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The Inside Skinny On The Grammy Winners & Losers

Posted Sun Feb 8, 2009 10:19pm PST by Paul Grein in And The Winner Is...

Raising Sand, the rootsy Robert Plant/Alison Krauss collaboration, was the Grammy magnet everyone expected it would be. The project won five awards, including Album of the Year, and, in a surprise, Record of the Year for "Please Read The Letter." That track beat out Coldplay's smash "Viva La Vida," but the English band still managed to win three awards, including Song of the Year.

This is the second time in less than a decade that a contemporary folk album produced by T Bone Burnett has been voted Album of the Year. The soundtrack to O Brother, Where Art Thou? won in 2001. Krauss has now won 26 Grammys, a total equaled by only one non-classical artist in Grammy history, Quincy Jones. The legendary producer has won 27 Grammys. Stevie Wonder is in third place among non-classical artists with 25.

If the big winner at the 51st annual Grammy Awards was a foregone conclusion, there were plenty of other surprises.

Adele won for Best New Artist over Jonas Brothers and Duffy, among others. Some pundits (including me) thought Adele and Duffy might split the vote, allowing JoBros to sneak in and take the prize. This is the second straight year that a female British "neo-soul" artist has taken this award; Amy Winehouse won last year. Even more impressive, Adele's "Chasing Pavements" won for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance over Leona Lewis' "Bleeding Love," the year's #1 hit, which has sold more than nine times as many downloads as Adele's song.

John Mayer won in the rock field for the first time, beating Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney, among others, for Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance for "Gravity." Mayer also won for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for the fourth time for "Say." Mayer is only the third male artist, following Michael Jackson and Eric Clapton, to win both the pop and rock awards in the same year.

Mary J. Blige's Growing Pains beat Ne-Yo's Year Of The Gentleman for Best Contemporary R&B Album. Ne-Yo had two big things going for him: He had won the same award last year for Because Of You and he was a finalist this year for Album of the Year. (He was the only Album of the Year finalist not to win his "genre" album category.)

Kings Of Leon's "Sex On Fire" won for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals, beating Coldplay and Radiohead, among others.

And Daft Punk's "Harder Better Faster Stronger" won for Best Dance Recording, beating a pair of #1 crossover hits, Rihanna's "Disturbia" and "Just Dance" by Lady GaGa featuring Colby O'Donis.

If those were among the night's biggest surprises, other outcomes were more predictable. George Strait, who has been turning out hits since 1981 and who has amassed 22 Country Music Assn. Awards, finally took home his first Grammy. Strait won Best Country Album for Troubadour.

Jennifer Hudson, who experienced a horrific family tragedy last fall, won for Best R&B Album for Jennifer Hudson. Voters also rallied behind Natalie Cole, a long-time Grammy favorite, who is battling Hepatitis C. Cole won for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for Still Unforgettable, the sequel to her 1991 album, Unforgettable With Love (which was the first winner in that category).

Lil Wayne won four awards, including Best Rap Album for Tha Carter III, which was the year's #1 album.

Al Green won two awards, both for tracks from his album Lay It Down. These are, incredibly, the R&B legend's first awards in the R&B field. He has won eight Grammys for gospel recordings and one in the pop field for a 1994 duet with Lyle Lovett.

Radiohead's In Rainbows won as Best Alternative Music Album. It's the British band's third award in the category, which puts it in a tie with the White Stripes for the most wins in the category.

Duffy won, as expected, for Best Pop Vocal Album for her hit debut, Rockferry. The win was especially noteworthy given the strength of the competition. Three of her rivals--Eagles, James Taylor and Sheryl Crow-have won a combined total of 20 Grammys.

Eagles lost that award, but won for Best Pop Instrumental Performance for "I Dreamed There Was No War." It's the first instrumental award for the group which, uniquely, has won vocal awards in three different fields-pop ("Lyin' Eyes"), rock ("Heartache Tonight") and country ("How Long").

A few acts got the last laugh. Sugarland's Love On The Inside and Carrie Underwood's Carnival Ride weren't even nominated for Best Country Album, but both artists walked off with performance awards for tracks from those albums. Sugarland's "Stay" won for Best Country Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal. The duo's Jennifer Nettles also won for Best Country Song for writing the song. Underwood won for Best Female Country Vocal Performance for "Last Name." It was her third victory in a row in this category.

Kanye West won two awards, without even releasing an album during the eligibility period--a neat trick. West won for a pair of collaborations, "American Boy" and "Swagga Like Us." West has now won 12 Grammys, the highest total for any rap artist. (Eminem is second among rappers, with nine Grammys.)

Jose Feliciano won for Best Tropical Latin Album for Senor Bachata, 40 years after he was crowned Best New Artist. No other artist in Grammy history has ever won another Grammy so many years after claiming the Best New Artist prize.

The late George Carlin won for Best Comedy Album for It's Bad For Ya. It was his fifth win in that category. Only two comedians have won as many times in this category. Bill Cosby leads with seven wins. The late Richard Pryor also won five.

Zappa Plays Zappa, featuring Dweezil Zappa, won Best Rock Instrumental Performance for "Peaches En Regalia." Zappa's father, the late Frank Zappa, introduced the song on his 1969 album Hot Rats. Dweezil Zappa's touching acceptance speech was the emotional highlight of the pre-telecast awards, and would have been a lovely moment on the telecast.

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' Runnin' Down A Dream won for Best Long Form Music Video. Petty had won before as a solo artist and with the Traveling Wilburys, but this was the first Grammy for his group. It came a mere 32 years after the group's debut album. The award was accepted in the pre-telecast portion by the film's director, Peter Bogdanovich.

An unheralded winner was New Orleans. Three winning albums paid tribute to that ravaged city. Dr. John And The Lower 911 won Best Contemporary Blues Album for City That Care Forgot. The Blind Boys Of Alabama won Best Traditional Gospel Album for Down In New Orleans. And BeauSoleil & Michael Doucet won Best Zydeco Or Cajun Music Album for Live At The 2008 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.

One final Grammy trivia note: Raising Sand is the third collaboration involving two solo artists to win for Album of the Year. It follows Double Fantasy, by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and Getz/Gilberto, the union of jazz tenor saxophonist Stan Getz and Brazilian bossa nova star Joao Gilberto.

369 Comments

61. monica -
DeMar H
This is to you...so READ! Obveez your frustrated that LIL WAYNE WAYNE didn't win!!! You need to understand this though...it doesn't really amount to how many albums that you have sold. If that was the case they would have had one of the bands nominated with the most albums sold win! And that no name your talking about is a rock legend. ROBERT PLANT...LED ZEPPLIN...hellllooo come on! But if your going to sit here and waste your time defending artists such as lil wayne than i guess i wouldn't expect you to know the true roots of music if it hit you in the ass! So get it right homeboy that is all i have to say. AND RADIOHEAD SHOULD HAVE WON!!! HOLLLAAA!

62. MR. SWAGGERiFiC -
Fa Sho Weezy F. Baby got 4 grammy's in one night..good job bruh puttin the 504 on the map

63. the truth -
no mention of the biggest comeback of the year, Metallica's Death Magnetic? They won 2 awards.

64. Monique -
kid rock is crud.
i rather see the jonas brothers..they at least have some class.
& jason maraz should have beat john mayer's song just says the same lyrics over & over..ugh.
and go kings of leon!!! =]
coldplay gets so boring plus they stole that song from another unknown band.

65. JuanR -
i think what jhonn mayer was the best

66. Yahoo! Music User -
Some of the performances were actually pretty bad. McCartney and Growl could have picked a much better song than "I Saw Her Standing There", which was used in a homage to the Beatles about two or three Grammies ago. The Bo Diddley homage sounded pretty uninspired (the audio definitely didn't help). Plant and Krauss deserved their awards, as their album is remarkable, but the performance sounded shy and weak. Carrie Underwood, Adele and some others did their job fairly well. Coldplay made a fool of themselves with piano ballad + Jay Z rapping, and with the Sgt. Pepper's wannabe costumes. Stevie Wonder with the Jonas Brothers, Miley Cyrus, Kate Perry, the pack of rappers... I won't even bother to comment.

67. artificially intelligent -
Kid rock didnt get ripped off... Kid rock was playing nursemaid to the Jonas Brothers.... and it's past your bedtime too..........

68. danny -
I am still upset that 2 years ago, during the memorial acknowledgements, Danny Flores, aka Chuck Rio, was not recognized when he passed away...even though he won the very FIRST Grammy ever for instrumental with his song "Tequila".........but the Grammy's did not even post his picture the year he passed away. That was a real insult, as far as I was concerned...and he was called the "Grandfather of Latin Rock". Shame on you, Grammys.

69. David Fitzudoh -
If there is winner or stage performance that rocked me that night, it was Jenny Hudson's track, she led me down memory lane again, i feel for her, and i know what it was like to be into such a trivial moment,but all in all she was able to scale through, and an award for that. Jenny cheers, I remain your fan ...

70. Yahoo! Music User -
ive never heard of adele and her songs but i think leona lewis should have won the battle she's so good and she sold a lot from her single bleeding love and better in time i love her songs and i love her she's really pretty in person and she really is so good i saw her at america's got talent finals she performed and shes so good

71. egg -
I honestly routed for Sara Bareilles and I still am! she deserves to win!

72. BIKER JIM -
Kid Rock got stink-eyed again. I won't watch next year.

73. danny -
Is it just me, or did anyone else find it incredibly presumptuous and arrogant for the Jonas Brothers to continually say things like "Go Stevie", and "Show em what ya got, Stevie", as if they were equals to the great Stevie Wonder.....that really chapped my hide, for these young wanna-be's to even presume to be peers to the legend....they should have been bowing in homage instead of acting as if Stevie Wonder needed their encouragement.....how absolutely arrogant.

74. Adewale-Satukesi -
this years' grammy suck!!!!!!!!!how else do we measure success in music,quality or quantity,tumb down to u rammy organisers

75. Lexie -
I'm convinced that this will be my last grammys. They drag them out way too long. They should give the awards away first, that way no one has to wait until almost eleven to see them all given out. Then the winners can perform. That would be cool. No disrespect to Alison Krauss and Robert Plant,as they're great musicians and everything-but I had Lil Wayne and Coldplay's cds playing all last year and this one too. I like Alison, she has a really beautiful haunting voice!

I think the grammy's tries too hard to incorporate all genres of music, and sometimes it works, and then othertimes it looks like a trainwreck.(Call me when I'm supposed to take the Jonas Bros and Miley Cyrus seriously, I resent whomever pushes these kids on us.. maybe they're talented, but they're victims of overhype, and it bothered me that Mr. Wonder couldn't perform by himself. I hardly heard him because of the audio quality stinking that bad. )

Not to mention, no one bothered to fix the audio during the performances. It was absolutely terrible. How can you ask a viewer for their attention for several hours and not give them the best viewing experience possible. Honestly!

76. Jason -
radiohead...the best..

77. Go Giants! -
Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Please Read The Letter sounds ok, not enough to win five awards. Who votes?

78. Stephanie M -
I agree with most of the wins except John Mayer who sucks...and was such a diva to not recognize Paul McCartney who opened the door so he could sing his crappy music. I also think Kings of Leon stole a Grammy from Disturbed and or Slipknot who rock year after year and had the 2 best songs out of that category. Jennifer Hudson was awesome and how could you not be touched. I would have liked to see Kid Rock win or Motley Crue since I am forced to hear them every time I turn on the radio...buts that not a bad thing. All in all the show sucked. You couldn't hear anybody over the bands and frankly..I missed some good sleep to stay up and watch it.

79. Bay -
Record of the year : Viva la Vida - Coldplay. Why not ? hic hic :(

80. Saheed -
Think ts high tym d academy of recording art and science comes out and tell d whole world d untold criteria. Apart from voting by t members for choosing winners of these awards.
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