19 December 2009 - 0 Comments
March 2010 sees the commencement of a new and very special award on the New Zealand music landscape, which will be known as The Taite Music Prize.
Named after the late Dylan Taite, one of the country's most highly respected music journalists, the award will be a first for New Zealand in its format. Acknowledging originality, creativity and musicianship regardless of sales figures or genre, The Taite Music Prize has been established to champion the finest release by a New Zealand artist or group, specifically focusing on the artistic merit and creative excellence of one album released in the previous calendar year.
In a similar vein to several international awards, The Taite Music Prize's purpose is to recognise outstanding creativity for an entire collection of music contained on one album. The winner will receive a cash prize of $10,000, to be spent as they wish.
Five nominated albums released in the previous calendar year (Jan to Dec 2009), will be announced on February 3rd 2010 alongside a ten person judging panel comprising record label representatives, music journalists and radio staff as well as a member of the Taite family. The judges will make their
decision based entirely on the music on the album. Sales, genres, artist recognition or popularity are not contributing factors in their decision making process. The winner will then be announced in Auckland on the 31st March.
Independent Music New Zealand (IMNZ) and Phonographic Performances New Zealand (PPNZ) are the principal music industry supporters of the Taite Music Prize in conjunction with the Taite family.
Dylan's son John says that the family are ecstatic about the new award, which acknowledges both the work of the respected journalist and great New Zealand talent. “Never mind the bollocks… here's the Taite Music Prize,” he says. “Dylan and music went together like gunpowder and matches. He was always ahead of the bounce, a creative pioneer who took risks and believed in the long shots…the
same qualities all great New Zealand music has at its core. I often meet musicians who say they're gutted they never got their “Dylan piece” before he shuffled off this mortal coil. Perhaps this is the next best thing.”
Thanks to ww.taitemusicprize.co.nz for this story.
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