Classical Brit Awards

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The Classical Brit Awards are an annual awards ceremony held in the United Kingdom covering aspects of classical music, and are the classical equivalent of pop music's Brit Awards.

The awards are organised by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) and were inaugurated in 2000 "in recognition of the achievements of classical musicians and the growth of classical music sales in the UK." The ceremony takes place in the Royal Albert Hall each May.

The event combines the magic of live performances from some of the most highly regarded classical musicians and performers in the world today, with a number of specially commissioned awards presented throughout the evening.

Voting for the awards is done by "an academy of industry executives, the media, the British Association of Record Dealers (BARD), members of the Musicians Union, lawyers, promoters, and orchestra leaders," except for "Album of the Year" which is voted for by listeners of Classic FM.

Contents

[edit] Awards

[edit] 2000

Friday May 6, 2000. Hosted by Sir Trevor McDonald.

[edit] 2001

Thursday May 31, 2001. Hosted by Katie Derham.

  • Male Artist of the Year — Nigel Kennedy
  • Female Artist of the Year — Angela Gheorghiu
  • Ensemble/Orchestral Album of the Year — Sir Simon Rattle and Berliner PhilharmonikerMahler, 10th Symphony
  • Critics Award — Sir Simon Rattle and Berliner Philarmoniker — Mahler, 10th Symphony
  • Young British Classical Performer — Freddy Kempf
  • Album of the Year — Russell WatsonThe Voice
  • Best-selling debut album — Russell Watson — The Voice
  • Outstanding Contribution to Music — Sir Simon Rattle

[edit] 2002

Wednesday May 23, 2002.

[edit] 2003

Thursday May 22, 2003. Hosted by Katie Derham.

  • Female Artist of the Year — Renée Fleming
  • Male Artist of the Year — Sir Simon Rattle
  • Album of the Year — Andrea Bocelli — Sentimento
  • Contemporary Music Award — Arvo Pärt — "Orient & Occident"
  • Young British Classical Performer — Chloe Hanslip
  • Ensemble/Orchestral Album of the Year — Berliner Philharmoniker and Sir Simon Rattle — "Mahler, Symphony no. 5"
  • Critics Award — Murray Perahia — "Chopin, Etudes Opus 10, Opus 25"
  • Outstanding Contribution to Music — Cecilia Bartoli

[edit] 2004

Wednesday May 26, 2004. Hosted by Katie Derham.

[edit] 2005

Wednesday May 25, 2005. Hosted by Lesley Garrett.

[edit] 2006

Thursday May 4, 2006. Hosted by Michael Parkinson.

[edit] External links