Australian Music Prize

The Australian Music Prize (often shortened to the AMP) is an annual award of $30,000 given to an Australian band or solo artist in recognition of the merit of an album released during the year of award. The award was made by Australian Music Prize Ltd, a sole-purpose entity sponsored by a variety of music industry figures and record companies. The AMP was established in 2005.

Australian Music Prize
Awarded forBest Australian album
CountryAustralia
First awarded2005
Websitewww.australianmusicprize.com.au

Unlike the more mainstream ARIA Music Awards, the AMP aims to encourage Australian music of excellence – the prize's stated aim is to "financially reward and increase exposure for an Australian artist (or group of artists) who have produced and commercially released what specially appointed judges vote is the best contemporary music album in any one calendar year". In this sense, the AMP is broadly comparable to the UK's Mercury Music Prize.

The prize typically launches at the start of October each year and accepts entries (must be new Australian artist albums commercially released in that year) in October and November. A shortlist is announced the following February and then a winner at an event in Sydney in March.

In 2023, the nominations were revealed in late November with the award announcement scheduled for early December.

Past winners and short list nominees

YearWinnerShortlisted nomineesRef(s)
2005

(1st)

The DronesWait Long by the River and the Bodies of Your Enemies Will Float By[1]
2006

(2nd)

Augie MarchMoo, You Bloody Choir[2][3]
2007

(3rd)

The Mess HallDevils Elbow[4][5]
2008

(4th)

Eddy Current Suppression RingPrimary Colours[6]
2009

(5th)

Lisa MitchellWonder
2010

(6th)

Cloud ControlBliss Release
2011

(7th)

The JezabelsPrisoner[7]
2012

(8th)

HermitudeHyperParadise
2013

(9th)

Big ScaryNot Art[8]
2014

(10th)

RemiRaw x Infinity[9]
2015

(11th)

Courtney BarnettSometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit[10]
2016

(12th)

A.B. OriginalReclaim Australia[11]
2017

(13th)

Sampa the GreatBirds and the BEE9[12]

[13]

2018

(14th)

GurrumulDjarimirri[14][15]
2019

(15th)

Sampa the GreatThe Return[16][17]
2020

(16th)

The AvalanchesWe Will Always Love You[18][19]
2021

(17th)

Genesis OwusuSmiling with No Teeth[20][21]
2022

(18th)

King StingrayKing Stingray[22][23]
2023

(19th)

RVGBrain Worms[24][25]

See also

References