Billboard Awards Salute Top-Selling Artists

December 11, 1992

THE third annual Billboard Music Awards, which was broadcast live for the first time on the Fox network Wednesday night, proved to be business as usual for a music-awards television show.

The two-hour special was kept alive by dry-witted host Phil Collins, a Grammy Award winner who began his rock career as the lead vocalist/drummer for Genesis and has continued with a successful solo career. Three years ago, Collins won the Billboard World Artist award.

Top Winners Wednesday night were Boyz II Men, with the No. 1 Pop Single; Garth Brooks, who garnered the award for No. 1 Pop Artist; and Guns N' Roses, who were named as the No. 1 Group.

Billboard's awards are the only music awards that pay tribute to the year's No. 1 artists based on the combination of worldwide record sales, radio airplay, and marketplace tallies.

"The Billboard Music Awards are unique because the winners have been determined by fans. They `vote' with their record buys," producer Paul Flattery said in a press release.

Billboard magazine, an international news weekly that covers music and home entertainment, is read by over 200 million people in 104 countries around the world. In the mid-1950s, the magazine began its "Hot 100" chart, which today has grown to cover a large range of musical styles, including rock, dance, rap, country, R&B, modern rock, new age, jazz, Latin, gospel, world music, and classical.

Other top Billboard winners this year included: Jodeci for the No. 1 R&B Album; the Irish band U2 for the No. 1 Album Rock Tracks Artist; Cypress Hill for No. 1 Hot Rap Singles; Kriss Kross for New Pop Artist.

The band Genesis won for No. 1 Boxscore Concert, and U2 was named the No. 1 Boxscore Tour. Michael Jackson was cited as the Top-Selling Artist of the Decade, and George Harrison took home the Century Award.