Nekesa Mumbi Moody, Associated Press, Los Angeles | Mon, 02/13/2012 8:22 AM
AP PhotoThe Grammys got under way on Sunday, with the Recording Academy trying to focus on music's
biggest night after of the death of one of music's biggest names - Whitney
Houston.
Houston died
on the eve of the Grammys at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, where she was preparing
to attend a pre-Grammy party. Her death cast a huge shadow over the event. As
the pre-telecast awards ceremony began, co-host Dave Koz acknowledged the
tragedy, noting the "great legacy of Miss Whitney Houston. She's in our
hearts and our minds."
Presenter Jimmy Jam, a friend and producer of Houston's, said it "a bittersweet
occasion tonight with the passing of Whitney."
"Anytime someone passes away, the thing you do is you gather your
family together, tell stories," he said. "A little bit of mourning,
little bit of celebrating - this is our family tonight and we're going to do it
the best that we can do it."
Melanie Fiona, who won best traditional R&B vocal performance and best
R&B song with Cee-Lo for the song Fool for You, also gave
tribute to the fallen star: "Whitney Houston I would not be standing up
here if it were not for you, thank you so much."
A moving moment came when Tony Bennett won his second Grammy of the evening,
best pop performance by a duo/group, for his collaboration with Amy Winehouse, Body and Soul. Winehouse, another supremely talented singer who had
a long struggle with drugs and alcohol, died last year.
Bennett, who also won for the album Duets II, brought both her
parents, Mitch and Janis Winehouse, onstage to accept the award.
"We shouldn't be here, our darling daughter should be here. These are
the cards that we're dealt," Mitch Winehouse said. "We miss our
daughter so much."
Winehouse also referenced the deaths of Houston and Etta James, saying:
"There's a beautiful girl band up there in heaven."
When it came to the business of awarding trophies, the Foo Fighters were the
top winners in the pre-telecast ceremony, taking four out of their possible six
trophies, including best rock album for Wasting Light (the album is
also up for album of the year).
"This is a very great honor because this album was the most fun we've
ever had making a record," said frontman Dave Grohl. "I asked my wife
if it was OK to use my garage... This represents the human element of
music."
Kanye West and dance/electronica DJ Skrillex won three each. Adele captured
two of her six possible Grammys, including best pop vocal album for 21, while Taylor Swift also won two trophies for her rebuke to her
critics, Mean. The folk-country duo The Civil Wars also won two.
Before the death of one of pop music's most important figures, the
pre-Grammy buzz focused on whether Adele - 2011's top-selling artist and set to
make her first public performance on the show since having vocal cord surgery -
would be the queen of the Grammys. Although Kanye West led all nominees with
seven and Bruno Mars and the Foo Fighters tied Adele with six nominations, the
British singer was favored to sweep all of her categories. Adele's 21 won for best pop vocal album.
But as show time neared, the focus remained on Houston's death. A tribute to Houston featuring
Jennifer Hudson was to take place during the main ceremony.
Grammy show producer Ken Ehrlich said Houston's death was "too fresh in
everyone's memory to do more at this time, but we would be remiss if we didn't
recognize Whitney's remarkable contribution to music fans in general, and in
particular her close ties with the Grammy telecast and her Grammy wins and
nominations over the years."
More Houston tributes from nominees and presenters are expected during the
three-and-a-half hour Staples
Center show, which was to
feature the Foo Fighters, Mars, Nicki Minaj, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney,
Swift, Chris Brown and Rihanna.
The show will mark the first time Rihanna and Brown have appeared at the
same awads show since his attack on her three years ago - also on the eve of
the Grammys - forced both to drop out of the show and led to an assault
conviction for Brown. It almost derailed his career, but 2011 marked a huge
comeback, and he was rewarded with a Grammy performance slot on Sunday night's
CBS broadcast.
Rihanna is also a nominee, up for album of the year. She is competing with
Adele's 21, Mars' Doo-Woops & Hooligans, the Foo
Fighters Wasting Light and Lady Gaga's Born This Way.
Adele's Rolling in the Deep is nominated for record and song of
the year. Both categories also include Bon Iver's Holocene, Mumford
& Sons The Cave, and Mars' Grenade. Katy Perry's Firework is up for record of the year but instead of that song,
West's All of the Lights takes the remaining position in the song
of the year category.
Bon Iver won best alternative music album for its self-titled album.
The ceremony marks the first since a major overhaul of the categories last
year: They were trimmed from 109 to 78. The move upset some musicians, and a
protest was planned outside of the Staples
Center on Sunday.
In one of the controversial new categories, best regional roots music,
Rebirth Brass Band won for Rebirth of New Orleans.
Tuareg desert rockers Tinariwen won the newly-combined best world music
album award, which had been previously been divided into traditional and
contemporary categories.
Cachao, the Cuban mambo pioneer who died in 2008, won best tropical Latin
album for The Last Mambo, while Mexican rock band Mana won for best
Latin pop, rock or urban album.
Los Tigres Del Norte won the Banda or Norteno award, while Pepe Aguilar won
in the regional Mexican or Tejano category.
Tedeschi Trucks Band won for best blues album, while Alison Krauss and Union
Station won for best bluegrass album. Levon Helm won for best Americana album, while duo The Civil Wars won
both a folk and country award for its album Barton Hollow. (nvn)