Leela Gilday wins second Juno award for latest album

Yellowknifer Leela Gilday won her second Juno award yesterday, winning the Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year for her latest album North Star Calling.

This was the fifth time Gilday has been nominated for a JUNO. Gilday previously won an Aborignal Recording of the Year JUNO in 2007.

“I feel very grateful and very honoured,” she said, speaking with CBC. “It means the music I’m making, even at this point in my career, five albums in, is still speaking to people and resonating with people. The stories I’m telling them are still impacting people.” 

North Star Calling was released in 2019 and is Gilday’s fifth album.

Her next album is set to be written entirely in the Dene language. Gilday, who is a member of the Yellowknives Dene First Nation, doesn’t speak Dene, but is working on the album with a team who speak the language. While Gilday has used Dene phrases in her music before, this will be her first work entirely in Dene.

In the past, this has meant writing the lyrics in English and then translating. But on this project, Gilday is writing all the lyrics in Dene first.

“It does take a little bit of bravery because there’s a lot of emotional work to be done when it comes to language loss,” she said in a previous interview with 100.1 True North FM. “It’s not just random that I don’t know my language, I don’t know my language because there’s a colonial policy put in place by the Government of Canada to erase native languages.”

She is also working on a duet show with her brother Jay, a fellow musician, and is also headlining the upcoming Folk on the Rocks festival.

The 2021 award ceremony took place virtually due to the pandemic. 

Yellowknife music teacher Stephen Richardson was also nominated for an award, the MusiCounts Teacher of the Year Award, which wasn’t presented on the night of the ceremony.

Bailey Moreton
Bailey Moreton
Bailey is new to the north, arriving from Ottawa where he studied journalism at Carleton University. He has worked for newspapers in Halifax, Windsor, and Ottawa. He came to the north hoping to see polar bears. He will settle for a bison. If you have a tip, send it to 905 252-9781, or [email protected].

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Yellowknife’s Leah McShane shines bright as Loran 2026 Scholar

Leah McShane, a Yellowknife high school student, was just named a Loran Scholar for 2026, out of more than 5,400 applicants across the country. The student from École Sir John Franklin High School made it through four selection rounds to receive the award. “With a little bit of work you can do anything you set your mind to,” said McShane, who hopes she can inspire more youth to follow their dreams.

Indigenous languages pilot program to launch at NWT Legislative Assembly

A new pilot program will connect fluent Indigenous languages speakers to interpreter roles at the N.W.T Legislative  Assembly. The pilot program will run from May 2026 to March 2027, with one applicant selected for each of the N.W.T.’s official Indigenous languages: Dene Kǝdǝ́ (North Slavey), Dëne Sųłıné (Chipewyan), Dene Zhatıé (South Slavey), Dinjii Zhuʼ Ginjik (Gwich’in), Inuinnaqtun, Inuktitut, Inuvialuktun andTłı̨chǫ.

GNWT reminds residents not to dump trash on public land

The Government of the Northwest Territories is reminding residents that dumping garbage, appliances, or construction materials on public land is harmful to the environment and to wildlife and is illegal under territorial legislation.  

GNWT says another school shows elevated lead in some water fixtures

A school in Behchokǫ̀ is the latest to receive test results showing elevated levels of lead in some water fixtures. So far, 28 tested school results have been announced to date, 23 have tested positive for elevated levels of lead in some of their drinking water fixtures. Robin Ferguson, Acting Assistant Deputy Minister at the Department of Infrastructure has said the GNWT plans to test more public buildings once school testing is completed.

Climate plan draws from NWT Traditional Knowledge and meteorological data

Hay River, the Hay River Metis Nation, Kátł'odeeche and West Point First Nation are working on a climate action plan that combines local and Traditional knowledge and statistical data alongside meteorological records and forecasts.