Jill Lawless, Associated Press, London | Entertainment | Wed, February 22 2012, 7:26 AM
Best female solo: Adele reacts after winning the award for best British Female Solo Artist during the Brit Awards 2012 at the O2 Arena in London, Tuesday (Wednesday Jakarta time). (AP/Joel Ryan)
Soulful songstress Adele capped a momentous year of
Grammy Awards triumph and medical woes with a double win at the U.K.'s Brit
music awards Tuesday, taking prizes for album of the year and best British
female solo artist before making an obscene gesture after the show's host cut
her acceptance speech short.
Teen-friendly English troubadour Ed Sheeran won two trophies,
including British male solo artist, at an energetic ceremony in London.
It has been a dramatic year for down-to-earth north London diva Adele,
who based her chat-topping songs of heartbreak on a rocky relationship.
Her sophomore album "21" won six Grammys last week and has
sold more than 6 million copies in the United States alone. But Adele also had
to undergo vocal cord surgery in November to fix a potentially
career-threatening throat condition.
She delivered a powerhouse performance of her single "Rolling in
the Deep" to thousands of fans and industry insiders at London's O2 arena.
"It's been an amazing year," Adele said as she received the
female artist statuette from petite pop star Kylie Minogue.
"I feel like a drag queen next to you," joked the winner,
who wore a sleek black Burberry gown but towered over Minogue. She thanked her
record company "for letting me be the kind of artist I want to be."
The show's host, James Corden, cut off Adele's acceptance speech,
prompting the singer to make a rude middle-finger gesture in frustration.
She stressed afterward that it was aimed at industry leaders, not her
fans.
"I'm sorry if I offended anyone but it was the suits that
offended me," Adele said. "Thank you all very much and thanks to my
fans. I don't want them to think I was swearing at them."
The 23-year-old lost out on the British single prize to boy band One
Direction's "What Makes You Beautiful," but took the coveted album of
the year award for "21." The statue was presented by singer George
Michael, returning to the stage after suffering life-threatening pneumonia
December.
The ceremony also included tributes to two departed divas, Whitney
Houston and Amy Winehouse.
Tousle-haired singer-songwriter Sheeran won prizes for solo artist and
British breakthrough act.
The red-headed 21-year-old has been panned as bland by some critics,
but has amassed legions of young fans through online releases and a relentless
calendar of shows.
Sheeran thanked his manager for transforming a "spotty, chubby
ginger teenager" into a Brit-winner.
Long derided as dull, the Brits have become a lively celebration of
U.K. music and style - and this year's awards come with British music riding
high around the world.
"I'm so, so proud to be British and to be flying our flag,"
said Adele, who has the century's best-selling album so far.
Tuesday's event - which kicked off with Coldplay performing
"Charlie Brown" and included live turns from Sheeran, Florence and
the Machine, Noel Gallagher, Bruno Mars and Rihanna - brought out a host of
stars who blended rock 'n' roll attitude and fashion finery.
Blur frontman Damon Albarn dressed down for the red carpet in jeans
and a flat cap, and former Oasis guitarist Gallagher wore a leather jacket. But
others struck a snazzier note. Actor Ray Winstone arrived in a pinstriped
three-piece suit, complete with watch chain.
Style standouts included Minogue, in a strapless sky blue dress;
plump-lipped Internet sensation Lana Del Rey, wearing a floor-length red gown;
and Florence and the Machine's Florence Welch, in a lacy peach dress by Sarah
Burton of Alexander McQueen.
Coldplay won their fourth best British group trophy, while Foo
Fighters were voted best international group.
Bruno Mars took the prize for international male solo artist, and
Rihanna won the international female prize for a second year.
The Barbadian singer, who has often been in the news for non-musical
reasons since her then-boyfriend Chris Brown attacked her at a pre-Grammy
Awards party in 2009, thanked her fans.
"At times when I feel misunderstood, my fans always remind me
that it's OK to be myself," she said.
Lana Del Rey appeared moved to be named international breakthrough
act.
"This award means much more to me than you know," said the
singer, who has gone from Internet-fueled buzz to backlash in record time after
a disastrous performance last month on "Saturday Night Live."
Britpop icons Blur received a special prize for their contribution to
music.
The four original members - Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James and Dave
Rowntree - performed together for the first time since a series of concerts in
2009, offering versions of 1990s hits including "Girls & Boys" and
"Parklife."
Most of the awards are chosen by more than 1,000 musicians, critics
and record industry figures, with several decided by public vote.