Adele And Foo Fighters Rule The Grammys
Adele and Foo Fighters were the big winners at the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday night (12Feb12), taking home 11 awards between them.
British singer Adele made her triumphant live public return following throat surgery and picked up six awards at the ceremony, including Song, Record and Album of the Year. Her peers also gave her a lengthy welcome-back standing ovation after she hit the high notes again on her 2011 smash-hit Rolling in the Deep.
The occasion proved a little too much for the singer when she stepped up to accept her sixth award of the night for Album of the Year - sobbing, she joked, "I just first of all wanna say, 'Mum, girl did good!'"
She had the crowd in hysterics a minute later as she thanked her record company executives, breaking off to say, "Oh, I got a bit of snot."
And Foo Fighters grabbed the night's rock honours and scored two of the performance highlights under a marquee outside the Staples Center - one a collaboration with electronic star DeadMau5.
Absent Kanye West was also a big winner, picking up four trophies for his song All of the Lights, album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy and his Otis collaboration with Jay Z, while Skrillex was a triple winner.
The double winners included Cee Lo Green, gospel star Kirk Franklin, Alison Krauss & Union Station, Taylor Swift and Tony Bennett.
Talking points and highlights of the night included Rihanna's pumped-up rendition of We Found Love and Coldplay's struggles with their song Paradise - before a huge day-glo backdrop. Off-key and croaky, frontman Chris Martin battled through the song, fighting the bad cold that has prompted the band to scrap upcoming Australian tour dates.
Bruce Springsteen kicked the evening off with a stirring rendition of uplifting new song We Take Care of Our Own and other major performance highlights included Katy Perry's fiery first TV appearance since her December (11) marriage split, Chris Brown, Bruno Mars, Taylor Swift and Sir Paul MCCartney, who was given a standing ovation for his performance of new romantic standard My Valentine from his new album Kisses on the Bottom. MCCartney also closed the show with a rocking, guitar-heavy hits medley that featured Joe Walsh, Dave Grohl and Springsteen.
The night's most bizarre performance came from Nicki Minaj as she debuted a new alter-ego, called Roman, during a strange performance art piece inspired by horror film The Exorcist. Minaj appeared to levitate as dancers dressed as monks and a man pretending to be a bishop watched on.
But the 2012 Grammys will be remembered for its all-star tributes - to Etta James, 2012 Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Glen Campbell, the Beach Boys, who kicked off their 50th anniversary celebrations with a rendition of summer anthem Good Vibrations at the ceremony, and Whitney Houston, who passed away in a Los Angeles hotel on the eve of music's big night.
Host LL Cool J began the show with a prayer for the late superstar before introducing a clip of her performing I Will Always Love You at the 1994 Grammys. And Houston superfan Jennifer Hudson stunned the Grammy audience with a emotional rendition of the same song as part of the In Memoriam segment of the show.
Reports suggested the Dreamgirls star had struggled with the tribute during last-minute rehearsals earlier in the day but she held it together for the pitch-perfect cover.
The night could easily have become a sombre one as stars reflected on Houston's life and legacy, but winners and performers alike appeared to want to make the celebration just that, and soul legend Diana Ross, a 2012 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award honouree, summed up the ceremony best as she stepped up to present the Best Album honour to Adele at the end of the event.
She said, "I am so excited to be here in this fantasic energy. We are having so much fun."
The full list of winners is:
Record of the Year
Rolling in the Deep by Adele
Song Of The Year
Rolling in the Deep by Adele & Paul Epworth
Best New Artist
Bon Iver
Album Of The Year
21 by Adele
Best Pop Solo Performance
Someone Like You by Adele
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
Body And Soul by Tony Bennett & Amy Winehouse
Best Pop Instrumental Album
The Road From Memphis by Booker T. Jones
Best Pop Vocal Album
21 by Adele
Best Dance Recording
Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites by Skrillex
Best Dance/Electronica Album
Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites by Skrillex
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album
Duets II by Tony Bennett
Best Rock Performance
Walk by Foo Fighters
Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance
White Limo by Foo Fighters
Best Rock Song
Walk by Foo Fighters
Best Rock Album
Wasting Light by Foo Fighters
Best Alternative Music Album
Bon Iver by Bon Iver
Best R&B Performance
Is This Love by Corinne Bailey Rae
Best Traditional R&B Performance
Fool For You by Cee Lo Green
Best R&B Song
Fool For You by Cee Lo Green
Best R&B Album
F.A.M.E. by Chris Brown
Best Rap Performance
Otis by Jay Z & Kanye West
Best Rap/Sung Collaboration
All of the Lights by Kanye West
Best Rap Song
All of the Lights by Kanye West
Best Rap Album
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy by Kanye West
Best Country Solo Performance
Mean by Taylor Swift
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
Boston Hollow by The Civil Wars
Best Country Song
Mean by Taylor Swift
Best Country Album
Own The Night by Lady Antebellum
Best New Age Album
What's It All About by Pat Metheny
Best Improvised Jazz Solo
500 Miles High by Chick Corea
Best Jazz Vocal Album
The Mosaic Project by Terri Lyne Carrington & Various Artists
Best Jazz Instrumental Album
Forever by Corea, Clarke & White
Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album
The Good Feeling by Christian MCBride Big Band
Best Gospel/Contemporary Christian Music Performance
Jesus by Le'Andria Johnson
Best Gospel Song
Hello Fear by Kirk Franklin
Best Contemporary Christian Music Song
Blessings by Laura Story
Best Gospel Album
Hello Fear by Kirk Franklin
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album
And If Our God Is For Us... by Chris Tomlin
Best Latin Pop, Rock, Or Urban Album
Drama Y Luz by Mana
Best Regional Mexican Or Tejano Album
Bicentenario by Pepe Aguilar
Best Banda Or Norteño Album
Los Tigres Del Norte And Friends by Los Tigres Del Norte
Best Tropical Latin Album
The Last Mambo by Cachao
Best Americana Album
Ramble At The Ryman by Levon Helm
Best Bluegrass Album
Paper Airplane by Alison Krauss & Union Station
Best Blues Album
Revelator by Tedeschi Trucks Band
Best Folk Album
Barton Hollow by The Civil Wars
Best Regional Roots Music Album
Rebirth Of New Orleans by Rebirth Brass Band
Best Reggae Album
Revelation Pt 1: The Root Of Life by Stephen Marley
Best World Music Album
Tassili by Tinariwen
Best Children's Album
All About Bullies... Big And Small by Various Artists
Best Spoken Word Album
If You Ask Me (And Of Course You Won't) by Betty White
Best Comedy Album
Hilarious by Louis C.K.
Best Musical Theater Album
The Book Of Mormon by Josh Gad & Andrew Rannells
Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media
Boardwalk Empire: Volume 1 by Various Artists
Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media
The King's Speech by Alexandre Desplat
Best Song Written For Visual Media
I See The Light (From Tangled) by Alan Menken & Glenn Slater
Best Instrumental Composition
Life In Eleven by Bela Fleck & Howard Levy
Best Instrumental Arrangement
Rhapsody In Blue by Gordon Goodwin
Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s)
Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me) by Jorge Calandrelli, arranger (for Tony Bennett & Queen Latifah)
Best Recording Package
Scenes From The Suburbs (Arcade Fire) by Caroline Robert
Best Boxed Or Special Limited Edition Package
The Promise: The Darkness On The Edge Of Town Story (Bruce Springsteen) by Dave Bett & Michelle Holme
Best Album Notes
Hear Me Howling!: Blues, Ballads & Beyond As Recorded By The San Francisco Bay By Chris Strachwitz In The 1960s by Adam MAChado
Best Historical Album
Band On The Run (Paul MCCartney Archive Collection - Deluxe Edition) by Paul MCCartney
Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical
Paper Airplane (Alison Krauss & Union Station) by Neal Cappellino & Mike Shipley
Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical
Paul Epworth (Foster The People, Cee Lo Green, Adele)
Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical
Cinema (Skrillex Remix) by Sonny Moore
Best Surround Sound Album
Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs (Super Deluxe Edition) by Elliot Scheiner
Best Engineered Album, Classical
Aldridge: Elmer Gantry (William Boggs, Keith Phares, Patricia Risley, Vale Rideout, Frank Kelley, Heather Buck, Florentine Opera Chorus & Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra) by
Byeong-Joon Hwang, John Newton and Jesse Lewis
Producer Of The Year, Classical
Judith Sherman (John Adams, St. Lawrence String Quartet & International Contemporary Ensemble, Rachel Barton Pine, Claude Frank, Anthony De Mare and others)
Best Orchestral Performance
Brahms: Symphony No. 4 by Los Angeles Philharmonic (conductor Gustavo Dudamel)
Best Opera Recording
Adams: Doctor Atomic by Meredith Arwady, Sasha Cooke, Richard Paul Fink, Gerald Finley, Thomas Glenn, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra & Metropolitan Opera Chorus (conductor Alan Gilbert)
Best Choral Performance
Light & Gold by Christopher Glynn & Hila Plitmann; The King's Singers, Laudibus, Pavao Quartet & The Eric Whitacre Singers (conductor Eric Whitacre)
Best Small Ensemble Performance
MACkey: Lonely Motel - Music From Slide by Rinde Eckert & Steven MACkey
Best Classical Instrumental Solo
Schwantner: Concerto For Percussion & Orchestra by Giancarlo Guerrero Nashville Symphony)
Best Classical Vocal Solo
Diva Divo by Joyce DiDonato (Kazushi Ono; Orchestre De L'Opera National De Lyon; Choeur De L'Opera National De Lyon)
Best Contemporary Classical Composition
Aldridge, Robert: Elmer Gantry by Robert Aldridge & Herschel Garfein
Best Short Form Music Video
Rolling in the Deep by Adele
Best Long Form Music Video
Foo Fighters: Back And Forth by Foo Fighters
Trustees Award winners
Dave Bartholomew, Steve Jobs and Rudy Van Gelder
Lifetime Achievement Award winners
Glen Campbell, The Allman Brothers Band, Antonio Carlos Jobim, The Memphis Horns, George Jones and Diana Ross.
MusiCares Person of the Year
Sir Paul MCCartney