German Music Authors' Prize

German music award

The German Music Authors' Prize (German: Deutscher Musikautorenpreis) is a German music prize that has been awarded since 2009 by German collective rights association GEMA. It is awarded to composers and lyricists for their outstanding achievements. Under the motto "Authors honor authors" (Autoren ehren Autoren), the winners are chosen by an independent jury of composers, lyricists and producers from all genres. Amongst the ten categories awarded, only the Young Talents category comes with a monetary prize of 10,000 Euro.

Recipients

2009

The ceremony took place on 28 May 2009 in Berlin, at the "axica" conference center.

  • Composition Film music: Martin Böttcher
  • Composition Pop/Rock: Peter Fox
  • Lyrics Pop/Rock: Judith Holofernes
  • Composition Independent: Niels Frevert [de]
  • Lyrics Hip-Hop: Die Fantastischen Vier
  • Composition Music Theatre: Detlev Glanert
  • Composition Symphonic: Manfred Trojahn
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Annette Humpe
  • Young Talent Award: Kai-Uwe Kolkhorst
  • Lifetime achievement: Peter Thomas

2010

The ceremony took place on 22 April 2010 in Berlin, at the "axica" conference center.

  • Composition Dance: Alex Christensen
  • Lyrics Schlager: Joachim Horn-Bernges
  • Composition Pop/Rock: David Jost, Dave Roth, Pat Benzner
  • Lyrics Pop/Rock: Jan Delay
  • Composition Jazz: Nils Wogram
  • Composition Instrumental music: Rebecca Saunders
  • Composition Experimental music: Carola Bauckholt
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Silbermond
  • Young Talent Award: Johannes Kreidler [de]
  • Lifetime achievement: Michael Kunze

2011

The ceremony took place on 14 April 2011 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel [de].[1]

2012

The ceremony took place on 24 May 2012 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.[2]

2013

The ceremony took place on 25 April 2013 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.[3]

  • Composition Rock/Pop: Die Toten Hosen
  • Composition Film music: Annette Focks
  • Lyrics Pop: Stefan Stoppok [de]
  • Lyrics Hip-Hop: Deichkind
  • Composition Symphonic: Jörg Widmann
  • Composition Art song: Rainer Rubbert [de]
  • Composition Dance/Elektro: Yann Peifer & Manuel Reuter
  • Young Talent Award: Torsten Goods [de] & Jan Miserre
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Die Toten Hosen – Tage wie diese
  • Lifetime achievement: Klaus Huber

2014

The ceremony took place on 8 May 2014 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.

2015

The ceremony took place on 21 May 2015 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.[4]

  • Composition Pop: Tobias Kuhn
  • Composition Hip-Hop: Farhot
  • Composition Music Theatre: Helmut Oehring
  • Composition Orchestra: Adriana Hölszky
  • Composition Audiovisual media: Fabian Römer [de]
  • Lyrics Pop/Rock: Wolfgang Niedecken
  • Lyrics Schlager: Heike Fransecky [de]
  • Young Talent Award: Sea + Air [de] (Daniel Benjamin [de], Eleni Zafiriadou)
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Mark Forster, Sido, Ralf Christian Mayer [de], Daniel Nitt und Philipp SteinkeAu revoir
  • Lifetime achievement: Helmut Lachenmann

2016

The ceremony took place on 12 May 2016 in Berlin, at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.[5]

  • Composition Pop/Rock: Sonja Glass
  • Composition Jazz/Crossover: Tini Thomsen
  • Lyrics Hip-Hop: Marten Laciny (Marteria/Marsimoto)
  • Composition Ensemble Music: Enno Poppe
  • Composition Music with voice: Samir Odeh-Tamimi [de]
  • Composition Audiovisual media: Florian Tessloff [de]
  • Lyrics Singer-songwriter: Sven Regener (Element of Crime)
  • Young Talent award: Jagoda Szmytka
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Andreas Bourani, Simon Müller-Lerch [de], Paul Neumann [de], Marek Pompetzki, Cecil Remmler [de], Paul Würdig – Astronaut
  • Lifetime achievement: Martin Böttcher

2017

  • Composition Audiovisual media: René Dohmen [de] & Jumpel Dürbeck [de]
  • Composition Hip-Hop: The Krauts [de]
  • Composition Musik Für Musiktheater: Anno Schreier
  • Composition Rock/Pop: Wallis Bird
  • Composition Symphonic: Olga Neuwirth
  • Text Schlager: Irma Holder [de]
  • Text Musikkabarett: Sebastian Krämer [de]
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Kerstin Ott
  • Young Talent award: Von Wegen Lisbeth
  • Lifetime achievement: Sofia Gubaidulina

2018

  • Composition Audiovisual media: Enis Rotthoff [de]
  • Composition Dance/Elektro: Martin Stimming
  • Composition Voice Experiment: David Moss
  • Composition Rock/Metal: Rammstein
  • Composition Solo concert: Michael Pelzel [de]
  • Text Hip-Hop: Prinz Pi [de] (Friedrich Kautz)
  • Text Pop: Balbina Jagielska [de]
  • Young Talent award: Anna-Marlene Bicking [de], Kathrin A. Denner and Lina Maly [de]
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Alice Merton and Nicolas Rebscher
  • Lifetime achievement: Klaus Doldinger

2019

  • Composition Audiovisual media: Ralf Wienrich [de]
  • Composition Choir music: Arvo Pärt
  • Composition Ensemble with electronic: Michael Maierhof [de]
  • Composition Hip Hop: Christian Kalla (Crada)
  • Composition Jazz/Crossover: Martin Tingvall
  • Text Kinderlied: Suli Puschban
  • Text Pop/Rock: Maxim Richarz
  • Young Talent award: Elif Demirezer and Mark Barden
  • Most Successful Work of the Year: Namika, Simon Triebel, Beatgees [de] (around Hannes Büscher, David Vogt, Philip Böllhoff and Sipho Sililo), Simon Müller-Lerch (Sera Finale [de]) and Alpha Diallo (Black M)
  • Lifetime achievement: Wolfgang Rihm

External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata (in German)

References

  1. ^ ""Autoren ehren Autoren" und machen sie zu glücklichen Gewinnern" (in German). German Music Authors' Prize. 2011. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  2. ^ "Musikautorenpreis 2012" (in German). German Music Authors' Prize. 2012. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  3. ^ "Der Deutsche Musikautorenpreis 2013: Die Gewinner" (in German). German Music Authors' Prize. 26 April 2013. Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  4. ^ "German Music Author Awards: All The Winners". Music Business Worldwide. 26 May 2015. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  5. ^ "Winners of the German Music Authors' Prize 2016". GEMA. 13 May 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2016.