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Showing posts with label Adele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adele. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

If Adele Adkins does not convert her six Grammy nominations into a haul of golden statuettes this weekend in Los Angeles, eyebrows will be raised on both sides of the Atlantic. The girl from Tottenham may speak with an accent incomprehensible to most Americans but for the past year the United States has been utterly in thrall to her voice.
British pop stars, from Dusty Springfield to Duran Duran, have of course enjoyed periods of domination in America before, registering both in the charts and also at the Grammy Awards. But what is unprecedented about Adele’s recent US takeover is the sheer magnitude of her triumph.
Her second album, 21, so called because she wrote the songs when she was that age, sold over 5.5 million copies in the US last year. The nearest competitor, Born This Way by Lady Gaga, struggled to sell 1.9 million copies, even with a leg up from a cut-price promotion by Amazon. 21 has again been number one in the American charts every week this year, after a brief interlude in which Michael Bublé’s Christmas CD took the top spot, and the sales total has moved past six million. That means Adele has outsold the far more publicised Gaga three to one. Throw in another million or so sales of her reinvigorated debut album 19 and the scale of the rout becomes astounding.
Put simply, 21 is the hit that won’t quit. The last album to stay ahead for so long was Whitney Houston’s The Bodyguard soundtrack, which 20 years ago topped the US charts for 20 weeks. Barring Earth being struck by an asteroid, 21 should equal that total in two weeks time and, given a Grammy boost, go on to surpass it, since there is no new release on the horizon capable of toppling it.
At a time when selling two million albums is seen as phenomenal, 21’s six million sales are near miraculous. There is, incidentally, no chance 21 could ever overtake the longest-running number one of all time, the 54-week wonder West Side Story from 1962.

21 has already yielded three US number-one hit singles – Rolling in the Deep, Someone Like You and Set Fire to the Rain – becoming the first album by one artist to do so while the album they came from was also number one. She has even managed the bestselling music DVD of the year, Live at the Royal Albert Hall. (It’s interesting to note that in the UK, only Someone Like You hit the top spot).
Adele’s effect on American radio has been similarly dramatic: usually strictly partisan in the styles of music they play, a wider variety of radio stations, including Latin, have played Rolling in the Deep than any previous recording. With six million downloads, it is the bestselling single in America since Elton John’s Candle in the Wind 1997.
The truly astonishing aspect of her success is that Adele has managed it as an American outlier. Partly by design and somewhat by accident, she has not played the promotional games that are considered de rigueur in today’s business. Most money is made from touring, but she had to cancel many 2011 shows due to a haemorrhaged vocal cord, forgoing not only box office revenue but the promotional impact on record sales. In an era when even cute kittens make videos, Adele acted as if she feared that having her image captured on camera would steal her soul. She had one proper video made, Rolling in the Deep, relied on a televised performance of Someone Like You to virally publicise that song, and put out a concert clip of Set Fire to the Rain.
Unlike almost every other major female star of our time, Adele has not launched a fragrance and does not have a fashion line. One might think this is logical, since her appeal is in her extraordinary soulfulness rather than mere physical attractiveness, but the music lover with a long memory cannot help but recall how, at the peak of her historic late-Sixties success, Aretha Franklin, universally recognised as the Queen of Soul, complained that she never got to model designer gowns int he way Diana Ross did. Franklin failed to grasp that she did not need to be a fashion plate to be loved.
Adele seems to know this intuitively. What she sells is well-written music performed with profound emotion. She is perfect for the American market without pandering to it. Even before the r&b giant Etta James passed away this January, Adele made it clear that she had been influenced by the soul titan. She inhabits a song and lives her lyric in the best tradition of jazz and blues singers from Frank Sinatra to Billie Holiday. So did another English singer Americans took to their heart, Adele’s fellow Brit School alumna Amy Winehouse.
This style is far more native to the US than the Nineties Britpop sound, which, in the famous words of music business legend Maurice Oberstein, “was a Britflop”. It is also more natural to American ears than much of Europop, which is constructed on a thumping beat not far from the oompah of German marching songs but very distant from the rhythmic percussion of r &  b.
If her recent remarks are to be believed, Adele will become even more palatable to a wide American audience when she incorporates more of a bluegrass feel into her next album. The greatest UK successes in the US have historically returned some American music forms to sender, as the Beatles and Rolling Stones did with early r&b covers and Led Zeppelin did with blues.
Adele is no stranger to the Grammys, having taken the trophies for Best New Artist and Best Female Vocal Performance in 2009. The astonishing element in these wins is that she only got Pavements to number 21 in the Hot 100. Her debut album, 19, peaked at 10.
This year, she has six nominations, Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album for 21, Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Short Form Music Video for Rolling in the Deep, and Best Pop Solo Performance for Someone Like You.
If she does take a half dozen walks to the podium, she will overtake all previous British artists who have dominated the American popular charts. The Beatles have more number ones (20) and more albums sold (a certified 207  million) in the US than any other artist ever, but they only won four Grammys when they were together. To follow the Grammys in the Sixties was to suffer a series of self-administered head wounds, caused by repeatedly slapping one’s brow in disbelief. The Grammys just did not get rock ’n’ roll until the Fab Four were history. After they broke up, the Beatles won seven. Jimmy Sturr, the polka king, won 18. As they say in New York, go figure.
Things were even worse for the next British artist to dominate the American charts, Elton John. His Seventies run of seven consecutive number-one albums remains the longest continuous string for a soloist in chart history, but none of them won Grammys. Elton had to wait until 1987 before he could share an award with Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight and Stevie Wonder.
He has earned a motley collection of six Grammys, including Best Instrumental Composition for Basque, performed by James Galway. So much for Your Song and Rocket Man!
The Grammys got hip during the Seventies, just in time for the historic success of the British disco kings the Bee Gees at the end of the decade. Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb wrote, performed and/or produced eight American number-one singles during 1978 and were rewarded with five prizes, including Album of the Year for Saturday Night Fever. The next British artist to win that many in one night was Amy Winehouse, who took home five, including Best New Artist, Record of the Year and Song of the Year, in 2008.
Now Adele threatens to equal or surpass these outstanding hauls. In her softly, softly approach to public life she recalls another UK vocalist, Sade, who has released nine albums in America since her 1985 debut. Every one of them has made the top 10. Sade has won four Grammys over her career without too much notice in Britain and enjoyed one of the top-10 earning tours of America in 2011, raking in $48,600,000.
Adele could equal and even exceed that sum this year if her voice holds out. But why bother with a long tour and submit herself to such physical strain? The way she’s pulling in money from recordings, she could actually concentrate on creating music rather than re-creating it.
In the meantime, we await tomorrow evening’s awards ceremony. Adele will probably make a clean sweep because she’s the winner from every perspective. She embodies commercial success, quality, and the underdog factor that made Susan Boyle a global phenomenon. As Elton John quipped at the Ivor Novello Awards in 2011, “Next year a large woman will win everything – and it won’t be me.”

Saturday, February 11, 2012

54th Grammy Awards

The 54th Annual Grammy Awards will be held on February 12, 2012, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles being broadcast on CBS 8:00 p.m. ET. Nominations were announced on November 30, 2011 on prime-time television as part of "The GRAMMY Nominations Concert Live! – Countdown to Music's Biggest Night", a one-hour special broadcast live on CBS from Nokia Theatre at L.A. Live.Kanye West received the most nominations with seven. Adele, Foo Fighters and Bruno Mars each received six nominations. Lil Wayne, Skrillex and Radiohead all earned five nominations.
A total of 78 awards will be presented following the Academy's decision to restructure the Grammy Award categories. Paul McCartney received the MusiCares Person of the Year award on February 10, 2012 at the Los Angeles Convention Center, two nights prior to the Grammy telecast. LL Cool J is set to host the show. It's the first time in seven years that the music industry's premier event will have an official host
On February 08, 2012 academy announced that 54th Grammy Pre-Telecast Ceremony will Stream Live Internationally. The show will take place from 1–3:30 p.m. PT at the Los Angeles Convention Center and will be streamed live in its entirety internationally at Grammy's official website and CBS Television Network. The ceremony will be co-hosted by Dave Koz and MC Lyte. a total of 68 Awards will be presented in the Pre-Telecast ceremony.
This year's official poster is designed by Architect Frank Gehry.

Pre-Telecast

Performers

  • Kim Burrell, Le'Andria Johnson, Kelly Price and Trin-I-Tee 5:7
  • Joyce DiDonato
  • Steve Earle
  • Rebirth Brass Band

Presenters

  • Gerald Clayton
  • Chick Corea
  • Brandon Heath
  • Arturo O'Farrill
  • OK Go
  • Corinne Bailey Rae
  • Esperanza Spalding
  • Jimmy Jam

Performers

  • Adele
  • Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson
  • The Beach Boys, Foster the People and Maroon 5
  • Tony Bennett and Carrie Underwood
  • Chris Brown, Deadmau5, Foo Fighters, David Guetta and Lil Wayne
  • Glen Campbell, The Band Perry and Blake Shelton
  • The Civil Wars
  • Coldplay and Rihanna
  • Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt (Tribute to Etta James)
  • Diana Krall
  • Bruno Mars
  • Paul McCartney
  • Nicki Minaj
  • Maceo Parker
  • Katy Perry
  • Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band
  • Taylor Swift
  • Joe Walsh

Presenters

  • Marc Anthony
  • Dierks Bentley
  • Jack Black
  • Reba McEntire
  • Drake
  • Fergie
  • Lady Antebellum
  • Miranda Lambert
  • Gwyneth Paltrow
  • Diana Ross
  • Ryan Seacrest
  • Ringo Starr
  • Amir "?uestlove" Thompson

Nominees

General

Record of the Year
  • "Rolling in the Deep" – Adele
    • Paul Epworth, producer; Tom Elmhirst & Mark Rankin, engineers/mixers
  • "Holocene" – Bon Iver
    • Justin Vernon, producer; Brian Joseph & Justin Vernon, engineers/mixers
  • "Grenade" – Bruno Mars
    • The Smeezingtons, producers; Ari Levine & Manny Marroquin, engineers/mixers
  • "The Cave" – Mumford & Sons
    • Markus Dravs, producer; Francois Chevallier & Ruadhri Cushnan, engineers/mixers
  • "Firework" – Katy Perry
    • Stargate & Sandy Vee, producers; Mikkel S. Eriksen, Phil Tan, Sandy Vee & Miles Walker, engineers/mixers
Album of the Year
  • 21 – Adele
    • Jim Abbiss, Adele, Paul Epworth, Rick Rubin, Fraser T. Smith, Ryan Tedder & Dan Wilson, producers; Jim Abbiss, Philip Allen, Beatriz Artola, Ian Dowling, Tom Elmhirst, Greg Fidelman, Dan Parry, Steve Price, Mark Rankin, Andrew Scheps, Fraser T. Smith & Ryan Tedder, engineers/mixers; Tom Coyne, mastering engineer
  • Wasting Light – Foo Fighters
    • Butch Vig, producer; James Brown & Alan Moulder, engineers/mixers; Joe LaPorta & Emily Lazar, mastering engineers
  • Born This Way – Lady Gaga
    • Paul Blair, DJ Snake, Fernando Garibay, Lady Gaga, Robert John "Mutt" Lange, Jeppe Laursen, RedOne & Clinton Sparks, producers; Fernando Garibay, Lady Gaga, Bill Malina, Trevor Muzzy, RedOne, Dave Russell, Justin Shirley Smith, Horace Ward & Tom Ware, engineers/mixers; Gene Grimaldi, mastering engineer
  • Doo-Wops & Hooligans – Bruno Mars
    • B.o.B, Cee Lo Green & Damian Marley, featured artists; Dwayne "Supa Dups" Chin-Quee, Needlz & The Smeezingtons, producers; Ari Levine & Manny Marroquin, engineers/mixers; Stephen Marcussen, mastering engineer
  • Loud – Rihanna
    • Drake, Eminem & Nicki Minaj, featured artists; Ester Dean, Alex da Kid, Kuk Harrell, Mel & Mus, Awesome Jones, Makeba Riddick, The Runners, Sham, Soundz, Stargate, Chris "Tricky" Stewart, Sandy Vee & Willy Will, producers; Ariel Chobaz, Cary Clark, Mikkel S. Eriksen, Alex da Kid, Josh Gudwin, Kuk Harrell, Jaycen Joshua, Manny Marroquin, Dana Nielsen, Chad "C-Note" Roper, Noah "40" Shebib, Corey Shoemaker, Jay Stevenson, Mike Strange, Phil Tan, Brian "B-Luv" Thomas, Marcos Tovar, Sandy Vee, Jeff "Supa Jeff" Villanueva, Miles Walker & Andrew Wuepper, engineers/mixers; Chris Gehringer, mastering engineer
Song of the Year
  • "All of the Lights"
    • Jeff Bhasker, Stacy Ferguson, Really Doe, Kanye West & Malik Yusef, songwriters (Kanye West featuring Rihanna, Kid Cudi & Fergie)
  • "The Cave"
    • Ted Dwane, Ben Lovett, Marcus Mumford & Country Winston, songwriters (Mumford & Sons)
  • "Grenade"
    • Brody Brown, Claude Kelly, The Smeezingtons & Andrew Wyatt, songwriters (Bruno Mars)
  • "Holocene"
    • Justin Vernon, songwriter (Bon Iver)
  • "Rolling in the Deep"
    • Adele & Paul Epworth, songwriters (Adele)
Best New Artist
  • The Band Perry
  • Bon Iver
  • J. Cole
  • Nicki Minaj
  • Skrillex

Pop

Best Pop Solo Performance
  • "Someone Like You" – Adele
  • "Yoü and I" – Lady Gaga
  • "Grenade" – Bruno Mars
  • "Firework" – Katy Perry
  • "Fuckin' Perfect" – P!nk
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
  • "Body and Soul" – Tony Bennett & Amy Winehouse
  • "Dearest" – The Black Keys
  • "Paradise" – Coldplay
  • "Pumped Up Kicks" – Foster the People
  • "Moves Like Jagger" – Maroon 5 featuring Christina Aguilera
Best Pop Instrumental Album
  • Wish Upon a Star: A Tribute to the Music of Walt Disney – Jenny Oaks Baker
  • E Kahe Malie – Daniel Ho
  • The Road from Memphis – Booker T. Jones
  • Hello Tomorrow – Dave Koz
  • Setzer Goes Instru-Mental! – Brian Setzer
Best Pop Vocal Album
  • 21 – Adele
  • The Lady Killer – Cee Lo Green
  • Born This Way – Lady Gaga
  • Doo-Wops & Hooligans – Bruno Mars
  • Loud – Rihanna

Dance/Electronica

Best Dance Recording
  • "Raise Your Weapon" – deadmau5 featuring Greta Svabo Bech
    • Joel Zimmerman, producer
  • "Barbra Streisand" – Duck Sauce
    • Armand Van Helden & Alain Macklovitch, producers; Armand Van Helden & Alain Macklovitch, mixers
  • "Sunshine" – David Guetta & Avicii
    • Tim Bergling, David Guetta & Giorgio Tuinfort, producers; Tim Bergling, mixer
  • "Call Your Girlfriend" – Robyn
    • Klas Åhlund & Billboard, producers; Niklas Flyckt, mixer
  • "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" – Skrillex
    • Sonny Moore, producer & mixer
  • "Save the World" - Swedish House Mafia
    • Steve Angello, Axel Hedfors & Sebastian Ingrosso, producers; Steve Angello, Axel Hedfors & Sebastian Ingrosso, mixers
Best Dance/Electronica Album
  • Zonoscope – Cut Copy
  • 4x4=12 – deadmau5
  • Nothing but the Beat – David Guetta
  • Body Talk Pt. 3 – Robyn
  • Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites – Skrillex

Traditional Pop

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album
  • Duets II – Tony Bennett
  • The Gift – Susan Boyle
  • In Concert on Broadway – Harry Connick, Jr.
  • Music Is Better Than Words – Seth MacFarlane
  • What Matters Most – Barbra Streisand

Rock

Best Rock Performance
  • "Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall" – Coldplay
  • "Down By the Water" – The Decemberists
  • "Walk" – Foo Fighters
  • "The Cave" – Mumford & Sons
  • "Lotus Flower" – Radiohead
Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance
  • "On the Backs of Angels" – Dream Theater
  • "White Limo" – Foo Fighters
  • "Curl of the Burl" – Mastodon
  • "Public Enemy No. 1" – Megadeth
  • "Blood in My Eyes" – Sum 41
Best Rock Song
  • "The Cave"
    • Mumford & Sons, songwriters (Mumford & Sons)
  • "Down By the Water"
    • Colin Meloy, songwriter (The Decemberists)
  • "Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall"
    • Coldplay, songwriters (Coldplay)
  • "Lotus Flower"
    • Radiohead, songwriters (Radiohead)
  • "Walk"
    • Foo Fighters, songwriters (Foo Fighters)
Best Rock Album
  • Rock 'n' Roll Party (Honoring Les Paul) – Jeff Beck
  • Wasting Light – Foo Fighters
  • Come Around Sundown – Kings of Leon
  • I'm With You – Red Hot Chili Peppers
  • The Whole Love – Wilco

Alternative

Best Alternative Music Album
  • Bon Iver – Bon Iver
  • Codes and Keys – Death Cab for Cutie
  • Torches – Foster the People
  • Circuital – My Morning Jacket
  • The King of Limbs – Radiohead

R&B

Best R&B Performance
  • "Far Away" – Marsha Ambrosius
  • "Pieces of Me" – Ledisi
  • "Not My Daddy" – Kelly Price featuring Stokley Williams
  • "Is This Love" – Corinne Bailey Rae
  • "You Are" – Charlie Wilson
Best Traditional R&B Performance
  • "Sometimes I Cry" – Eric Benét
  • "Fool for You" – Cee Lo Green featuring Melanie Fiona
  • "Radio Message" – R. Kelly
  • "Good Man" – Raphael Saadiq
  • "Surrender" – Betty Wright & The Roots
Best R&B Song
  • "Far Away"
    • Marsha Ambrosius, Sterling Simms & Justin Smith, songwriters (Marsha Ambrosius)
  • "Fool for You"
    • Cee Lo Green & Jack Splash, songwriters (Cee Lo Green featuring Melanie Fiona)
  • "Not My Daddy"
    • Kelly Price, songwriter (Kelly Price featuring Stokley Williams)
  • "Pieces of Me"
    • Chuck Harmony, Claude Kelly & Ledisi, songwriters (Ledisi)
  • "You Are"
    • Dennis Bettis, Carl M. Days, Jr., Wirlie Morris, Charlie Wilson & Mahin Wilson, songwriters (Charlie Wilson)
Best R&B Album
  • F.A.M.E. – Chris Brown
  • Second Chance – El DeBarge
  • Love Letter – R. Kelly
  • Pieces of Me – Ledisi
  • Kelly – Kelly Price

Rap

Best Rap Performance
  • "Look at Me Now" – Chris Brown featuring Lil Wayne & Busta Rhymes
  • "Otis" – Jay-Z & Kanye West (featuring Otis Redding)
  • "The Show Goes On" – Lupe Fiasco
  • "Moment 4 Life" – Nicki Minaj featuring Drake
  • "Black and Yellow" – Wiz Khalifa
Best Rap/Sung Collaboration
  • "Party" – Beyoncé featuring André 3000
  • "I'm On One" – DJ Khaled featuring Drake, Rick Ross & Lil Wayne
  • "I Need a Doctor" – Dr. Dre featuring Eminem & Skylar Grey
  • "What's My Name?" – Rihanna featuring Drake
  • "Motivation" – Kelly Rowland featuring Lil Wayne
  • "All of the Lights" – Kanye West featuring Rihanna, Fergie & Kid Cudi
Best Rap Song
  • "All of the Lights"
    • Jeff Bhasker, Fergie, Really Doe, Kanye West & Malik Yusef, songwriters (Kanye West featuring Rihanna, Fergie & Kid Cudi)
  • "Black and Yellow"
    • Wiz Khalifa & Stargate, songwriters (Wiz Khalifa)
  • "I Need a Doctor"
    • Alex da Kid, Dr. Dre, Eminem & Skylar Grey, songwriters (Dr. Dre featuring Eminem & Skylar Grey)
  • "Look at Me Now"
    • Jean Baptiste, Chris Brown, Ryan Buendia, Diplo, Lil Wayne & Busta Rhymes, songwriters (Chris Brown featuring Lil Wayne & Busta Rhymes)
  • "Otis"
    • Jay-Z & Kanye West, songwriters (with James Brown, Jimmy Campbell, Reg Connelly, Roy Hammond, J. Roach, Kirk Robinson & Harry M. Woods, songwriters) (Jay-Z & Kanye West) (featuring Otis Redding)
  • "The Show Goes On"
    • Dustin William Brower, Jonathon Keith Brown, Daniel Johnson, Kane & Lupe Fiasco, songwriters (with Isaac Brock, Dann Gallucci & Eric Judy, songwriters) (Lupe Fiasco)
Best Rap Album
  • Watch the Throne – Jay-Z & Kanye West
  • Tha Carter IV – Lil Wayne
  • Lasers – Lupe Fiasco
  • Pink Friday – Nicki Minaj
  • My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy – Kanye West

Country

Best Country Solo Performance
  • "Dirt Road Anthem" – Jason Aldean
  • "I'm Gonna Love You Through It" – Martina McBride
  • "Honey Bee" – Blake Shelton
  • "Mean" – Taylor Swift
  • "Mama's Song" – Carrie Underwood
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
  • "Don't You Wanna Stay" – Jason Aldean with Kelly Clarkson
  • "You and Tequila" – Kenny Chesney featuring Grace Potter
  • "Barton Hollow" – The Civil Wars
  • "Are You Gonna Kiss Me or Not" – Thompson Square
Best Country Song
  • "Are You Gonna Kiss Me or Not"
    • Jim Collins & David Lee Murphy, songwriters (Thompson Square)
  • "God Gave Me You"
    • Dave Barnes, songwriter (Blake Shelton)
  • "Just Fishin'"
    • Casey Beathard, Monty Criswell & Ed Hill, songwriters (Trace Adkins)
  • "Mean"
    • Taylor Swift, songwriter (Taylor Swift)
  • "Threaten Me with Heaven"
    • Vince Gill, Amy Grant, Will Owsley & Dillon O’Brian, songwriters (Vince Gill)
  • "You and Tequila"
    • Matraca Berg & Deana Carter, songwriters (Kenny Chesney featuring Grace Potter)
Best Country Album
  • My Kinda Party – Jason Aldean
  • Chief – Eric Church
  • Own the Night – Lady Antebellum
  • Red River Blue – Blake Shelton
  • Here for a Good Time – George Strait
  • Speak Now – Taylor Swift

New Age

Best New Age Album
  • Northern Seas – Al Conti
  • Gaia – Michael Brant DeMaria
  • Wind, Rock, Sea & Flame – Peter Kater
  • What's It All About – Pat Metheny
  • Instrumental Oasis, Vol. 6 – Zamora

Jazz

Best Improvised Jazz Solo
  • "All or Nothing at All" – Randy Brecker
  • "You Are My Sunshine" – Ron Carter
  • "500 Miles High" – Chick Corea
  • "Work" – Fred Hersch
  • "Sonnymoon for Two" – Sonny Rollins
Best Jazz Vocal Album
  • 'Round Midnight – Karrin Allyson
  • The Mosaic Project – Terri Lyne Carrington & Various Artists
  • The Gate – Kurt Elling
  • American Road – Tierney Sutton (Band)
  • The Music of Randy Newman – Roseanna Vitro
Best Jazz Instrumental Album
  • Bond: The Paris Sessions – Gerald Clayton
  • Forever – Corea, Clarke & White
  • Alone at the Vanguard – Fred Hersch
  • Bird Songs – Joe Lovano & Us Five
  • Road Shows Vol. 2 – Sonny Rollins
  • Timeline – Yellowjackets
Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album
  • The Jazz Ballad Song Book – Randy Brecker with DR Big Band
  • The Good Feeling – Christian McBride Big Band
  • 40 Acres and a Burro – Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
  • Legacy – Gerald Wilson Orchestra
  • Alma Adentro: The Puerto Rican Songbook – Miguel Zenón

Gospel/Contemporary Christian

Best Gospel/Contemporary Christian Music Performance
  • "Do Everything" – Steven Curtis Chapman
  • "Alive (Mary Magdalene)" – Natalie Grant
  • "Your Love" – Brandon Heath
  • "Jesus" – Le'Andria Johnson
  • "I Lift My Hands" – Chris Tomlin
Best Gospel Song
  • "Hello Fear"
    • Kirk Franklin, songwriter (Kirk Franklin)
  • "Sitting with Me"
    • Gerald Haddon, Tammi Haddon & Mary Mary, songwriters (Mary Mary)
  • "Spiritual"
    • Donald Lawrence, songwriter (Donald Lawrence & Co. featuring Blanche McAllister-Dykes)
  • "Trust Me"
    • Richard Smallwood, songwriter (Richard Smallwood & Vision)
  • "Window"
    • Canton Jones, songwriter (Canton Jones)
Best Contemporary Christian Music Song
  • "Blessings"
    • Laura Story, songwriter (Laura Story)
  • "Hold Me"
    • Jamie Grace, Christopher Stevens & TobyMac, songwriters (Jamie Grace featuring TobyMac)
  • "I Lift My Hands"
    • Louie Giglio, Matt Maher & Chris Tomlin, songwriters (Chris Tomlin)
  • "Strong Enough"
    • Matthew West, songwriter (Matthew West)
  • "Your Love"
    • Brandon Heath & Jason Ingram, songwriters (Brandon Heath)
Best Gospel Album
  • The Love Album – Kim Burrell
  • The Journey – Andraé Crouch
  • Hello Fear – Kirk Franklin
  • Something Big – Mary Mary
  • Angel & Chanelle (Deluxe Edition) – Trin-i-tee 5:7
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album
  • Ghosts Upon the Earth – Gungor
  • Leaving Eden – Brandon Heath
  • The Great Awakening – Leeland
  • What If We Were Real – Mandisa
  • Black & White – Royal Tailor
  • And If Our God Is for Us... – Chris Tomlin

Latin

Best Latin Pop, Rock or Urban Album
  • Entren Los Que Quieran – Calle 13
  • Entre La Ciudad Y El Mar – Gustavo Galindo
  • Nuestra – La Vida Bohème
  • Not So Commercial – Los Amigos Invisibles
  • Drama y Luz – Maná
Best Regional Mexican or Tejano Album
  • Bicentenario – Pepe Aguilar
  • Orale – Mariachi Divas De Cindy Shea
  • Amor A La Musica – Mariachi Los Arrieros Del Valle
  • Eres Un Farsante – Paquita la del Barrio
  • Huevos Rancheros – Joan Sebastian
Best Banda or Norteño Album
  • Estare Mejor – El Güero y Su Banda Centenario
  • Intocable 2011 – Intocable
  • MTV Unplugged: Los Tigres del Norte and Friends – Los Tigres del Norte
  • El Árbol – Los Tucanes de Tijuana
  • No Vengo A Ver Si Puedo... Si Por Que Puedo Vengo – Michael Salgado
Best Tropical Latin Album
  • Homenaje A Los Rumberos – Edwin Bonilla
  • The Last Mambo – Cachao
  • Mongorama – José Rizo's Mongorama

American Roots Music

Best Americana Album
  • Emotional Jukebox – Linda Chorney
  • Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down – Ry Cooder
  • Hard Bargain – Emmylou Harris
  • Ramble at the Ryman – Levon Helm
  • Blessed – Lucinda Williams
Best Bluegrass Album
  • Paper Airplane – Alison Krauss & Union Station
  • Reason and Rhyme: Bluegrass Songs by Robert Hunter and Jim Lauderdale – Jim Lauderdale
  • Rare Bird Alert – Steve Martin & Steep Canyon Rangers
  • Old Memories: The Songs of Bill Monroe – Del McCoury Band
  • A Mother's Prayer – Ralph Stanley
  • Sleep with One Eye Open – Chris Thile & Michael Daves
Best Blues Album
  • Low Country Blues – Gregg Allman
  • Roadside Attractions – Marcia Ball
  • Man in Motion – Warren Haynes
  • The Reflection – Keb Mo
  • Revelator – Tedeschi Trucks Band
Best Folk Album
  • Barton Hollow – The Civil Wars
  • I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive – Steve Earle
  • Helplessness Blues – Fleet Foxes
  • Ukulele Songs – Eddie Vedder
  • The Harrow & The Harvest – Gillian Welch
Best Regional Roots Music Album
  • Can't Sit Down – C.J. Chenier
  • Wao Akua: The Forest of the Gods – George Kahumoku, Jr.
  • Rebirth of New Orleans – Rebirth Brass Band
  • Grand Isle – Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys
  • Not Just Another Polka – Jimmy Sturr & His Orchestra

Reggae

Best Reggae Album
  • Harlem-Kingston Express Live! – Monty Alexander
  • Reggae Knights – Israel Vibration
  • Revelation Pt 1: The Root of Life – Stephen Marley
  • Wild and Free – Ziggy Marley
  • Summer in Kingston – Shaggy

World Music

Best World Music Album
  • AfroCubism – AfroCubism
  • Africa for Africa – Femi Kuti
  • Songs from a Zulu Farm – Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • Tassili – Tinariwen

Children's

Best Children's Album
  • All About Bullies... Big and Small – Various Artists
  • Are We There Yet? – The Papa Hugs Band
  • Fitness Rock & Roll – Miss Amy
  • GulfAlive – The Banana Plant
  • I Love: Tom T. Hall's Songs of Fox Hollow – Various Artists

Spoken Word

Best Spoken Word Album (Includes Poetry, Audio Books & Story Telling)
  • Bossypants – Tina Fey
  • Fab Fan Memories - The Beatles Bond – Various Artists
  • Hamlet (William Shakespeare) – Dan Donohue & Various Artists - Oregon Shakespeare Festival
  • If You Ask Me (And of Course You Won't) – Betty White
  • The Mark of Zorro – Val Kilmer & Cast

Comedy

Best Comedy Album
  • Alpocalypse – "Weird Al" Yankovic
  • Finest Hour – Patton Oswalt
  • Hilarious – Louis C.K.
  • Kathy Griffin: 50 & Not Pregnant – Kathy Griffin
  • Turtleneck & Chain – The Lonely Island

Musical Show

Best Musical Theater Album
  • Anything Goes – New Broadway Cast Recording
    • Sutton Foster & Joel Grey, principal soloists; Rob Fisher, James Lowe & Joel Moss, producers (Cole Porter, composer/lyricist)
  • The Book of Mormon – Original Broadway Cast
    • Josh Gad & Andrew Rannells, principal soloists; Anne Garefino, Robert Lopez, Stephen Oremus, Trey Parker, Scott Rudin & Matt Stone, producers; Robert Lopez, Trey Parker & Matt Stone, composers/lyricists
  • How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying – The 2011 Broadway Cast Recording
    • John Larroquette & Daniel Radcliffe, principal soloists; Robert Sher, producer (Frank Loesser, composer/lyricist)

Music for Visual Media

Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media
  • Boardwalk Empire Volume 1 – Various Artists
  • Burlesque – Christina Aguilera
  • Glee: The Music, Volume 4 – Glee Cast
  • Tangled – Various Artists
  • True Blood Volume 3 – Various Artists
Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media
  • Black Swan
    • Clint Mansell, composer
  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2
    • Alexandre Desplat, composer
  • The King's Speech
    • Alexandre Desplat, composer
  • The Shrine
    • Ryan Shore, composer
  • Tron: Legacy
    • Daft Punk, composers
Best Song Written for Visual Media
  • "Born to Be Somebody" (from Justin Bieber: Never Say Never)
    • Diane Warren, songwriter (Justin Bieber)
  • "Christmastime Is Killing Us" (from Family Guy)
    • Ron Jones, Seth MacFarlane & Danny Smith, songwriters (Danny Smith, Ron Jones & Seth MacFarlane)
  • "I See the Light" (from Tangled)
    • Alan Menken & Glenn Slater, songwriters (Mandy Moore & Zachary Levi)
  • "So Long" (from Winnie the Pooh)
    • Zooey Deschanel, songwriter (Zooey Deschanel & M. Ward)
  • "Where the River Goes" (from Footloose)
    • Zac Brown, Wyatt Durrette, Drew Pearson & Anne Preven, songwriters (Zac Brown)
  • "You Haven't Seen the Last of Me" (from Burlesque)
    • Diane Warren, songwriter (Cher)

Composing/Arranging

Best Instrumental Composition
  • "Falling Men"
    • John Hollenbeck, composer (John Hollenbeck, Daniel Yvinec & Orchestre National de Jazz (ONJ))
  • "Hunting Wabbits 3 (Get Off My Lawn)"
    • Gordon Goodwin, composer (Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band)
  • "I Talk to the Trees"
    • Randy Brecker, composer (Randy Brecker with DR Big Band)
  • "Life in Eleven"
    • Béla Fleck & Howard Levy, composers (Béla Fleck and the Flecktones)
  • "Timeline"
    • Russell Ferrante, composer (Yellowjackets)
Best Instrumental Arrangement
  • "All or Nothing at All"
    • Peter Jensen, arranger (Randy Brecker with DR Big Band)
  • "In the Beginning"
    • Clare Fischer, arranger (The Clare Fischer Big Band)
  • "Nasty Dance"
    • Bob Brookmeyer, arranger (The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra)
  • "Rhapsody in Blue"
    • Gordon Goodwin, arranger (Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band)
  • "Song Without Words"
    • Carlos Franzetti, arranger (Carlos Franzetti & Allison Brewster Franzetti)
Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s)
  • "Ao Mar"
    • Vince Mendoza, arranger (Vince Mendoza)
  • "Moon Over Bourbon Street"
    • Rob Mathes, arranger (Sting & Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra)
  • "On Broadway"
    • Kevin Axt, Ray Brinker, Trey Henry, Christian Jacob & Tierney Sutton, arrangers (The Tierney Sutton Band)
  • "Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)"
    • Jorge Calandrelli, arranger (Tony Bennett & Queen Latifah)
  • "The Windmills of Your Mind"
    • William A. Ross, arranger (Barbra Streisand)

Package

Best Recording Package
  • Chickenfoot III
    • Todd Gallopo, art director (Chickenfoot)
  • Good Luck & True Love
    • Sarah Dodds & Shauna Dodds, art directors (Reckless Kelly)
  • Rivers and Homes
    • Jonathan Dagan, art director (J.Viewz)
  • Scenes from The Suburbs
    • Vincent Morisset, art director (Arcade Fire)
  • Watch the Throne
    • Virgil Abloh, art director (Jay-Z & Kanye West)
Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package
  • The King of Limbs
    • Donald Twain & Zachariah Wildwood, art directors (Radiohead)
  • The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story
    • Dave Bett & Michelle Holme, art directors (Bruce Springsteen)
  • 25th Anniversary Music Box
    • Matt Taylor & Ellen Wakayama, art directors (Danny Elfman & Tim Burton)
  • 25 Years
    • James Spindler, art director (Sting)
  • Wingless Angels (Deluxe Edition)
    • David Gorman, art director (Wingless Angels)

Notes

Best Album Notes
  • The Bang Years 1966-1968
    • Neil Diamond, album notes writer (Neil Diamond)
  • The Bristol Sessions, 1927-1928: The Big Bang of Country Music
    • Ted Olson & Tony Russell, album notes writers (Various Artists)
  • Complete Mythology
    • Ken Shipley, album notes writer (Syl Johnson)
  • Hear Me Howling!: Blues, Ballads & Beyond as Recorded by the San Francisco Bay by Chris Strachwitz in the 1960s
    • Adam Machado, album notes writer (Various Artists)
  • The Music City Story: Street Corner Doo Wop, Raw R&B and Soulful Sounds from Berkeley, California 1950-75
    • Alec Palao, album notes writer (Various Artists)

Historical

Best Historical Album
  • Band on the Run (Paul McCartney Archive Collection - Deluxe Edition)
    • Paul McCartney, compilation producer; Sam Okell & Steve Rooke, mastering engineers (Paul McCartney & Wings)
  • The Bristol Sessions, 1927-1928: The Big Bang of Country Music
    • Christopher C. King & Ted Olson, compilation producers; Christopher C. King & Chris Zwarg, mastering engineers (Various Artists)
  • Complete Mythology
    • Tom Lunt, Rob Sevier & Ken Shipley, compilation producers; Jeff Lipton, mastering engineer (Syl Johnson)
  • Hear Me Howling!: Blues, Ballads & Beyond as Recorded by the San Francisco Bay by Chris Strachwitz in the 1960s
    • Chris Strachwitz, compilation producer; Mike Cogan, mastering engineer (Various Artists)
  • Young Man with the Big Beat: The Complete '56 Elvis Presley Masters
    • Ernst Mikael Jorgensen, compilation producer; Vic Anesini, mastering engineer (Elvis Presley)

Production

Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical
  • Follow Me Down
    • Brandon Bell & Gary Paczosa, engineers; Sangwook "Sunny" Nam & Doug Sax, mastering engineers (Sarah Jarosz)
  • The Harrow & The Harvest
    • Matt Andrews, engineer; Stephen Marcussen, mastering engineer (Gillian Welch)
  • Music Is Better Than Words
    • Rich Breen & Frank Filipetti, engineers; Bob Ludwig, mastering engineer (Seth MacFarlane)
  • The Next Right Thing
    • Kevin Killen, Brendan Muldowney & John Shyloski, engineers; John Shyloski, mastering engineer (Seth Glier)
  • Paper Airplane
    • Mike Shipley, engineer; Brad Blackwood, mastering engineer (Alison Krauss & Union Station)
Producer of the Year, Non-Classical
  • Danger Mouse
    • Meyrin Fields EP (Broken Bells) (S)
    • Rome (Danger Mouse & Daniele Luppi) (A)
  • Paul Epworth
    • "Call It What You Want" (Foster the People) (T)
    • "I Would Do Anything for You" (Foster the People) (T)
    • "I'll Be Waiting" (Adele) (T)
    • "Life on the Nickel" (Foster the People) (T)
    • "No One's Gonna Love You" (Cee Lo Green) (S)
    • "Rolling in the Deep" (Adele) (T)
  • The Smeezingtons
    • Doo-Wops & Hooligans (Bruno Mars) (A)
    • "If I Was You (OMG)" (Far East Movement featuring Snoop Dogg) (T)
    • "Lighters" (Bad Meets Evil featuring Bruno Mars) (T)
    • "Mirror" (Lil Wayne featuring Bruno Mars) (T)
    • "Rocketeer" (Far East Movement featuring Ryan Tedder) (T)
  • Ryan Tedder
    • "Brighter Than the Sun" (Colbie Caillat) (T)
    • "Favorite Song" (Colbie Caillat featuring Common) (T)
    • "I Remember Me" (Jennifer Hudson) (T)
    • "I Was Here" (Beyoncé) (T)
    • "Not Over You" (Gavin DeGraw) (S)
    • "#1Nite (One Night)" (Cobra Starship) (S)
    • "Rumour Has It" (Adele) (T)
    • "Sweeter" (Gavin DeGraw) (T)
    • "Who's That Boy" (Demi Lovato featuring Dev) (T)
  • Butch Vig
    • Wasting Light (Foo Fighters) (A)
Best Remixed Recording
  • "Cinema" (Skrillex Remix)
    • Skrillex, remixer (Benny Benassi featuring Gary Go)
  • "Collide" (Afrojack Remix)
    • Afrojack, remixer (Leona Lewis & Avicii)
  • "End of Line" (Photek Remix)
    • Photek, remixer (Daft Punk)
  • "Only Girl (In the World)" (Rosabel Club Mix)
    • Rosabel, remixers (Rihanna)
  • "Rope" (deadmau5 Mix)
    • deadmau5, remixer (Foo Fighters)

Production, Surround Sound

Best Surround Sound Album
  • An Evening with Dave Grusin
    • Frank Filipetti & Eric Schilling, surround mix engineers; Frank Filipetti, surround mastering engineer; Phil Ramone, surround producer (Various Artists)
  • Grace for Drowning
    • Steven Wilson, surround mix engineer; Paschal Byrne, surround mastering engineer; Steven Wilson, surround producer (Steven Wilson)
  • Kind
    • Morten Lindberg, surround mix engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround mastering engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround producer (Kjetil Almenning, Ensemble 96 & Nidaros String Quartet)
  • Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (Super Deluxe Edition)
    • Elliot Scheiner, surround mix engineer; Bob Ludwig, surround mastering engineer; Bill Levenson & Elliot Scheiner, surround producers (Derek and the Dominos)
  • Spohr: String Sextet in C Major, Op. 140 & Nonet in F Major, Op. 31
    • Andreas Spreer, surround mix engineer; Robin Schmidt & Andreas Spreer, surround mastering engineer; Andreas Spreer, surround producer (Camerata Freden)

Production, Classical

Best Engineered Album, Classical
  • Aldridge: Elmer Gantry
    • Byeong-Joon Hwang & John Newton, engineers; Jesse Lewis, mastering engineer (William Boggs, Keith Phares, Patricia Risley, Vale Rideout, Frank Kelley, Heather Buck, Florentine Opera Chorus & Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra)
  • Glazunov: Complete Concertos
    • Richard King, engineer (José Serebrier, Alexey Serov, Wen-Sinn Yang, Alexander Romanovsky, Rachel Barton Pine, Marc Chisson & Russian National Orchestra)
  • Mackey: Lonely Motel - Music From Slide
    • Tom Lazarus & Bill Maylone, engineers; Joe Lambert, mastering engineer (Rinde Eckert, Steven Mackey & Eighth Blackbird)
  • Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos Nos. 3 & 4
    • Arne Akselberg, engineer (Leif Ove Andsnes, Antonio Pappano & London Symphony Orchestra)
  • Weinberg: Symphony No. 3 & Suite No. 4 From 'The Golden Key'
    • Torbjörn Samuelsson, engineer (Thord Svedlund & Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra)
Producer of the Year, Classical
  • Blanton Alspaugh
    • Aldridge: Elmer Gantry (William Boggs, Keith Phares, Patricia Risley, Vale Rideout, Frank Kelley, Heather Buck, Florentine Opera Chorus & Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra)
    • Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas (Peter Takács)
    • Osterfield: Rocky Streams (Paul Osterfield, Todd Waldecker & Various Artists)
  • Manfred Eicher
    • Bach: Concertos & Sinfonias for Oboe; Ich Hatte Viel Bekümmernis (Heinz Holliger, Eric Höbarth & Camerata Bern)
    • Hymns & Prayers (Gidon Kremer & Kremerata Baltica)
    • Manto & Madrigals (Thomas Zehetmair & Ruth Killius)
    • Songs of Ascension (Meredith Monk & Vocal Ensemble, Todd Reynolds Quartet, The M6 & Montclair State University Singers)
    • Tchaikovsky/Kissine: Piano Trios (Gidon Kremer, Giedre Dirvanauskaite & Khatia Buniatishvili)
    • A Worcester Ladymass (Trio Mediaeval)
  • David Frost
    • Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass Live (Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass)
    • Mackey: Lonely Motel - Music from Slide (Rinde Eckert, Steven Mackey & Eighth Blackbird)
    • Prayers & Alleluias (Kenneth Dake)
    • Sharon Isbin & Friends - Guitar Passions (Sharon Isbin & Various Artists)
  • Peter Rutenberg
    • Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem, Op. 45 (Patrick Dupré Quigley, James K. Bass, Seraphic Fire & Professional Choral Institute)
    • The Vanishing Nordic Chorale (Philip Spray & Musik Ekklesia)
  • Judith Sherman
    • Adams: Son of Chamber Symphony; String Quartet (John Adams, St. Lawrence String Quartet & International Contemporary Ensemble)
    • Capricho Latino (Rachel Barton Pine)
    • 85th Birthday Celebration (Claude Frank)
    • Insects & Paper Airplanes - Chamber Music of Lawrence Dillon (Daedalus Quartet & Benjamin Hochman)
    • Midnight Frolic - The Broadway Theater Music of Louis A. Hirsch (Rick Benjamin & Paragon Ragtime Orchestra)
    • Notable Women - Trios by Today's Female Composers (Lincoln Trio)
    • The Soviet Experience, Vol. 1 - String Quartets by Dmitri Shostakovich & His Contemporaries (Pacifica Quartet)
    • Speak! (Anthony De Mare)
    • State of the Art - The American Brass Quintet at 50 (The American Brass Quintet)
    • Steve Reich: WTC 9/11; Mallet Quartet; Dance Patterns (Kronos Quartet, Steve Reich Musicians & So Percussion)
    • Winging It - Piano Music of John Corigliano (Ursula Oppens)

Classical

Best Orchestral Performance
  • "Bowen: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2"
    • Andrew Davis, conductor (BBC Philharmonic)
  • "Brahms: Symphony No. 4"
    • Gustavo Dudamel, conductor (Los Angeles Philharmonic)
  • "Haydn: Symphonies 104, 88 & 101"
    • Nicholas McGegan, conductor (Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra)
  • "Henze: Symphonies Nos. 3-5"
    • Marek Janowski, conductor (Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin)
  • Martinu: The 6 Symphonies
    • Jirí Belohlávek, conductor (BBC Symphony Orchestra)
Best Opera Recording
  • "Adams: Doctor Atomic"
    • Alan Gilbert, conductor; Meredith Arwady, Sasha Cooke, Richard Paul Fink, Gerald Finley, Thomas Glenn & Eric Owens; Jay David Saks, producer (Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; Metropolitan Opera Chorus)
  • "Britten: Billy Budd"
    • Mark Elder, conductor; John Mark Ainsley, Phillip Ens, Jacques Imbrailo, Darren Jeffery, Iain Paterson & Matthew Rose; James Whitbourn, producer (London Philharmonic Orchestra; Glyndebourne Chorus)
  • "Rautavaara: Kaivos"
    • Hannu Lintu, conductor; Jaakko Kortekangas, Hannu Niemelä, Johanna Rusanen-Kartano & Mati Turi; Seppo Siirala, producer (Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra; Kaivos Chorus)
  • "Verdi: La Traviata"
    • Antonio Pappano, conductor; Joseph Calleja, Renée Fleming & Thomas Hampson; James Whitbourn, producer (Orchestra of the Royal Opera House; Royal Opera Chorus)
  • "Vivaldi: Ercole Sul Termodonte"
    • Fabio Biondi, conductor; Romina Basso, Patrizia Ciofi, Diana Damrau, Joyce DiDonato, Vivica Genaux, Philippe Jaroussky, Topi Lehtipuu & Rolando Villazón; Daniel Zalay, producer (Europa Galante; Coro Da Camera Santa Cecilia Di Borgo San Lorenzo)
Best Choral Performance
  • "Beyond All Mortal Dreams - American A Cappella"
    • Stephen Layton, conductor (Choir of Trinity College Cambridge)
  • "Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem, Op. 45"
    • Patrick Dupré Quigley, conductor; James K. Bass, chorus master (Justin Blackwell, Scott Allen Jarrett, Paul Max Tipton & Teresa Wakim; Professional Choral Institute & Seraphic Fire)
  • "Kind"
    • Kjetil Almenning, conductor (Nidaros String Quartet; Ensemble 96)
  • "Light & Gold"
    • Eric Whitacre, conductor (Christopher Glynn & Hila Plitmann; The King's Singers, Laudibus, Pavão Quartet & The Eric Whitacre Singers)
  • "The Natural World of Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen"
    • Paul Hillier, conductor (Ars Nova Copenhagen)
Best Small Ensemble Performance
  • "Frank: Hilos" – Gabriela Lena Frank; ALIAS Chamber Ensemble
  • "The Kingdoms of Castille – Richard Savino, conductor; El Mundo
  • "Mackey: Lonely Motel - Music from Slide" – Rinde Eckert & Steven Mackey; Eighth Blackbird
  • "A Seraphic Fire Christmas" – Patrick Dupré Quigley, conductor; Seraphic Fire
  • "Sound the Bells!" – The Bay Brass
Best Classical Instrumental Solo
  • "Chinese Recorder Concertos - East Meets West"
    • Lan Shui, conductor; Michala Petri (Copenhagen Philharmonic)
  • "Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 18; Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini"
    • Claudio Abbado, Yuja Wang (Mahler Chamber Orchestra)
  • "Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos Nos. 3 & 4"
    • Leif Ove Andsnes, Antonio Pappano (London Symphony Orchestra)
  • "Schwantner: Concerto for Percussion & Orchestra"
    • Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Christopher Lamb (Nashville Symphony)
  • "Winging It - Piano Music of John Corigliano"
    • Ursula Oppens
Best Classical Vocal Solo
  • "Diva Divo"
    • Joyce DiDonato (Kazushi Ono; Orchestre De L'Opéra National De Lyon; Choeur De L'Opéra National De Lyon)
  • "Grieg/Thommessen: Veslemøy Synsk"
    • Marianne Beate Kielland (Nils Anders Mortensen)
  • "Handel: Cleopatra"
    • Natalie Dessay (Emmanuelle Haïm; Le Concert D'Astrée)
  • "Purcell: O Solitude"
    • Andreas Scholl (Stefano Montanari; Christophe Dumaux; Accademia Bizantina)
  • "Three Baroque Tenors"
    • Ian Bostridge (Bernard Labadie; Mark Bennett, Andrew Clarke, Sophie Daneman, Alberto Grazzi, Jonathan Gunthorpe, Benjamin Hulett & Madeline Shaw; The English Concert)
Best Contemporary Classical Composition
  • "Aldridge, Robert: Elmer Gantry" – Robert Aldridge & Herschel Garfein
  • "Crumb, George: The Ghosts of Alhambra" – George Crumb
  • "Friedman, Jefferson: String Quartet No. 3" – Jefferson Friedman
  • "Mackey, Steven: Lonely Motel - Music From Slide" – Steven Mackey
  • "Ruders, Poul: Piano Concerto No. 2" – Poul Ruders

Music Video

Best Short Form Music Video
  • "Rolling in the Deep" – Adele
    • Sam Brown, video director; Hannah Chandler, video producer
  • "Yes I Know" – Memory Tapes
    • Eric Epstein, video director & video producer
  • "All Is Not Lost" – OK Go
    • Itamar Kubovy, Damian Kulash & Trish Sie, video directors; Shirley Moyers, video producer
  • "Lotus Flower" – Radiohead
    • Garth Jennings, video director & video producer
  • "First of the Year (Equinox)" – Skrillex
    • Tony Truand, video director; Noah Klein, video producer
  • "Perform This Way" – "Weird Al" Yankovic
    • "Weird Al" Yankovic, video director; Cisco Newman, video producer
Best Long Form Music Video
  • I Am... World Tour – Beyoncé
    • Beyoncé, Ed Burke & Frank Gatson, Jr., video directors; Beyoncé & Camille Yorrick, video producers
  • Foo Fighters: Back and Forth – Foo Fighters
    • James Moll, video director; James Moll & Nigel Sinclair, video producers
  • Talihina Sky: The Story of Kings of Leon – Kings of Leon
    • Stephen C. Mitchell, video director; Casey McGrath, video producer
  • Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest – A Tribe Called Quest
    • Michael Rapaport, video director; Robert Benavides, Debra Koffler, Eric Matthies, Frank Mele, Edward Parks & A Tribe Called Quest, video producers
  • Nine Types of Light – TV on the Radio
    • Tunde Adebimpe, video director; Michelle An & Braj, video producers

Special Merit Awards

MusiCares Person of the Year
  • Paul McCartney
President's Merit Award
  • Sir Richard Branson
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Allman Brothers Band
  • Glen Campbell
  • Antonio Carlos Jobim
  • Roy Haynes
  • George Jones
  • the Memphis Horns
  • Diana Ross
  • Gil Scott-Heron
Grammy Trustees Award
  • Dave Bartholomew
  • Steve Jobs
  • Rudy Van Gelder
Technical Grammy Award
  • Roger Nichols
  • Celemony

COUNDOWN TO 2012 GRAMMYs; Music's Biggest Performer Lineup


From Adele to Joe Walsh, view our handy performer checklist for the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards


With GRAMMY Weekend approaching, it's time to think about finalizing your to-do list for your official GRAMMY Sunday party. Hors d'oeuvres? Check. Favorite beverage? Check. Something sweet? Check. Internet bill paid so you can stream GRAMMY Live? Check.
What's on the GRAMMY menu, you ask? Plenty.
The eclectic performance lineup for the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards has a little bit of everything — from a comeback by 2011's best-selling artist, a classic band reunion and duets to genre-stretching collaborations, a Beatle legend, GRAMMY debuts, and hearty sides of country, rock, pop and hip-hop. Plus, the GRAMMYs are guaranteed to be cool with two-time GRAMMY-winning artist/actor LL Cool J serving as host.

It's a lot to keep track of, so we've compiled a handy alphabetical guide listing the artists who will be taking the GRAMMY stage on Music's Biggest Night. Of course, be sure to stay logged on to GRAMMY.com to complement your GRAMMY experience and join the conversation.
And the performers for the 54th GRAMMY Awards are:
  • Adele, who will be performing for the first time since undergoing vocal-cord surgery last fall
  • Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson
  • The Beach Boys, who will be reuniting for their first appearance in two decades, with Foster The People and Maroon 5
  • Tony Bennett and Carrie Underwood
  • Chris Brown
  • Glen Campbell with the Band Perry and Blake Shelton
  • The Civil Wars
  • Coldplay and Rihanna
  • Dance/electronica segment featuring Chris Brown, Deadmau5, Foo Fighters, David Guetta, and Lil Wayne
  • Foo Fighters
  • Alicia Keys and Bonnie Raitt
  • Diana Krall
  • Bruno Mars
  • Paul McCartney
  • Nicki Minaj
  • Maceo Parker
  • Katy Perry
  • Bruce Springsteen And The E Street Band
  • Taylor Swift
  • Joe Walsh
The 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards will take place live on Sunday, Feb. 12 at Staples Center in Los Angeles and will be broadcast in high definition and 5.1 surround sound on the CBS Television Network from 8–11:30 p.m. (ET/PT). The show also will be supported on radio worldwide via Westwood One/Dial Global

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

COUNDOWN TO 2012 GRAMMYs; Adele To Perform


Current nominee to make first appearance on the live stage since undergoing vocal cord surgery

Current GRAMMY nominee Adele will make her much anticipated return to the live stage on the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards. This will be her first time performing live in nearly five months since being forced to cancel a sold-out U.S. tour to undergo surgery on her vocal cords. Additional performers, presenters and special segments will be announced soon.
"I'm immensely proud to have been asked to perform at this year's GRAMMY Awards," said Adele. "It's an absolute honor to be included in such a night, and for it to be my first performance in months is very exciting and of course nerve-racking, but what a way to get back into it all."
Two-time GRAMMY winner Adele has six nominations: Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best Short Form Music Video for "Rolling In The Deep"; Album Of The Year and Best Pop Vocal Album for 21; and Best Pop Solo Performance for "Someone Like You."
Previously announced performers for the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards include Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson; Glen Campbell with the Band Perry and Blake Shelton; Coldplay and Rihanna; Foo Fighters; Bruno Mars; Paul McCartney; Nicki Minaj; and Taylor Swift. Aldean, the Band Perry, Minaj, and Shelton will perform on the GRAMMY telecast for the first time, while Adele, Campbell, Clarkson, Coldplay, Foo Fighters, Mars, McCartney, Rihanna, and Swift are returning to the GRAMMY stage. LL Cool J, who has hosted "The GRAMMY Nominations Concert Live!! — Countdown To Music's Biggest Night" since its inception in December 2008, will be hosting the annual GRAMMY Awards telecast for the first time.
The 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards are produced by John Cossette Productions and AEG Ehrlich Ventures for The Recording Academy. Ken Ehrlich is executive producer, Louis J. Horvitz is director, and David Wild and Ken Ehrlich are the writers.
The 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards will take place live on Sunday, Feb. 12 at Staples Center in Los Angeles and will be broadcast in high definition and 5.1 surround sound on the CBS Television Network from 8–11:30 p.m. (ET/PT). The show also will be supported on radio worldwide via Westwood One/Dial Global, and covered online at GRAMMY.com and CBS.com, and on YouTube.



Adele #WeAreMusic 54th GRAMMY Awards Campaign - The 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards LIVE Feb. 12, 2012 on CBS #grammys #wearemusic
Adele is ready to perform again -- and she's coming back in a big way!

"Ima be, Ima be singing at the Grammys," the singer revealed this morning on her Twitter page. "It's been so long I started to forget I was a singer! I can't wait, speak soon xx".

The gig will be her first time singing in public since undergoing throat surgery last year.

She's up for Song of the Year, Record of the Year, Album of the Year, Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Pop Solo Performance.

Adele had previously announced she'll also be performing at the Brit Awards, which take place a week after Grammy night.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

First Batch of 54th Grammy Awards Performers Announced

Taylor Swift, Bruno Mars, Foo Fighters, Nicki Minaj, Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson are officially announced as performers at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards. For Minaj and Aldean, this would their first time performing on the Grammys stage. Minaj was also the first artist announced as this year's performer.

Aldean and Clarkson, meanwhile, were announced as joint performers, most likely playing their duet "Don't You Wanna Stay" which is nominated for Best Country Duo/Group Performance. More performers and presenters will be announced in the coming weeks leading to the February 12 ceremony.

There's a speculation that Adele is going to open the show, but since she recently got a throat surgery, it will depend on her doctor's permission. She reportedly is waiting until early next month to find out whether she is ready to sing in pubic again.

It is also yet known whether biggest nominee this year, Kanye West, will be part of the performers line-up. Traditionally, The Recording Academy would invite the person of the night to show off on the stage.

The Grammy Awards, which takes place in Los Angeles, will air live on CBS at 8 P.M. EST on February 12.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Rihanna reclaims US Billboard number one with 'We Found Love'


Rihanna has returned to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 with 'We Found Love'.

The singer notches up a ninth week at the summit, after being ousted by LMFAO's 'Sexy And I Know It' last week, which falls to two.

Meanwhile, Adele leaps from eight to four with 'Set Fire To The Rain', and Jason Mraz debuts at number eight with 'I Won't Give Up'.

Further down the chart, Snoop Dogg, Wiz Khalifa and Bruno Mars advance from 14 to 11 with 'Young, Wild & Free', Jessie J's 'Domino' jumps from 21 to 17, and Kelly Clarkson re-enters at 57 with 'Stronger (What Doesn't Kill You)'.

will.i.am, Jennifer Lopez and Mick Jagger's 'T.H.E (The Hardest Ever)' vaults 90 to 62, The Black Keys lift 79 to 69 with 'Lonely Boy', and Florence + the Machine's 'Shake It Out' shifts from 89 to 73.

The Top 10 singles in full :

1. (2) Rihanna ft. Calvin Harris: 'We Found Love'
2. (1) LMFAO: 'Sexy And I Know It'
3. (4) Bruno Mars: 'It Will Rain'
4. (8) Adele: 'Set Fire to the Rain'
5. (5) Flo Rida: 'Good Feeling'
6. (3) Katy Perry: 'The One That Got Away'
7. (7) Jay-Z & Kanye West: 'Ni**as in Paris'
8. (*) Jason Mraz: 'I Won't Give Up'
9. (6) LMFAO ft, Lauren Bennett & GoonRock: 'Party Rock Anthem'
10. (9) Adele: 'Someone Like You'

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Adele Still Lined Up for Grammy Appearance

She underwent vocal chord surgery to fix her impressive pipes back in November, and word has it, Adele will be well enough to attend this year’s Grammy Awards after all.
The “Rollin in the Deep” songstress is up for six Grammy nominations, and according to a source although she will be in attendance, she most likely won’t be able to perform.

“Producers of the Grammys would love to have Adele perform, and open the show, but she isn't able to give them an answer yet. She won't be able to give them an answer until the beginning of February, and they completely understand,” the insider said.
Ms Adele, who had the surgery to stop vocal cord hemorrhaging, is up for Album of the Year, Record of the Year and Song of the Year.

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