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FYI

Elisapie Isaac And Decree Win imagineNATIVE Awards

The acclaimed Quebec recording artist and Cree singer/songwriter Nigel Irwin (pictured) respectively win the NFB/imagineNATIVE Digital Project Prize and the Slaight Music-backed Bullseye Music Prize.

Elisapie Isaac And Decree Win imagineNATIVE Awards

By FYI Staff

The imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival ran Oct 22-27 in Toronto, and included the awarding of two music prizes, to Montreal-based director and recording artist Elisapie Isaac and Cree singer/songwriter Nigel Irwin.


Elisapie Isaac won the 8th annual NFB/imagineNATIVE Digital Project Prize. She will work with the NFB’s Digital Studio to create an interactive music video from her Polaris and Juno-nominated album Ballad of the Runaway Girl, a record that won two Felix awards last week.

The project will pay tribute to the Inuit families who were relocated in the 1950s as part of a colonizers’ tactic known as the High Arctic relocation, and will pick up on themes in Elisapie’s work that are close to her heart: how the traditions of the Inuit demonstrate their resiliency, desire to survive and hope for their future. This interactive production will be unveiled at next year’s imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival and featured on NFB.ca.

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The Bullseye Music Prize, a $10,000 award supported by Slaight Music, went to Cree singer/songwriter Nigel Irwin, who records as Decree. Launched in 2016, iN Bullseye is an Indigenous music talent search contest that seeks to nurture Canada’s newest music talent with unprecedented opportunities to turn their talent into a career. 

The contest winner accesses the $10,000 cash award to create a professionally recorded demo of one of their submitted tracks, and produce their first music video. This video will be promoted through imagineNATIVE’s networks, including on imagineNATIVE’s annual Film + VR Tour to Indigenous communities across Canada, and will premiere at the next imagineNATIVE Festival as part of the ‘imagineNATIVE Originals’ programme of works commissioned by the organization.

Since 2016, over 110 new musicians - from electronic dance music artists to folk singer-songwriters - submitted their work to iN Bullseye for consideration.

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Deryck Whibley of Sum 41 perform on stage during Day 3 of Hurricane Festival 2024 at Eichenring on June 23, 2024 in Scheessel, Germany.
Matt Jelonek/Getty Images

Deryck Whibley of Sum 41 perform on stage during Day 3 of Hurricane Festival 2024 at Eichenring on June 23, 2024 in Scheessel, Germany.

Chart Beat

Sum 41 Scores Second Alternative Airplay No. 1 This Year With ‘Dopamine’

The band's second and third No. 1s have led over two decades after its first in 2001.

After earning its first No. 1 on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart in over two decades earlier this year, Sum 41 scores another as “Dopamine” rises a spot to No. 1 on the Nov. 30-dated survey.

The song follows the two-week Alternative Airplay command for “Landmines” in March. The latter led 22 years, five months and three weeks after Sum 41’s first No. 1, “Fat Lip,” in August 2001, rewriting the record for the longest break between rulers for an act in the chart’s 36-year history. It shattered the previous best test of patience, held by The Killers, who waited 13 years and six months between the reigns of “When You Were Young” in 2006 and “Caution” in 2020.

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