by public vote from a shortlist of five nominees by a Heritage Prize jury, were awarded in their first year in the 1960s–1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000–2005 categories. In the second year, the shortlists were increased to 10, the categories shifted to 1960–75, 1976–85, 1986–1995 and 1996–2005, and a second prize was awarded by a jury with the winner of the public vote. The jury award ensures that albums which were artistically important but not necessarily commercially popular have a fair chance of winning; the jury does not meet to make its choice until after the popular-vote winner has been determined. == Ceremonies ==
Ceremonies
The 2018 Polaris sponsors included the CBC, the Government of Canada, FACTOR, Ontario Media Development Corporation, Slaight Communications, Radio Starmaker Fund, SiriusXM, Stingray Music/Galaxie, The Carlu, Shure Canada, Toronto radio station Indie88, SOCAN, and Re-Sound20. Past sponsors have included Rogers Communications and Scion. The ceremonies are video-streamed live on CBC Music. ==Controversies==
Controversies
The prize has been considered too "indie" or too "mainstream". Polaris Salons, with jurors as panellists, are held in a number of cities before the ceremonies. When Fucked Up won in 2009, mainstream media outlets were uncertain about how they would present the band's name. The Canoe.ca news service used the headline "F***** Up (language alert , language alert below) wins the 2009 Polaris Music Prize on Monday night"; The Globe and Mail headline was "Toronto hardcore band wins Polaris Music Prize," and The New Yorker was "The Prize That Dare Not Speak Its Name". Godspeed You! Black Emperor refused to attend the 2013 Polaris ceremonies. When the band won for their album, ''Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend!'', representatives of their label (Constellation Records) accepted the prize on their behalf. Constellation's Don Wilkie said, "Godspeed will use the prize money to purchase musical instruments for, and support organizations providing music lessons to, people incarcerated within the Quebec prison system." The next day, the band said that "holding a gala during a time of austerity and normalized decline is a weird thing to do" and "maybe the next celebration should happen in a cruddier hall, without the corporate banners and culture overlords." Tanya Tagaq said "Fuck PETA" in her 2014 victory speech, using her performance and subsequent interviews as a platform to draw attention to missing and murdered Aboriginal women across Canada. Lido Pimienta's 2017 acceptance speech ended with an obscenity-spiked outburst. "All of my fucking monitors were off," Pimienta shouted into the microphone at the end of the show, which was webcast by the CBC. She had performed two songs live: "I could not hear myself when I was up here. I'm fucking pissed off. Thank you though, motherfucker." After the 2023 revelation of questions about the Indigenous Canadian status of singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie, calls were made to revoke her main- and heritage-prize awards. The committee rescinded the awards in 2025 after the revocation of her membership in the Order of Canada because she could no longer provide satisfactory proof of Canadian citizenship. ==Music releases==
Music releases
In 2006 and 2007, compilation CDs and souvenir program guides with one song from each shortlisted artist (except Arcade Fire in 2007) were given out at the Polaris ceremony. From 2008 to 2011, the program guides instead download cards for the songs. Polaris has sponsored a series of promotional singles by nominees or winners. The "Polaris Cover Sessions" series has past nominees recording a cover of a song by another nominee or Heritage Prize winner, and the "Polaris Collaboration Sessions" series has two past nominees collaborating on new songs. • 2015: Polaris Cover Sessions No. 1 (10-inch) • Sarah Harmer, "Odessa" (Caribou) • Whitehorse, "The Bones of an Idol" (The New Pornographers) • Great Lake Swimmers, "I'm a Mountain" (Sarah Harmer) • 2016: Polaris Cover Sessions No. 2 (10-inch) • Arkells, "I Am Not Afraid" (Owen Pallett) • Zaki Ibrahim, "Show Me the Place" (Leonard Cohen) • Joel Plaskett, "Bittersweet Melodies" (Feist) • 2017: Polaris Cover Sessions No. 3 (10-inch) • Little Scream, "Anew Day" (Mary Margaret O'Hara) • Hannah Georgas, "Crown of Love" (Arcade Fire) • Les soeurs Boulay, "Complainte pour Ste-Catherine" (Kate & Anna McGarrigle) • 2018: Polaris Cover Sessions No. 4 (10-inch) • Jean-Michel Blais, "Mushaboom" (Feist) • Weaves, "Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)" (Arcade Fire) • Lindi Ortega, "Suzanne" (Leonard Cohen) • 2019: Polaris Cover Sessions No. 5 (12-inch) • Faith Healer, "When You Awake" (The Band) • Partner, "Limelight" (Rush) • Pierre Kwenders, "It Ain't Fair" (Jean-Pierre Ferland) Collaboration sessions Polaris, the Banff Centre and Scion Sessions teamed up for a collaborative residency project with past shortlisted artists Shad and Holy Fuck. The result was the Scion Sessions-sponsored Holy Shad "Legend of Cy Borg Parts I and II" seven-inch single and a documentary video produced by AUX TV. In 2017, Buffy Sainte-Marie and Tanya Tagaq collaborated on "You Got to Run (Spirit of the Wind)". Two Years later, the Weather Station and Jennifer Castle recorded a two-song split single. The Weather Station's song was "I Tried To Wear The World (featuring Jennifer Castle)", and Castle's was "Midas Touch (featuring The Weather Station)." == See also ==
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