ARIA Music Awards

ARIA Music Awards
Current: 2024 ARIA Music Awards
Awarded forExcellence and innovation in all genres of Australian music.
CountryAustralia
Presented byAustralian Recording Industry Association
First awarded1987 (1987)
Last awardedCurrent
Websiteariaawards.com.au
Television/radio coverage
NetworkNetwork Ten (1992–2000, 2002–08, 2010, 2014–16)
Nine Network (2001, 2009, 2017–present)
GO! (2011–13)
YouTube (2021–present)
Stan (2023–)[1]
Most recent ARIA Award winners
← 2022 15 November 2023 2024 →
Award Album of the Year Best Group
Winner Genesis Owusu
(Struggler)
DMA's
(How Many Dreams?)
Award Best Artist
Winner Troye Sivan
("Rush")

Previous Album of the Year

Gela

Album of the Year

Struggler

The Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards (commonly known informally as ARIA Music Awards, ARIA Awards, or simply the ARIAs) is an annual series of awards nights celebrating the Australian music industry, put on by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). The event has been held annually since 1987 and encompasses the general genre-specific and popular awards (these are what is usually being referred to as "the ARIA awards") as well as Fine Arts Awards and Artisan Awards (held separately from 2004), Achievement Awards and ARIA Hall of Fame – the latter were held separately from 2005 to 2010 but returned to the general ceremony in 2011. For 2010, ARIA introduced public voted awards for the first time.

Winning, or even being nominated for, an ARIA award results in a lot of media attention and publicity on an artist, and usually increases recording sales several-fold, as well as chart significance – in 2005, for example, after Ben Lee won three awards, his album Awake Is the New Sleep jumped from No. 31 to No. 5 in the ARIA Charts, its highest position. In October 1995 singer-songwriter Tina Arena became the first woman to win Album of the Year for Don't Ask (1994) and Song of the Year for "Chains". Before the ceremony the album had achieved 3× platinum (for shipment of 210,000 copies) and by year's end it was 8× platinum (560,000 copies) and had topped the end of year albums chart.[2][third-party source needed]

  1. ^ Knox, David (27 August 2023). "Airdate: Aria Awards 2023". tvtonight.com.au. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  2. ^ O'Grady, Anthony. "The 9th Annual Aria Music Awards". Australian Recording Industry Association. Archived from the original on 16 December 2000. Retrieved 21 October 2020.

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