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AWARDS DATABASE
All of the winners, all of the nominees, all of the awards shows.
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Sylvester "Sly Stone" Stewart didn't come back on stage, of course, but other members of the Family Stone did, and promised there will be more to come from the group and their leader, though in typically vague terms. "There's some stuff that you haven't heard yet, and Sly has evolved and it's great," said original member Freddie Stewart, Sly's brother.
U2's win was the first time a rock band has claimed the best album award since 2001, when Steely Dan was the surprise pick for its CD "Two Against Nature" — and that jazz-leaning duo is hardly the classic rock prototype. The bounty of awards Wednesday brought the Irish rock veterans' career total of Grammys to 22. Steve Lillywhite, a key studio figure in "Dismantle," won producer-of-the-year honors. Green Day, the Bay Area pop punk band, took record-of-the-year honors for its pulsing, forlorn hit "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," off its "American Idiot" collection, an album that already had earned a Grammy last year for rock album. Country and bluegrass singer Alison Krauss and her band Union Station won in three categories, including best country album for "Lonely Runs Both Ways" and may be needing a closet for her gramophone statuettes — her career total is now 20, the most by any woman and seventh overall among all-time winners. For Carey, even being nominated represented a career comeback that, for melodrama, rivals any in the history of pop music. In 2002, EMI's Virgin Records showed Carey the door and swallowed a $28-million payout to do it. In the months leading up to that decision, Carey saw her semiautobiographical film, "Glitter," get savaged by critics and watched the tie-in soundtrack limp down the music charts. Before Wednesday, she had not won a Grammy since her new-artist win in 1990. In the Latin music field, Miami singer-songwriter Willie Chirino surpassed more widely recognized artists to take the award for salsa/merengue album for his independently produced "Son del Alma." It marks the first Grammy win in the Cuban American's 35-year career. William Bolcom's "Bolcom: Song of Innocence and of Experience" won three awards in the classical music field, including best album. The show opened with an odd mix of live performance and high-tech animation as five-time Grammy winner Madonna and the Gorillaz — the rock and hip-hop collective that is represented in music videos only as cartoon characters — meshed their respective hits, "Hang Up" and "Feelgood Inc." The performances ended with Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Allen Toussaint, the Edge of U2, Dr. John and others collaborating on a tribute to New Orleans with the Toussaint-penned song "Yes We Can." They also belted out "In the Midnight Hour," a signature hit for Wilson Pickett, who died last month at 64. Before the show, producer Ken Ehrlich joked that "hopefully it won't be midnight when that airs"; the show, which aired live on the East Coast, didn't stretch that long, but it did clock in at three hours and 30 minutes. The 48th Annual Grammy Awards were for recordings released between Oct. 1, 2004, and Sept. 30, 2005. Awards were given out Wednesday in 108 categories, most of them before the CBS broadcast began. Awards in 11 categories were handed out during the show. One person who won but could not attend was Les Paul, the 90-year-old electric guitar pioneer who has been hospitalized in New Jersey since Friday with pneumonia. Paul, whose only previous Grammy win was in 1977, won Wednesday in two instrumental categories for tracks off the album "Les Paul & Friends: American Made World Played." The man whose name graces one of the most popular guitar models in rock also could not attend the Tuesday night tribute to him in Los Angeles that featured Buddy Guy, Slash and others. From his hospital bed on Wednesday, the nonagenarian said the distant accolades are bittersweet. "I'm so sorry I can't be there," Paul said. "I'm so happy about the Grammys. I feel like a condemned building with a new flagpole on it." |
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