Container Top
Jobs   |   Homes   |   Rentals   |   Autos   |   Biz List   |   Stuff for Sale  |   NIE   |   Daily Deals   |   Shopping/Coupons   |   Obituaries   |   Pets   |   Place an Ad   |  
Friday, May 25, 2012
 

Events Calendar

EVENT SEARCH:
 ==> Submit an Event

MORE IN NEWS...

Blogs:

The330:

Black Keys score Grammy nomination; Kanye West leads noms with 7

By Nekesa Mumbi Moody
Associated Press

Grammy Nominations_Kada
In this Feb. 15, 2011 file photo, Adele performs on stage during the Brit Awards 2011 at The O2 Arena in London. Adele was nominated for six Grammy Awards on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. The awards will be held on Feb. 12. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)

Adele scored six Grammy nominations on Wednesday, including for record, song and album of the year, but the owner of the 2011’s best-selling album with 21 wasn’t the night’s top nominee — and that wasn’t the evening’s only surprise.

Kanye West came away with a leading seven nominations, including a bid for song of the year for his all-star song “All of the Lights.” However, the album from which it came — My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, heralded by many critics as the best album of 2010 — was shut out of the best album category, and all of his other nominations were relegated to the rap fields.

The Black Keys received a nomination for best pop duo or group perfomance for their cover of Buddy Holly’s “Dearest.” The song was featured on the covers compilation album, Rave On Buddy Holly. The Keys have now been nominated for six Grammy Awards in their career and have won three.

Other notable omissions in the top categories included country phenomenon Taylor Swift and veteran crooner Tony Bennett.

Bruno Mars and the Foo Fighters tied Adele with six nominations each, including in the album of the year category. Critical-darling folky act Bon Iver scored four nominations, with two in the prestigious record and song of the year categories; and dubstep star Skrillex may have been the night’s biggest surprise, getting five nominations, including a bid for best new artist.

The nominations were announced after the Recording Academy’s fourth annual live concert special, which aired on CBS from the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles. The hour-long event featured key nominees like Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Nicki Minaj and the Band Perry.

Even though Adele didn’t get the lion’s share of nominations, she got them where it counted: Her 21, the mournful post-breakup album that produced smash hits like the torch ballad “Someone Like You” — was nominated for album of the year. The searing groove “Rolling in the Deep,” which spent seven weeks at No. 1 this past summer, got nominations for both record and song of the year. Only Mars got nominations in all three categories as well.

Other nominees in the record of the year category included Bon Iver’s ballad “Holocene”; Mars’ ballad “Grenade”; Mumford & Sons’ “The Cave”; and Katy Perry’s inspirational anthem “Firework.” For song of the year, which honors the writers of the tune, contenders included “The Cave,” ‘’Grenade, “Holocene” and Lady Gaga’s “You and I.”

The best album category was as noteworthy for who was excluded as it was for who was nominated. Lady Gaga garnered her third straight nod in the category for Born This Way, while veteran rockers the Foo Fighters were nominated for Wasting Light, along with Mars’ debut album, Doo-Wops & Hooligans, and Rihanna’s steamy dance album Loud.

Shut out were perceived favorites like 85-year-old Bennett, who became the oldest person to score a No. 1 debut when his Duets II album was released earlier this year, and the megawatt collaboration of Jay-Z and West with the heavily hyped Watch The Throne.

The biggest snub may have been to Swift, who won in the category in 2010 and was considered by some critics to be a favorite for Speak Now, which has sold 3.7 million copies. She did get three nominations, however, including for best country album.

Unlike the past two years, which saw Swift and fellow country act Lady Antebellum soar in the general categories, the only country act that got a mainstream nomination was the country sibling act The Band Perry. Best known for their poignant ballad “If I Die Young,” they got a nomination for best new artist. Their competition also includes Bon Iver, Jay-Z rap protege J. Cole, Skrillex and rapper-singer Nicki Minaj, who scored four nominations in total.

The 54th Grammys will be held Feb. 12 in Los Angeles. The ceremony will mark the first since the academy shaved its categories from 109 to 78 this year, amid some protest. Some of the more niched categories, like best Zydeco or Cajun music album, were eliminated.

In addition, men and women now compete together in vocal categories for pop, R&B and country, instead of having separate categories for each sex. This year, the category is best pop solo performance and Bruno Mars is the only man nominated for “Grenade.” His competition includes Adele for “Someone Like You,” Lady Gaga for “You and I,” Pink for “(Expletive) Perfect” and Perry for “Firework.”

Click here to read or leave a comment on this story.




Story tools

Email  Email   Print  Print   Reprint  Reprint   Popular  Most Popular   Subscribe  Subscribe

Share this story






Share this story on Facebook and Twitter



Recently Commented Stories

Powered by Disqus