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4 posts categorized "Grammy Awards 2010"

February 01, 2010

Taylor Swift and the Grammys: Is that all there is?

Swiftnicks
Taylor Swift (left) performs with Stevie Nicks at the 2010 Grammy Awards. (LA Times photo by Robert Gauthier)

The day after the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards and the question I’m getting most from readers is this: Is that all there is?

The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences would like to leave its television audience with the impression that Taylor Swift made the best album of the last year, “Fearless,” by awarding her its most prestigious prize. But what many people who watched the show are talking about Monday is not the “artistic achievement” of that album, to use the academy hyperbole, but the inability of Taylor Swift to sing on key. She was flatter than a pancake in her frankly embarrassing duet with Stevie Nicks.

One could write it off as a bad night, but Swift has had more than one in nationally televised awards shows. Her duet with Miley Cyrus (remember her?) on last year’s Grammys was just as shaky, leaving viewers who had not previously heard her music wondering what all the fuss was about. To put this in context for the “American Idol” audience that the Grammys were clearly courting with Sunday’s pop-heavy lineup, what do you think Simon Cowell would’ve said about Swift’s performance? I have an idea and it wouldn’t have been, “You’re on to the next round!”

Continue reading "Taylor Swift and the Grammys: Is that all there is?" »

January 31, 2010

The 52nd Grammy Awards: Taylor Swift wins album of year

Swiftnew

Taylor Swift accepts the award for Album of the Year at the 2010 Grammys. (Robyn Beck, Getty Images) 

In another one of those Grammy shockers, Taylor Swift won the night’s biggest award – album of the year for “Fearless” -- after a nationally televised performance Sunday that pointed out how richly she didn't deserve it.

In the live face-off at the 52nd annual Grammy Awards between Swift and Beyonce, who took home six statues, Lady B was the clear winner with a raucous medley of her “If I Were a Boy” and Alanis Morissette’s “You Oughta Know.” Swift, in contrast, sounded woefully out of tune in a duet with Stevie Nicks, the latest in a string of underwhelming performances on national television.

Yet it was Swift who bested Beyonce for the prestigious best-album honors. Beyonce’s consolation prize was song of the year (“Single Ladies [Put a Ring on It]”). Kings of Leon took record of the year (“Use Somebody”) and the Zac Brown Band won best new artist. Also shut out in the major categories were Lady Gaga  and the Black Eyed Eyes. Gaga jumped into a pit of fire and the Peas danced with robots, but to no avail.

As if a staggering 1003 nominations in 109 categories weren’t enough, here are a few categories of our own:

Censors working overtime: Lil Wayne, Eminem and Drake – can’t recall a more intense hip-hop performance on this most staid of awards shows. Too bad most of it was inaudible, as the foul-mouthed trio gave the guardians of public decency a migraine while huge chunks of their performance were muted. Not saying we needed to hear explicit language on prime-time TV, but it does point out how ultimately unsatisfying most live music performances on television are because of such restrictions.

Beck-ola! Jeff Beck paid homage to the late guitar great Les Paul by dancing on the strings while covering the old Les Paul-Mary Ford hit “How High the Moon” with vocalist Imelda May. She sounded heavily processed, but Beck was the real deal. If that doesn’t inspire any aspiring ax-man to junk “Guitar Hero” and pick up a real guitar, nothing will.

Best fashion choice: On a night when outrageousness was the rule, Maxwell stood out by going classic. Dark suit, tie, Marvin Gaye-like smoothness, right down to a Tammi Terrell-style duet with Roberta Flack on “Where is the Love.”

When the song isn’t very good … add lots of strings, a marching band, dance badly. Dave Matthews did all of the above in an attempt to salvage “You & Me.”

She never saw it coming: Bet when Mary J. Blige was clawing her way out of Yonkers, N.Y., in the late ‘80s she didn’t expect to find herself next to Andrea Bocelli singing a Simon and Garfunkel song on the Grammys. Chalk it up to another one of those odd Grammy programming decisions: The opera singer and the queen of hip-hop soul both looked a little awkward.

Were You Holding Your Breath …  about which song Bon Jovi was going to play in fan voting? Did anyone think it wasn’t going to be “Livin’ on a Prayer”?

Back from the dead, in 3-D: The Michael Jackson tribute was one of the set pieces scheduled for his aborted London residency. It resurfaced as one of those Grammy gimmicks that must’ve sounded good in some music exec’s glass office, but fell strangely flat in execution – especially without access to the 3-D glasses handed out to audience members at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Celine Dion, Usher, Carrie Underwood, Jennifer Hudson and Smokey Robinson took turns belting out lines alongside a recording of Jackson’s voice on "Earth Song." But the blustery anthem is not one of Jackson’s finest moments: “What about apathy?” everybody! Jackson’s children, Prince and Paris, then took the stage, and their simple, direct eloquence made all that preceded it seem like so much overkill. Fighting through his nerves, Prince Jackson said it best about his father: “Through all his songs, his message was simple: Love.”

Pitch-corrector must not have been working: Taylor Swift sounded flat, especially when she jumped in to sing “Rhiannon” with Stevie Nicks, who also sounded off. Swift looked more confident than she has on past nationally televised awards shows, but her vocals suggested otherwise.

Comeback kid: Less than a month after brain surgery, Leon Russell banged the keys with the Zac Brown Band, a refreshing throwback to a time when bearded, potbellied Southern guys played roots rock like their lives depended on it.

How do you spell train wreck? A-U-T-O-T-U-N-E. That chaotic Jamie Foxx/T-Pain collision, which started out as mocking opera, then segued into Auto-Tune overkill. (Could someone please kill Auto-Tune now? Didn’t Jay-Z already pronounce it dead?) Not even a Slash guitar solo could save it.

Naughty, naughty? Sure sounded to me like the audio dropped out during Fergie’s rap as the futuristic Black Eyed Peas got all sci-fi on us. Actually, the censors did us all a favor, because as MC’s go, Fergie has got flow issues.

Pink
Pink performs at the Grammys. (Kevin Winter, Getty Images) View more photos of Pink's performance at the 2010 Grammys.

Cirque du Soleil goes Pink: She’s been doing the acrobatics in concert for years. But as she twirled slowly in midair while sending water from her drenched body cascading down on the well-coifed audience, all the while managing to sing (could she have been lip-synching?), Pink surely was the talk of the TV show’s first hour with her high-flying performance.

Her night? Sensing that she just might run the table on her 10 nominations early on, Beyonce came out with a performance that was all windblown fury and overkill, slamming together her “If I Were a Boy” (grabbing her junk in the process) with Alanis Morissette’s “You Oughta Know.” Unusually aggressive by Lady B standards, especially coming off her classy Etta James moves in “Cadillac Records.”

Makeup! Someone get me makeup! What was with the runny facepaint on Lady Gaga and Elton John in their piano duet? Pretty cool opening set by Gaga, but somebody should’ve reconsidered that hideous makeup job. Yeah, yeah, I get that she got thrown into a "fire" and came out "charred." Just looked cheap.  I really like that she's willing not to play the traditional dance-pop diva role, but this was distracting.

Savior of the music industry: Susan Boyle sold a ton of records, but she was no-show, in part because her debut was released too late for Grammy consideration. Still, in a year where the Grammys swung hard toward younger performers, it was a “48-year-old housewife in sensible shoes,” as host Stephen Colbert called her, who gave the sagging industry a late sales uplift.

Better late than never? Neil Young won his first Grammy award, for box-set packaging (“Neil Young Archives Vol. 1 [1963-1972]”). As the LA times pointed out, that ties him with Britney Spears. Seriously.

Second City flop: Tough night for artists with Chicago connections. Kurt Elling won for best jazz vocal album (“Kurt Elling Sings The Music Of Coltrane And Hartman”); Kanye West for best rap song (“Run This Town”). But nominees such as Common, Wilco, Neko Case and Mavis Staples went home empty.

greg@gregkot.com

Related:

Photos: Grammy Awards 2010 red carpet

A complete list of 2010 Grammy winners

Best & Worst of 2010 Grammys

January 20, 2010

Grammy predictions: Who will win, who should win, who got shafted

    You want “artistic excellence?” Though that’s what the Grammy Awards vow to recognize each year, you may not necessarily get it when you tune in to the 52nd annual ceremony at 7 p.m. CST Jan. 31 on CBS-TV. For every deserving winner in recent years (hard to argue with last year’s album-of-the-year winners, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss), there are a half-dozen blunders (my all-time favorite is the New Vaudeville Band’s “Winchester Cathedral” topping the Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby” and the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” in 1966 for best rock recording). Below, we play the perilous game of predicting how the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences will vote, and point out the artistic excellence they overlooked (remember, only recordings released between Oct. 1, 2008, and Aug. 31, 2009 are eligible).

Album of the Year

Nominees: Beyonce, “I Am ... Sasha Fierce”; Black Eyed Peas, “The E.N.D.”; Lady Gaga, “The Fame”; Dave Matthews Band, “Big Whiskey and the Groogrux King”; Taylor Swift “Fearless.”

Who will win: Beyonce, “I Am … Sasha Fierce” 

Who should win: Lady Gaga, “The Fame”

Who got shafted: Kanye West, “808’s and Heartbreak”
 
Record of the Year
(Award to the artist and the producer, recording engineer and-or mixer)

Nominees: Beyonce, “Halo”; Black Eyed Peas, “I Got a Feeling”; Kings of Leon, “Use Somebody”; Taylor Swift, “You Belong With Me”; Lady Gaga, “Poker Face.”

Who will win: Taylor Swift “You Belong to Me”

Who should win: Lady Gaga “Poker Face”

Who got shafted: Phoenix, “Lisztomania”

Continue reading "Grammy predictions: Who will win, who should win, who got shafted" »

Grammy preview: Youth will be served

Jobros
The Jonas Brothers perform with Stevie Wonder at the 51st Grammy Awards show. (Mark J. Terrill, AP) View my predictions on who will win big this year HERE.

At the 52nd annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 31, it’ll be kids night – at least by the staid standards of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

In past years, the Grammys have tried to mix it up with veteran acts facing off against relative newcomers for the big prizes, or vintage stars mingling with up-and-comers in cross-generational live performances. Who can forget the Jonas Brothers trying to get funky (or something like that) with Stevie Wonder on last year’s telecast?
 
As with the JoBros-Stevie trainwreck, the old-timers usually get the better of the newcomers. Consider the most prestigious category: Album of the Year. Just in the last decade, the surprise winners have included Herbie Hancock for “River: The Joni Letters” in 2008, Ray Charles' “Genius Loves Company” in 2005 and Steely Dan's “Two Against Nature” in 2001. All of these great artists won for the wrong album; they should’ve been recognized decades sooner. Instead, they beat younger, more worthy competition with mediocre releases. When Hancock triumphed over the favored Kanye West and Amy Winehouse in 2008, awards presenter Quincy Jones said it all: “Unbelievable!”

But there’s no chance of a venerable insider usurping the pop upstarts  this year because the major categories are dominated by relatively young artists who are either just beginning their careers or in their commercial prime.

Continue reading "Grammy preview: Youth will be served" »

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