I wrote this for the fRoots board, but thought I'd bring it to wider attention here too, though obviously of less concern over here.
There's an interesting and very revealing story about the process of judging the Mercury Awards in today's Guardian G2, written by Jude Rogers, reviews editor of The Word.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,2163040,00.html
To me, one of the most telling paras reads:
"In May, my life was overtaken by 233 CDs. Note this was just the CDs, none of them being accompanied with potentially judgment-skewing press packs or videos. Each judge was asked to make a longlist of 25 albums. At this stage, the responsibility you feel as a judge is immense, and the amount of love you invest in lesser-known artists surges - this, you think to yourself, could be this act's passport to success, a huge push up the music industry's tall, giddy ladder. The judges then meet to come up with a shortlist . . ."
This absolutely tallies with what a former judge sympathic to fRoots' areas of music told me about how we've had breakthrough nominations in the past like Eliza Carthy, Norma Waterson, Kate Rusby and Susheela Raman. It needs one of the judges with a passion and knowledge of a so-called "specialist" area of music to get behind one album from that field which could deserve wider attention. If they do so, then at least the other judges are more likely to be enthused and give it a proper listen - it doesn't guarantee they'll like it, but at least it gets it in with a chance and levels the playing field.
I had no idea that the press packs which entrants are asked to supply large numbers of (in addition to a fee) don't go to the judges. This particularly discriminates against artists in non-mainstream fields where the judges may have no prior knowledge. This year, though I may be wrong, I believe that our area of music had no expert/ally on the panel and it seems to me that by neither providing informed, sympathetic judgement nor supporting materials, the Mercury organisation took entrance money from artists/ labels under false pretences - could I even dare to use the words "con" or "fraud" here? The shortlist would certainly seem to bear it out in a year where they have been some very noteworthy albums in our fields that I believe were entered.
Just imagine the outcry if they were found to have had a judging panel that didn't contain anybody interested in white boy rock bands . . .


It was acceptable in the eighties...