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Genesis Owusu, Amy Shark dominate 2021 ARIA Awards nominations

Breakthrough moment for Genesis Owusu, whose debut album draws on his experiences with racism and depression.

Ghanaian-Australian hip-hop artist Genesis Owusu and pop singer-songwriter Amy Shark are the lead nominees for the 2021 ARIA Awards, after the two musicians were announced as finalists in six categories each at a live event held in Sydney on Wednesday morning.

It marks a breakthrough moment for Owusu, whose compelling and genre-hopping debut album Smiling With No Teeth was written about his experiences with racism and depression while growing up in Canberra.

Speaking with The Australian ahead of the Wednesday announcement from home quarantine in Canberra, having recently returned from recording sessions in Sydney, the artist born Kofi Owusu-Ansah was thrilled by the prospect of wider recognition for his work.

“I definitely didn’t make that album with any kind of ARIA or institutional success in mind; a lot of people have told me my music can get pretty weird, justifiably so,” he said with a laugh. “It’s the truest thing that I’ve ever done, and the fact that so many people globally have been introduced to me through this album is super fitting.”

Owusu is up for six ARIAs including album of the year, best artist, best independent release, best hip-hop release, best Australian live act and best cover art.

It was during the process of writing his debut album with a live band that he settled on the twin narrative threads of racism and depression.

Genesis Owusu, aka Kofi Owusu-Ansah. Picture: Bec Parsons
Genesis Owusu, aka Kofi Owusu-Ansah. Picture: Bec Parsons

With an expansive musical palette that contains elements of hip-hop, R&B, funk, rock and soul, many of its 15 tracks are upbeat arrangements that offset these troubling and personal lyrical undercurrents.

“That was all part of the concept, and part of the album title in itself: Smiling With No Teeth basically translates to a fake smile, or putting on a performance to people who don’t really care anyway,” said Owusu, 23.

“It was crafted like that musically, because in real life, I had to do that: when I wanted to talk to people in general about things like racism or depression, they had to be sugar-coated, or glazed in honey for people to be comfortable enough to talk about it at all,” he said. “I definitely wanted to express that in the music.”

In January, Owusu will travel to the US for his first tour there, while in October he will support Tame Impala – which dominated the ARIA Awards last year with five wins – on its Australian arena tour.

Owusu’s energetic live show is designed as an electric performance that’s more theatrical than most, with the frontman accompanied by a handful of dancers to help him get the songs and stories across.

For the Tame Impala tour, he’d love to include both the dancers and his live band, but that will be a matter of the resources available.

“Hopefully some of these ARIA Awards come in, and the price goes up,” he said with a laugh.

Also nominated for six ARIAs is pop singer-songwriter Amy Shark, whose second album Cry Forever was released in April.

Pop singer-songwriter Amy Shark. Picture: Sam Ruttyn
Pop singer-songwriter Amy Shark. Picture: Sam Ruttyn

The Gold Coast-born musician is a finalist for album of the year, best artist, best pop release, song of the year, best video and best Australian live act, which brings her career ARIA nominations to a total of 28.

On November 24, the ARIAs will be held as a televised virtual event for the second time.

The ceremony will also mark the first time that ARIA drops its gendered categories for best male and female artists, instead adopting a catch-all “best artist” award.

As well as Owusu and Shark, the other eight nominees in the inaugural best artist category include Kylie Minogue, Keith Urban, Tones and I, The Kid Laroi, Vance Joy, Budjerah, Masked Wolf and Ngaiire.

The breakthrough artist award has also been retitled to honour Michael Gudinski, the former Mushroom Group chairman who died in March. Artists nominated in this category include Masked Wolf, Budjerah, Gretta Ray, MAY-A and Ngaiire.

The ARIA finalists announcement on Wednesday morning follows a one-sentence statement released by ARIA on Friday afternoon, noting the board had “today resolved to withdraw the ARIA award made to Denis Handlin”.

The statement did not specify the award or why it had been withdrawn.

However, it referred to an ARIA Industry Icon award presented to the former Sony Music Australia chief executive and managing director in 2014, following revelations about Sony’s corporate culture under his leadership on ABC’s Four Corners program aired on October 11.

Former Sony Music Australia CEO Denis Handlin (centre) with pop singer Jessica Mauboy and Molly Meldrum at the ARIA Awards in Sydney on November 26 2014, after Handlin had been presented with an ‘industry icon’ award.
Former Sony Music Australia CEO Denis Handlin (centre) with pop singer Jessica Mauboy and Molly Meldrum at the ARIA Awards in Sydney on November 26 2014, after Handlin had been presented with an ‘industry icon’ award.

Mr Handlin was the ­second person to receive the ‘icon’ prize, ­following Michael Gudinski in 2013. Mr Handlin had been chairman of the ARIA board from 1999 to 2008, and from 2010 to 2021.

On June 21, Mr Handlin was abruptly removed from the top job at Sony Music Australia, effective immediately, via an all-staff email sent from its New York head office after 50 years at the company. As a result, he immediately lost the ARIA board role.

His removal brought to an end almost four decades of exclusively male leadership at ARIA. The peak recording industry body now has its first female chief executive in Annabelle Herd, who took up the job in February.

ARIA also has its first female board chair in ABC Music head Natalie Waller, who was announced in the role on July 13 following a unanimous vote from her fellow board directors.

2021 ARIA AWARD NOMINATIONS

Album Of The Year

Amy Shark – Cry Forever (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Genesis Owusu – Smiling with No Teeth (OURNESS / AWAL)

Midnight Oil and First Nations Collaborators – The Makarrata Project (Sony Music)

The Avalanches – We Will Always Love You (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

Tones And I – Welcome to the Madhouse (Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Best Artist

Amy Shark – Cry Forever (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Budjerah – Budjerah (EP) (Warner Music Australia)

Genesis Owusu – Smiling with No Teeth (OURNESS / AWAL)

Keith Urban – The Speed Of Now Part 1 (CAPITOL – NASHVILLE / EMI Music Australia)

Kylie Minogue – Disco (Liberator Music/Mushroom)

Masked Wolf – Astronaut In The Ocean (Teamwrk Records/ADA/Warner Music)

Ngaiire – 3 (Dot Dash Recordings / Remote Control Records)

The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber – Stay (Columbia/Sony Music)

Tones And I – Welcome to the Madhouse Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Vance Joy – Missing Piece (Liberation Records/Mushroom Group)

Best Dance Release

Cosmo’s Midnight – Yesteryear (Nite High/Sony Music)

Dom Dolla – Pump The Brakes (Sweat It Out/Warner)

Jolyon Petch – Dreams (TMRW Music)

KLP & Stace Cadet – People Happy (Medium Rare Recordings / Sony Music)

RÜFÜS DU SOL – Alive (Rose Avenue Records/Reprise/Warner Music)

Best Group

AC/DC – Power Up (Leidseplein Presse / Sony Music)

Gang Of Youths – The Angel of 8th Ave. (Mosy Recordings / Sony Music)

Midnight Oil and First Nations Collaborators – The Makarrata Project (Sony Music)

RÜFÜS DU SOL – Alive (Rose Avenue Records/Reprise/Warner Music)

The Avalanches – We Will Always Love You (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

Michael Gudinski Breakthrough Artist

Budjerah – Budjerah (EP) (Warner Music Australia)

Gretta Ray – Begin To Look Around (EMI Music Australia)

Masked Wolf – Astronaut In The Ocean (Teamwrk Records/ADA/Warner Music)

MAY-A -Don’t Kiss Ur Friends (Arcadia Music / Sony Music)

Ngaiire – 3 (Dot Dash Recordings / Remote Control Records)

Best Pop Release

Amy Shark – Cry Forever (Wonderlick Recording Company)

The Avalanches – We Will Always Love You (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber – Stay (Columbia/Sony Music)

Tones And I – Fly Away (Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Vance Joy – Missing Piece (Liberation Records/Mushroom Group)

Best Hip Hop Release

B Wise – jamie (Semi Pro Sound)

Genesis Owusu – Smiling with No Teeth (OURNESS / AWAL)

Masked Wolf – Astronaut In The Ocean (Teamwrk Records/ADA/Warner Music)

The Kid LAROI – WITHOUT YOU (Columbia/Sony Music)

Youngn Lipz – Area Baby (Biordi Music/Virgin Music)

Best Soul/R&B Release

Budjerah – Budjerah (EP) (Warner Music Australia)

Hiatus Kaiyote – Mood Valiant (Brainfeeder/Ninja Tune)

Ngaiire – 3 (Dot Dash Recordings / Remote Control Records)

Tash Sultana – Terra Firma (Lonely Lands Records/Sony Music

Tkay Maidza – Last Year Was Weird, Vol. 3 (Dew Process/Universal Music Australia)

Best Independent Release

Archie Roach – The Songs Of Charcoal Lane (Bloodlines/Mushroom)

Ball Park Music – Ball Park Music (Prawn Records/ Inertia Music)

Emma Donovan & The Putbacks – Crossover (Hopestreet Recordings/The Planet Company)

Genesis Owusu – Smiling with No Teeth (OURNESS / AWAL)

Vance Joy – Missing Piece (Liberation Records/Mushroom Group)

Best Rock Album

AC/DC – Power Up (Leidseplein Presse / Sony Music)

Ball Park Music – Ball Park Music (Prawn Records/ Inertia Music)

Holy Holy – Hello My Beautiful World (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Middle Kids – Today We’re The Greatest (EMI Music Australia)

Midnight Oil and First Nations Collaborators – The Makarrata Project (Sony Music)

Best Adult Contemporary Album

Big Scary – Daisy (Pieater/Inertia)

Crowded House – Dreamers Are Waiting (EMI Music Australia)

Kylie Minogue- Disco (Liberator Music/Mushroom)

Nick Cave & Warren Ellis – Carnage (Goliath / AWAL)

Odette – Herald (EMI Music Australia)

Best Country Album

Brad Cox – My Mind’s Projection (Sony Music)

Felicity Urquhart & Josh Cunningham – The Song Club (ABC Music)

Shane Nicholson – Living In Colour (Lost Highway Australia/Universal Music Australia)

The Wolfe Brothers – Kids On Cassette (BMG/WMG)

Troy Cassar-Daley – The World Today (Tarampa Music / Sony Music)

Best Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Album

Alpha Wolf – A Quiet Place To Die (Greyscale Records / Cooking Vinyl Australia)

Psychedelic Porn Crumpets – SHYGA! The Sunlight Mound What Reality? (TFS Records/Virgin Music)

Tropical F..k Storm – Deep States (TFS Records/Virgin Music)

Yours Truly – Self Care (UNFD/The Orchard)

A. Swayze & the Ghosts – Paid Salvation (IVY LEAGUE/MUSHROOM)

Best Blues & Roots Album

Archie Roach – The Songs Of Charcoal Lane (Bloodlines/Mushroom)

Emma Donovan & The Putbacks – Crossover (Hopestreet Recordings/The Planet Company)

Josh Teskey & Ash Grunwald – Push The Blues Away(Ivy League/Mushroom)

Martha Marlow – Medicine Man (Independent/The Planet Company)

Ziggy Alberts – Searching For Freedom (Commonfolk Records / The Orchard)

Best Children’s Album

Amber Lawrence – The Kid’s Gone Country 2 (Fun For All The Family ABC Music)

Bluey The Album – Bluey (Ludo Studios / Demon Music Group / BBC Studios / Rocket)

Diver City – Dance Silly (ABC Music / Universal)

The Wiggles – Lullabies With Love (ABC Music)

Various Artists – The Moon, The Mouse & The Frog: Lullabies from Northern Australia (ABC Music)

PUBLIC VOTED AWARDS

Best Video

24k – Tkay Maidza, Nicholas Muecke (Dew Process/Universal Music Australia)

Astronaut In The Ocean – Masked Wolf, Daniele Cernera (Teamwrk Records/ADA/Warner Music)

could cry just thinkin about you (Full Version) – Troye Sivan & Jesse Gohier-Fleet (EMI Music Australia)

Dance – Julia Stone, Jessie Hill (BMG/WMG)

First Nation – Midnight Oil, Robert Hambling (Sony Music)

Higher – Budjerah, Mick Soiza (Warner Music Australia)

Love Songs Ain’t for Us – Amy Shark, James Chappell (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Missing Piece – Vance Joy, Annelise Hickey (Liberation Records/Mushroom Group)

The Divine Chord – The Avalanches, Jonathan Zawada (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

Won’t Sleep – Tones and I, Nick Kozakis, Liam Kelly (Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Best Australian Live Act

Amy Shark – Cry Forever Tour 2021 (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Ball Park Music – The Residency (Prawn Records/ Inertia Music)

Budjerah – Budjerah 2021 Aus Tour (Warner Music Australia)

Genesis Owusu – Smiling With No Teeth Album Tour (OURNESS / AWAL)

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Micro Tour (King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard/Virgin Music)

Lime Cordiale – Relapse Tour (Chugg Music Pty Ltd)

Midnight Oil – Makarrata Live (Sony Music)

The Avalanches – The Avalanches Live (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

The Teskey Brothers – The Teskey Brothers (Headline Shows + Festivals) (IVY LEAGUE/MUSHROOM)

Song of the Year

Amy Shark Feat. Keith Urban – Love Songs Ain’t For Us (Wonderlick Recording Company)

Dean Lewis – Falling Up (Island Records Australia/Universal Music Australia)

Hooligan Hefs – Send It! (db Music / Warner Music Australia)

Keith Urban & Pink – One Too Many (CAPITOL – NASHVILLE / EMI Music Australia)

Masked Wolf – Astronaut In The Ocean (Teamwrk Records/ADA/Warner Music)

Sam Fischer & Demi Lovato – What Other People Say (Sony Music)

Spacey Jane – Booster Seat (AWAL Recordings)

The Kid LAROI with Miley Cyrus – Without You (Columbia/Sony Music)

Tones and I – Fly Away (Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Vance Joy – Missing Piece (Liberation Records/Mushroom Group)

Most Popular International

Ariana Grande – Positions (Universal Records USA / Universal Music Australia)

Doja Cat – Planet Her (RCA Records / Sony Music)

Justin Bieber – Justice (Def Jam / Universal Music Australia)

Kanye West – Donda (Def Jam / Universal Music Australia)

Luke Combs – What You See Ain’t Always What You Get (Columbia Nashville / Sony Music)

Machine Gun Kelly – Tickets To My Downfall (Interscope / Universal Music Australia)

Miley Cyrus – Plastic Hearts (RCA Records / Sony Music)

Olivia Rodrigo – Sour (Geffen / Universal Music Australia)

Pop Smoke – Shoot For The Stars Aim For The Moon (Universal Records USA / Universal Music Australia)

Taylor Swift – Evermore (Universal Music Australia)

Telstra ARIA Music Teacher Award

Aaron Silver – Wodonga Primary School, Regional VIC

Ashley Baxter – Pimlico State High School, Townsville QLD

Daniel Wilson – Star Struck, Newcastle NSW

Zoë Barry – Sacred Heart School, Melbourne VIC

ARTISAN AWARDS

Best Cover Art

Ngaiire Joseph & Dan Segal for Ngaiire – 3 (Dot Dash Recordings / Remote Control Records)

Eben Ejdne for Odette – Herald (EMI Music Australia)

Kofi Ansah & Bailey Howard for Genesis Owusu – Smiling with No Teeth (OURNESS / AWAL)

Jonathan Zawada for The Avalanches – We Will Always Love You (Modular / EMI Music Australia)

Giulia Giannini McGauran & Mitchell Eaton for Tones and I – Welcome to the Madhouse (Bad Batch Records / Sony Music)

Engineer Of The Year

Chris Collins

Eric J Dubowsky

Konstantin Kersting

Matt Corby

Tony Espie

Producer Of The Year

Andrew Klippel, Dave Hammer

Konstantin Kersting

M-Phazes

Matt Corby

Robert Chater

FINE ARTS AWARDS

Best Classical Album

Christian Li – Vivaldi: The Four Seasons (Decca Records Australia/Universal Music Australia

Emily Sun & Andrea Lam – Nocturnes (ABC Classic)

Genevieve Lacey and Marshall McGuire – Bower (ABC Classic / Universal)

Grigoryan Brothers – This is Us: A Musical Reflection of Australia (ABC Classic / Universal)

Nat Bartsch – Hope (ABC Classic / Universal)

Best Jazz Album

Australian Art Orchestra, Reuben Lewis, Tariro Mavondo & Peter Knight – Closed Beginnings (AAO Recordings/The Planet Company)

Kristen Beradi, Sean Foran & Rafael Karlen – Haven (Earshift Music / The Planet Company) Mildlife – Automatic (Inertia Music / [PIAS])

Petra Haden & The Nick Haywood Quintet – Songs from my Father (ABC Jazz / Universal)

Vazesh – The Sacred Key (Earshift Music / The Planet Company)

Best Original Soundtrack or Musical Theatre Cast Album

Angus & Julia Stone – Life Is Strange (BMG/WMG)

Antony Partos – Rams (Original Motion Picture Score) (ABC Music)

Caitlin Yeo, Maria Alfonsine, Damian de Boos-Smith – Wakefield Season One Official Soundtrack (MADBS Composing Palace)

Sia – Music Songs From And Inspired By The Motion Picture (Atlantic Records / Warner Music

Yve Blake – Fangirls (ADA/Warner Music)

Best World Music Album

Bob Weatherall & Halfway, with William Barton – Restless Dream (ABC Music)

Bukhu – Bukhchuluun Ganburged – The Journey (Bukhu/Distrokid)

Eishan Ensemble – Project Masnavi (Earshift Music / The Planet Company)

Joseph Tawadros – Hope In An Empty City (Independent / The Planet Company)

Kuya James – ISA (Settle Down Records / MGM Distribution)

Andrew McMillen
Andrew McMillenMusic Writer

Andrew McMillen is an award-winning journalist and author based in Brisbane. Since January 2018, he has worked as national music writer at The Australian. Previously, his feature writing has been published in The New York Times, Rolling Stone and GQ. He won the feature writing category at the Queensland Clarion Awards in 2017 for a story published in The Weekend Australian Magazine, and won the freelance journalism category at the Queensland Clarion Awards from 2015–2017. In 2014, UQP published his book Talking Smack: Honest Conversations About Drugs, a collection of stories that featured 14 prominent Australian musicians.

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/arts/music/genesis-owusu-amy-shark-dominate-2021-aria-awards-nominations/news-story/62fd823bb27f7254ceaf34e67ca0986d