MOBO Awards explained

The MOBO Awards
Current Awards:MOBO Awards 2023
Location:Various (in 2024, Sheffield)
Awarded For:Excellence in music of black origin
Presenter:MOBO Organisation
Country:United Kingdom

The MOBO Awards (Music of Black Origin, also known as the MOBOs) are an annual British music award presentation honouring achievements in "music of black origin", including hip hop, grime, UK Drill, R&B, soul, reggae, jazz, gospel, and African music.

The MOBO Awards were founded by Kanya King and Andy Ruffell. The first ever award was presented to Baby D, in the Best Dance Act category.[1] The inaugural awards were broadcast by Carlton Television from London's Connaught Rooms. Across its 22-year history, the MOBOs have been broadcast on Channel 4, BBC Television, ITV2 and on Channel 5 before returning to the BBC in 2020. In 2009, the ceremony was held for the first time in Glasgow. Prior to that, it had been held in London. In 2011, the ceremony returned for a second time to Scotland. The awards then moved to Leeds for the first time in 2015 and to Sheffield in 2024.

The show returned to Leeds in 2017 when it was last held before going on hiatus. In 2020 it was confirmed it would be returning that year, however for the first time ever it would be streamed on YouTube.

Ceremonies

The ceremony was first broadcast regionally on Carlton Television from 1996 to 1997, before airing nationwide on Channel 4 from 1998 until 2003. From 2004 to 2013, they were aired by the BBC; beginning in 2006, the show aired live on BBC Three, and highlights aired on BBC One.

In 2014, the BBC dropped the MOBO Awards, and the ceremony moved to ITV under a three-year deal, airing on ITV2 with same-night highlights on ITV.[2]

In 2017, the ceremony moved to Channel 5 and BET.[3]

In 2018, the MOBO Organisation announced that the ceremony would take a one-year hiatus in order to plan a "bigger, revamped show" in 2019. However, the show did not materialise, with organisers now planning to hold the ceremony in 2020 instead; Kanya King stated that there would be "positive changes" to the show, and that they would be "returning with even more determination and energy to support and boost our culture wherever we can."[4] [5]

Table summary

No.DateFirst broadcastBest AlbumBest SingleHonorary awardsBroadcasterHost(s)[6] Venue
118 November 1996[7] 21 November 1996TimelessGoldie"Give Me a Little More Time" – GabrielleLionel Richie
Jazzy B
Carlton Television (ITV)Sonya SaulNew Connaught Rooms, London
210 November 199713 November 1997[8] Travelling Without MovingJamiroquai"I Wanna Be the Only One" – Eternal ft. BeBe WinansBootsy Collins
Mick Hucknall
Lisa I'Anson
314 October 199815 October 1998ColoursAdam F"Freak Me" – Another LevelB. B. King
Sean Combs
Channel 4Mel B and Bill BellamyRoyal Albert Hall
46 October 19997 October 1999Prodigal SistaBeverley Knight"My Love" – Kele Le RocTina Turner
Erskine Thompson
Mel B and Wyclef Jean
54 October 20005 October 2000RiseGabrielle"Fill Me In" – Craig DavidLA Reid
Aswad
Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes and Trevor NelsonAlexandra Palace
64 October 20016 October 20018701 – Usher"Independent Women Part 1" – Destiny's ChildLuther Vandross
R Kelly
Trevor Nelson and KelisLondon Arena
71 October 20023 October 2002Songs in A Minor – Alicia Keys"It Takes More" – Ms DynamiteChaka Khan
Jimmy Cliff
Street Politiks
Alesha Dixon and LL Cool J
825 September 20034 October 2003Get Rich Or Die Tryin' – 50 Cent"In Da Club" – 50 CentGeorge Benson
Kool & The Gang
Lil' Kim
Lil' Kim and Blu CantrellRoyal Albert Hall
930 September 20046 October 2004The College Dropout – Kanye West"Thank You" – JameliaAnita Baker
Janet Jackson
BBC OneMos Def
1022 September 200523 September 2005Time To GrowLemar"Pow! (Forward)" – Lethal BPublic Enemy
Bob Marley and the Wailers
Gina Yashere and Akon
1120 September 200622 September 2006"Déjà Vu" – BeyoncéSam Moore
Anti-Slavery International
BBC One (highlights)
BBC Three (live coverage)
Gina Yashere and Coolio
1219 September 2007"Because of You" – NeYoJamelia and ShaggyThe O2 Arena
1315 October 2008SpiritLeona Lewis"American Boy" – EstelleMary WilsonMel B and Rev. RunWembley Arena
1430 September 2009Uncle BN-Dubz"Beat Again" – JLSMichael JacksonReggie Yates and Keri HilsonSEC Centre
1520 October 2010JLS – JLS"Playing With Fire" – N-Dubz ft. Mr HudsonBilly OceanAlesha Dixon and Reggie YatesEcho Arena Liverpool
165 October 2011Who You AreJessie J"Do It Like A Dude" – Jessie JBoyz II MenAlesha Dixon and Jason DeruloSEC Centre
173 November 2012Our Version of EventsEmeli Sandé"Earthquake" – Labrinth ft. Tinie TempahDionne Warwick
TLC
Miquita Oliver and Adam DeaconEcho Arena Liverpool
1819 October 2013HomeRudimental"La La La" – Naughty BoyStephen Lawrence TrustSSE Hydro
1922 October 2014In the Lonely HourSam Smith"Stay with Me" – Sam SmithIdris Elba (Inspiration)ITV2 (live coverage)
ITV (deferred)
Mel B and Sarah-Jane CrawfordWembley Arena
204 November 2015 The Long Way HomeKrept and Konan"Shutdown" – SkeptaLenny Henry
CeeLo Green
Sarah-Jane CrawfordFirst Direct Arena
214 November 2016Made in the ManorKano"Robbery (remix)" – Abra Cadabra ft. Krept & KonanNicola Adams
Ms. Dynamite
Rickie Haywood-Williams and Melvin Odoom[9] SSE Hydro
2229 November 2017Gang Signs & PrayerStormzy"Did You See" – J HusIdris Elba (Paving The Way)Channel 5 (deferred)
BET (highlights)
Maya Jama and Marvin Humes[10] First Direct Arena[11]
239 December 2020Crabs in a BucketNines"Don't Rush" – Young T & Bugsey feat. Headie OneSteve McQueenYouTube (live coverage)
BBC One (highlights)
Maya Jama and ChunkzVirtual[12]
245 December 20218 December 2021We're All Alone in This TogetherDave"Body" – Russ Millions and Tion WayneFrank Bruno (Inspiration)Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Munya Chawawa and Eddie KadiCBS Arena, Coventry
2530 November 20227 December 2022Alpha PlaceKnucks and Sometimes I Might Be IntrovertLittle Simz"Own Brand (Baddie)" – Dreya Mac, Felixthe1st and Finch FettiJamal Edwards (Paving the Way)Chunkz and Yung FillyWembley Arena
267 February 2024SprinterCentral Cee and DaveJessica Ennis-Hill (Paving the Way)Indiyah Polack and Babatunde AléshéSheffield Arena

Performers

In the course of its history, the MOBO Awards show has witnessed performances from UK and international talent. Over the years, artists have included Janet Jackson, E-17, Destiny's Child, Dionne Warwick, Lisa Maffia, Justin Timberlake, Kanye West, Tina Turner, Rosie Gaines, Dizzee Rascal, Jay-Z, LL Cool J, Amy Winehouse, Stefflon Don, Coolio, Usher, John Legend, Jason Derulo, and Jessie J.

In 2000, Sade came out of retirement to perform at the Awards, her first performance in almost a decade.

History

Kanya King launched the MOBO awards in 1996 with business partner Andy Ruffell, aiming to establish a platform for music that, according to King, encompasses urban, hip hop, R&B and reggae.

1996

1997

The 1997 award ceremony was held at London's New Connaught Rooms on 10 November. The gala included performances by Mary J. Blige and Eternal.

1998

The Malibu MOBO Awards show was held at The Royal Albert Hall and hosted by Mel B and Bill Bellamy. It was broadcast nationally by Channel 4. Performers and presenters included footballer Sol Campbell, girl band All Saints, DJ Trevor Nelson, boxers Lennox Lewis and Chris Eubank, Puff Daddy, Chaka Khan, Goldie, Another Level, and Martine McCutcheon. Contribution to Black Music went to Carl McIntosh and B. B. King won the Lifetime Achievement Award.

1999

The 1999 Malibu MOBO Awards award ceremony was held at The Royal Albert Hall, sponsored by Malibu and hosted by Mel B and Wyclef Jean. International Hip-Hop Act Award went to Jay-Z, Best Album was awarded to Beverley Knight, International Act to Lauryn Hill and Lifetime Achievement Award to Tina Turner. Performers and presenters included Des'ree, Dru Hill, Method Man & Redman, Tim Westwood, Lionel Richie, Lulu, Victoria Beckham, Chris Eubank, Another Level, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Destiny's Child, and girl band Eternal.

2000

The MOBO Awards 2000 ceremony took place at Alexandra Palace, hosted by Trevor Nelson and Lisa Left Eye Lopes and sponsored by Mastercard. There show opened with a performance of Money by Jamelia featuring Beenie Man. Craig David performed an acoustic medley of Fill Me In, 7 Days and Nice & Slow by Usher, Sade exclusively performed By Your Side, Gabrielle performed Rise, MJ Cole performed Crazy Love featuring Elizabeth Troy, Donell Jones performed U Know What's Up featuring ceremony host, Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes. The show closed with a performance of Who Let The Dogs Out by Baha Men.

In addition to their performances, Craig David, Jamelia, Beenie Man, MJ Cole and Gabrielle also won awards. With Craig David receiving three awards in total.

Award presenters included MOBO Award founder, Kanya King, Honeyz, Melanie Sykes amongst others.

2002

2003

In 2003, the MOBO awards show moved to The Royal Albert Hall and was hosted by Blu Cantrell and Lil' Kim, with performances from DMX, Lumidee, Wayne Wonder, George Benson, Lemar, Seal, Mis-Teeq and Redman, J'Nay John Adeleye, Big Brovaz, Black Eyed Peas and Kool and the Gang. Among the winners of the night were: 50 Cent, Justin Timberlake, Big Brovaz and Lisa Maffia, who was the only UK female artist to win an award.

2004

The ninth awards ceremony took place on 30 September 2004 at The Royal Albert Hall and was broadcast by BBC Television. Janet Jackson received the icon award. So Solid Crew won the award in the UK garage Act category award beating Dizzee Rascal and The Streets. Controversy surrounded the removal of reggae artists Vybz Kartel and Elephant Man from the "Best Reggae Act" category at the 2004 awards due to their homophobia and incitement to murder.[13]

2005

The 2005 awards show saw one of the biggest line-ups in MOBO award history, including John Legend, Ms Dynamite, Lemar, Kano, Damien Marley, Public Enemy and Lauryn Hill. The event was hosted by Gina Yashere and Akon at The Royal Albert Hall, with guest presenters Chris Eubank, Lisa Maffia, Josie Darby, Simon Webbe, Myleene Klass, Estelle, Tim Westwood, Kwame Kwei-Armah and Chuck D. Big winners on the night included Corrine Bailey-Rae, Lemar, Black Eyed Peas, Rihanna, Sean Paul and Beyoncé.

2006

In 2006 the awards ceremony was hosted by Coolio and Gina Yashere at The Royal Albert Hall. For the first time the World Music and Jazz categories were suspended. Corinne Bailey Rae won the prize for Best UK Newcomer and Jai Amore won Best Unsigned Act. British rapper Akala won Best Hip Hop Act, beating stiff competition from American acts such as Kanye West, 50 Cent, and The Game.

2007

The 2007 awards ceremony was broadcast live on BBC Three from the O2 Arena in London and hosted by Shaggy and Jamelia. The jazz category returned. Shaggy opened the evening with a medley. T-Pain performed on stage with Yung Joc, Craig David and Kano collaborated on stage; Ne-Yo, Mutya Buena and Robin Thicke also performed. Amy Winehouse performed two songs and accepted the award for Best UK Female. N-Dubz won Best Newcomer. England cricketer Monty Panesar and England footballer Micah Richards were among a line up of guests presenting individual awards which also included Sinitta and Quentin Tarantino.

2008

[14]

2009

See main article: MOBO Awards 2009. The 2009 awards event took place on 30 September at the SEC Centre in Glasgow, the first time the MOBO awards show took place outside London. A tribute performance was dedicated to Michael Jackson, and the Young Soul Rebels performed their charity single "I Got Soul". Reggie Yates and Keri Hilson hosted the awards show, with Peter Andre presenting backstage.

2010

The awards ceremony took place on 20 October 2010 in Liverpool.[15]

2011

The awards show returned to Glasgow's SEC Centre on 5 October 2011, hosted by Jason Derülo and Alesha Dixon. Jessie J won four awards, making her the biggest winner of the night. Boyz II Men received the award for Outstanding Contribution to Music. Other winners included Rihanna, Tinie Tempah, Adele and Alborosie. Amy Winehouse was given an award and a special tribute, following her death in July 2011.

2012

The 17th Awards show took place on 3 November 2012 at the Liverpool Arena. Presented by Miquita Oliver and Adam Deacon – with backstage support from Rickie and Melvin – the night saw Trey Songz, Conor Maynard, Emeli Sandé, Misha B, JLS, Stooshe, Labrinth, Angel and Wiley perform.

Emeli Sandé won awards for Best Female, Best Album and Best R&B/Soul while Plan B took Best Male Act and Best Hip Hop/Grime. TLC were awarded Outstanding Contribution to Music, with Dionne Warwick receiving the MOBO Lifetime Achievement Award. The full list of winners where:

2013

The 18th Awards show took place on 19 October 2013 and was held at the SSE Hydro in Glasgow. It was hosted by Trevor Nelson and Sarah-Jane Crawford. Performances included Tinie Tempah, Iggy Azalea, Naughty Boy, Rudimental and Jahméne Douglas.

Winners

2014

The 19th Awards show took place on 22 October 2014 and was held at The SSE Arena in London. It was hosted by Mel B and Sarah-Jane Crawford. It was broadcast live on ITV2 for the first time.

Performances

Winners

2015

The 20th Awards show took place on 4 November 2015 and was held at the First Direct Arena in Leeds.[16] The show was broadcast live on ITV2 and hosted by Sarah-Jane Crawford.

Performances

Winners

2016

The 21st Awards show took place on 4 November 2016 and was held at the SSE Hydro in Glasgow. The show was broadcast live on ITV2 and hosted by Rickie Haywood Williams and Melvin Odoom.

Tinie Tempah was due to perform, but pulled out hours before the show. He was replaced by Professor Green.

An error saw the wrong act given the award for Best Song. "Of the many worthy winners of best song, we deeply regret a mistake was made," said Mobo organisers, in a statement blaming a "production error".

Performances

Winners

2017

The MOBO Awards 2017 took place at Leeds First Direct Arena on 29 November. Stormzy won three awards while Stefflon Don's award made her the only female winner on the night.[17]

2021

See main article: article and MOBO Awards 2021.

2022

See main article: article and MOBO Awards 2022.

2023

See main article: article and MOBO Awards 2023.

MOBO UnSung Awards

MOBO UnSung is a biennial talent competition for unsigned acts, showcasing the next generation of urban artists.[18] The 10 finalists (unusually increased to 11 in 2018 due to the high numbers of entrants), are narrowed down to a top 3, which the winner is then picked from.[19]

2022

2018

2016

2014

2013

2012

Criticism

The MOBOs have faced criticism for having become increasingly oriented towards "commercial" urban music, and having given nominations and awards to musicians who are not black.[37] [38] In 2003, a boycott effort emerged after the American pop musicians Justin Timberlake and Christina Aguilera won the awards for Best R&B Act and Best Video respectively. The Independent described the wins as being the result of the "white appropriation of black music".[37] A MOBO spokesperson defended their presence, stating that the awards were designed to honour achievements in music of black origin, regardless of the ethnicity of their performers, and cited the increasing worldwide growth of urban music at the time.[37]

In 2006, DJ and music journalist Bigger wrote that the presentation had been "veering away from its concept of rewarding music of black origin" as early as its third edition, noting its increasing dominance by American acts at the expense of domestic acts. He argued that the show had become "little more than a pat on the back and a jolly boys' outing for major labels and American acts."[39]

In 2011, Lanre Bakare wrote in The Guardian that the show was being affected by the music industry's dilution of the distinctive black music scene, promoting it to mainstream audiences as popular music (including "manufactured", U.S.-style hip-hop and R&B). In the column, it was noted that Labrinth had criticized the nominations of Conor Maynard and Ed Sheeran for awards, while Charlie Dark of Attica Blues argued that the MOBOs needed to promote innovation in black music, and "shouldn't be an annual event where everyone pats themselves on the back for very small advances that they've made, when they are powerful enough to bring real change. If they don't adapt, artists who aren't interested in commercial pop and being put in musical boxes will just do their own thing."[38]

In 2020, English rock duo Nova Twins wrote an open letter on Twitter addressed to the MOBOs concerning the lack of a Rock/Alternative category, despite the fact that many POC have contributed to the evolution of rock music, and still are to this day, and hoping "that a Rock/Alternative category will be added to the MOBO (Music of Black Origin) Awards in 2021, recognising the POC contributors to the genre".[40] The MOBOS later replied on Twitter that "the MOBO Awards Judging Panel have actually discussed this and ... will continue to review potential category expansions for future Award ceremonies."[41]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1996: The Beginning – with Tony Blair, Lionel Richie, The Fugees,,, – MOBO Awards. mobo.com. 26 September 2017.
  2. Web site: MOBO Awards to return to London for 2014 ceremony . 2014-09-04. NME. Paras . Sehmar. 2019-12-14.
  3. Web site: CHANNEL 5 CONFIRMED AS OFFICIAL BROADCASTER OF THE 2017 MOBO AWARDS. mobo.com. 2019-12-14.
  4. News: Mobo awards take 'gap year' to plan future. Savage. Mark. 2018-09-25. BBC News. 2018-09-25.
  5. News: MOBO Awards coming back for 2020. BBC News. 2019-11-12. 2019-12-14.
  6. Web site: MOBO ACKNOWLEDGES: 17 YEARS OF AWARD SHOW HOSTS. Wendi. Bekoe. MOBO. 13 October 2013. 25 October 2016.
  7. Web site: Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 7 December 1996. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.. 26 September 2017. Google Books.
  8. Book: Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Billboard. 12. mobo awards carlton television 1997 broadcast.. 15 November 1997. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.. 26 September 2017. Internet Archive.
  9. Web site: Breakfast radio royalty Rickie and Melvin unveiled as hosts for 2016 MOBO Awards in Glasgow. Rebecca. Parker. glasgowlive.co.uk. 26 October 2016. 26 October 2016.
  10. Web site: George. Gamer. MOBO Awards 2017 reveal hosts and live performers. musicweek.com. 23 November 2017. 23 November 2017.
  11. Web site: MOBO Awards to return to First Direct Arena in Leeds. BBC News. 26 September 2017. 26 September 2017.
  12. Web site: MOBO Awards returns on 9 December. MOBO. 23 November 2020.
  13. News: Growing up Gay in Jamaica. BBC News . 15 September 2004. 7 June 2010.
  14. Web site: MOBO Awards 2008 MOBO Organisation . mobo.com . 20 October 2021.
  15. Web site: MOBO Lands in Liverpool! . MOBO . 19 October 2010 . 22 October 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160818210658/http://www.mobo.com/news-blogs/mobo-lands-in-liverpool . 18 August 2016 . dead .
  16. News: MOBO Awards 2015 will take place in Leeds!. MOBO. 31 August 2015. 28 October 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160818210700/http://www.mobo.com/news-blogs/mobo-awards-2015-will-take-place-leeds. 18 August 2016. dead.
  17. News: Here's Everything That Happened At The MOBO Awards 2017. Capital XTRA. 30 November 2017. 2017-11-30.
  18. Web site: UnSung MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  19. Web site: MOBO UnSung 2021 MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  20. Web site: 30 November 2021. MOBO UnSung: Class of 2022 MOBO Organisation. 13 December 2021. mobo.com.
  21. Web site: 20 October 2021. MARSHALL ANNOUNCED AS OFFICIAL PARTNER OF MOBO UNSUNG MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  22. Web site: 2021-11-03. MOBO UnSung 2021 – Now Open For Entries. 2021-11-23. PRS for Music Foundation.
  23. Web site: 11 October 2018. MOBO UnSung 2018: Get To Know Our Finalists! MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  24. Web site: 27 February 2019. Graft wins MOBO UnSung 2018! MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  25. Web site: Graft crowned the winner of MOBO UnSung 2018. 23 November 2021. PRS for Music Foundation.
  26. Web site: 15 June 2017. MOBO UnSung 2016: Get To Know Our Top 10 Finalists! MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  27. Web site: 12 October 2017. MOBO UnSung Tour 2017 announced. 23 November 2021. PRS for Music Foundation.
  28. Web site: 15 June 2017. ALIKA WINS MOBO UNSUNG 2016 MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  29. Web site: Alika named the winner of MOBO UnSung 2016. 2021-11-23. PRS for Music Foundation.
  30. Web site: 16 June 2017. 2014 MOBO UnSung: Get To Know Our 10 Finalists! MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  31. Web site: 29 April 2015. MOBO UnSung Tour Announced! Featuring UnSung 2014 winners MiC LOWRY as the headline Act! MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  32. Web site: 21 May 2015. The 2015 MOBO UnSung Tour MOBO Organisation. 23 November 2021. mobo.com.
  33. Web site: MOBO UnSung Competition 2014 winner. 23 November 2021. PRS for Music Foundation.
  34. Web site: 24 September 2013. They've got that MOBO workin' – The Best You Magazine. 23 November 2021. The Best You Magazine.
  35. Web site: Guy. Peter. 11 July 2012. Liverpool soul star Esco Williams wins MOBO Unsung Award. 23 November 2021. Liverpool Echo.
  36. Web site: 22 February 2013. MOBO UnSung 2012: Artists Catch Up – Esco Williams, Jacob Banks & more MOBO Awards. live. 29 September 2017. 23 November 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20170929183904/http://www.mobo.com/news-blogs/mobo-unsung-2012-artists-catch.
  37. Web site: Boycott call as white acts win music prizes. 2003-09-26. The Independent. Louise. Jury. 2019-08-23.
  38. News: The Mobos' real problem is not being too white: it's being too commercial. Bakare. Lanre. 2012-11-04. The Observer. 2019-08-23. 0029-7712.
  39. News: Are the Mobos good for black music?. 20 September 2006. BBC News.
  40. 1333384207658344448. NovaTwinsMusic. Our open letter to the@moboawards:. 30 November 2020.
  41. 1333439389901459459. MOBO. Replying to@MOBOAwards. 30 November 2020.