Tag: grammys

  • ‘A Star Is Born’ Wins 2 Grammys: Watch Lady Gaga’s ‘Shallow’ Performance

    ‘A Star Is Born’ Wins 2 Grammys: Watch Lady Gaga’s ‘Shallow’ Performance

    Warner Bros.

    “A Star Is Born” added two Grammys to its impressive awards season haul on Sunday night for its hit anthem “Shallow.”

    Songwriters Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Anthony Rossomando and Andrew Wyatt won best song written for visual media. “Shallow” also won best pop duo/group performance, which Gaga accepted on behalf of herself and the absent Bradley Cooper.

    “I wish Bradley was here right now,” she said in her acceptance speech. “I know he wants to be here. Bradley, I loved singing this song with you.”

    Gaga also addressed addiction and mental illness, the film’s key theme. “I’m so proud to be a part of a movie that addresses mental health issues and a lot of artists deal with that and we’ve got to take care of each other. So if you see somebody that’s hurting, don’t look away,” she implored.

    Gaga’s performance of “Shallow” on the Grammys broadcast was decidedly more hard rock than the version heard in the movie:

    https://twitter.com/opinion8dmecom/status/1094798449478909959

  • ‘Black Panther’ Gets Grammy Album of the Year Nomination, ‘Shallow’ Gets 4 Nods

    ‘Black Panther’ Gets Grammy Album of the Year Nomination, ‘Shallow’ Gets 4 Nods

    Marvel Studios

    “Black Panther” wants all the awards. All of them.

    Marvel is already making a big Oscar push for the mega-hit superhero flick (and yesterday, it earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture – Drama).

    Now, the movie has received a very rare honor — a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. It is the first soundtrack to get a nod for the top prize since 2000’s “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”

    “Black Panther” received five nominations in total. In addition to Album of the Year, the song “All the Stars,” performed by Kendrick Lamar and SZA, was nominated for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, Best Rap/Sung Performance and Best Song Written for Visual Media.

    The soundtrack will vie for the top prize against Janelle Monae’s “Dirty Computer,” Cardi B’s “Invasion of Privacy,” Brandi Carlile’s “By the Way, I Forgive You,” Drake’s “Scorpion,” H.E.R.’s “H.E.R.,” Post Malone’s “Beerbongs & Bentleys,” and Kacey Musgraves’s “Golden Hour.”

    The soundtrack for the romantic drama “A Star Is Born” was not eligible for the Grammys this year, as it was released on October 5. However, the lead single, “Shallow,” by Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper, received four nominations, including Song of the Year, Record of the Year, Best Pop Duo/Group Performance and Best Song Written for Visual Media.

    This is Cooper’s first nomination and Gaga’s 24th (she’s won six Grammys total).

    So, “Black Panther” and “A Star Is Born” will face off in the Best Song Written for Visual Media category, along with: “Mystery of Love” (“Call Me by Your Name”), “Remember Me” (“Coco”) and “This Is Me” (“The Greatest Showman”).

    The 61st Annual Grammy Awards airs February 10 on CBS.

  • Chrissy Teigen Confirms the Sex of 2nd Baby With John Legend via New Photo

    Sunday was a big night for Chrissy Teigen and John Legend fans, and not just because they got to see the power couple at the 2018 Grammy Awards. After the event, Teigen confirmed the sex of their second child in an Instagram post.

    Sharing a photo of herself on the red carpet with her baby bump on display, Teigen wrote, “Mama and her baby boy.” The comment immediately sparked a wave of congratulations from fans happy to hear that the “Lip Sync Battle” co-host and her Grammy winner husband are adding a boy to their family, which already includes daughter Luna Simone, who turns 2 years old in April.

    mama and her baby boy

    A post shared by chrissy teigen (@chrissyteigen) on

    Now, for Teigen and Legend, the baby’s sex was not a surprise. The two used in vitro fertilization to conceive both of their children, as People reports. Knowing the genetic makeup of their last remaining embryo, Teigen had already tweeted a year ago — before she was pregnant again — that their next child would be a boy.

    Surprised or not, though, fans are happy for the growing family. We look forward to seeing their little boy in the coming months.

  • Carrie Fisher Wins Posthumous Grammy; Read Billie Lourd’s Sweet Tribute

    In addition to her accomplished acting career, the late, great Carrie Fisher was also a talented writer, too, working as a script doctor and penning multiple bestsellers throughout her too-short lifetime. Those two worlds collided when she performed the audio book narration for her last work before her death, the “Star Wars“-themed memoir “The Princess Diarist,” and now, that recording has snagged Fisher a posthumous Grammy Award.

    Fisher prevailed in the Spoken Word Album category on Sunday night, beating out the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and Mark Ruffalo and Bernie Sanders. “The Princess Diarist” caused a stir when it was first released, shortly before the writer-actress’s sudden death in December 2016 at age 60, revealing Fisher’s affair with her then-married co-star Harrison Ford during the making of the first “Star Wars” film.

    The late star’s family and friends celebrated her big win in her stead, with her daughter, Billie Lourd, offering the sweetest tribute to Fisher’s achievement. In post on Instagram, Lourd shared a throwback photo of her mother carrying her down a red carpet when she was a little girl.

    Noting that she wished Fisher could be with her to share in her joy, Lourd wrote the she would “instead … celebrate in true Carrie style: in bed in front of the TV over cold Coca Colas and warm e cigs. I’m beyond proud.”

    Mark Hamill, Fisher’s “Star Wars” castmate, let his hashtags do most of the talking, tweeting a big, all-caps “CONGRATULATIONS” to his “#SpaceSis.”

    “#AlwaysWithUs #AlwaysAWinner #CarrieOnFOREVER,” the actor added.

    Fisher’s half-sister, Joely Fisher, and Grammys category mate, Mark Ruffalo, also tweeted their congrats to the late actress.

    We only wish Fisher could have been here to enjoy the honor herself. We miss you, Princess.

  • ‘Game of Thrones’ Earns First Grammy Nomination

    “Game of Thrones” is one step closer to an EGOT.

    But seriously, the HBO drama hit a new milestone today when it received its first-ever Grammy nomination for composer Ramin Djawadi’s work in Season 7.

    Djawadi — who previously received a Grammy nomination for his “Iron Man” score — will face off against Jóhann Jóhannsson for “Arrival,” Hans Zimmer for “Dunkirk,” Justin Hurwitz for “La La Land,” and Benjamin Wallfisch, Pharrell Williams, and Hans Zimmer for “Hidden Figures.”

    The Season 7 finale featured a brand-new theme, “Truth,” that played over scenes between Daenerys Targaryen and Jon Snow, as well as the revelatory wedding of his true parents, Lyanna Stark and Prince Rhaegar Targaryen.

    “It’s supposed to be its own thing,” Djawadi told Entertainment Weekly. “The trick with this theme is that it really had to be a love theme but when we played it in earlier episodes, you don’t want to give away the love too soon. So it had to be a theme that could be a little bit mysterious, a little moody, and you could play it darker at times. I know everybody was expecting [them to get together] but we really had to be able to do this slowly. That was the most important thing for me.”

    Interestingly, Djawadi’s “Game of Thrones” music has only been Emmy-nominated once, for the Season 4 episode “The Mountain and the Viper.” He has, however, earned Emmy nods for “Westworld,” “Prison Break,” and “FlashForward.”

    How he did not get one for the “GOT” Season 6 finale composition “Light of the Seven,” we don’t understand:

  • John Legend Loves How ‘Underground’ Depicts a Painful History and the Ability to Overcome

    WGN America's 'Underground' Season Two Premiere Screening At The Smithsonian National Museum Of African American History And CulJohn Legend is starting to make living up to that lofty last name look easy.

    On both the personal and the professional front, Legend has been enjoying the kind of moment pop artists aspire to but can often only dream of. After building a monumental career in a relatively short period of time — with major mile markers including multiple platinum records, numerous Grammys, both a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for Best Original Song for “Selma‘s” “Glory” and a phenomenal mega-hit in the form of “All of Me” — the singer-songwriter has been riding a major wave and adding even more titles — including actor and producer — to his business card.

    The both appeared in and co-wrote and performed the song “Start a Fire” in the acclaimed and wildly popular film “La La Land“; he produced his first major Broadway production, “Jitney,” as well as Netflix‘s Young Barak Obama biopic “Southside With You;” he dropped his sixth album, Darkness and Light; and his high-profile romance with his supermodel/TV host wife Chrissy Teigen remains a “relationship goals” guidepost for many, and they welcomed their first daughter, Luna, into the mix. In just a couple of weeks, he and Ariana Grande‘s newly recorded rendition of “Beauty and the Beast” will appear in Disney’s live action adaption of its animated classic.

    Also among the past year’s triumphs was Legend’s first foray into executive producing a television series, WGN’s “Underground,” the warmly received scripted drama chronicling the efforts of several characters attempting to escape slavery in the Antebellum South during the Civil War via the secret Underground Railroad. With “Underground” returning on Mar. 8 for a second season — which introduces historical figures including Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass (the latter played by Legend himself), Legend sat down for a roundtable conversation about the show’s future and that amazing 2016 he enjoyed.

    Being a part of a show like this makes you a student of history. In learning the history of this time period, whats been eye-opening for you?

    John Legend: All kinds of little things. You’re going to learn some things about Harriet Tubman this season that are pretty exciting and interesting. I didn’t know that she was a narcoleptic. She had been hit in the head pretty traumatically when she was young, and the result of that was that she would just fall asleep randomly. And she would see things during that time and use those visions to guide her, some of the time.

    That was an interesting thing I had never heard of, and there are going to be tidbits like that, throughout the season, because we’re basing this on a real life, who was a superhero in American history that meant so much to this movement.

    And you’re taking on the role of Frederick Douglass yourself.

    That was pretty easy. It was one day. It wasn’t a long period of time, where I was immersed in it. I just wanted to deliver in that scene, so we focused on that, but I wouldn’t characterize that as a significant role.

    Did you have trepidation in playing someone of his historic stature?

    There’s some pressure, but it’s not the pressure of having a bunch of video of Frederick Douglass, so I have to sound like Frederick Douglass. No one knows what he sounded like. It was more a photo and his words. That’s not the same pressure as someone who’s a 20th century icon where everyone knows what they sound like, knows what they look like, and knows their mannerisms.

    Can you talk about how emotionally challenging it is to be a part of a project that recreates what many consider the worst aspects of American history?

    I think the power of the show is that it shows the worst, and it shows the potential to overcome that. I think that’s what is the saving grace of the show. Nobody wants to wallow in misery for a five-season series. You want to see how bad things got, but you also want to see the possibility of redemption, of hope, of change, of resistance.

    I think that’s the power of this show is that it shows both the pain and the resistance. It shows the struggle and the accomplishment of reaching your goal. And that’s what makes it fun to make is that it’s not just about how bad things were, it’s about the possibility of changing things. A possibility of resisting it and moving the world.

    With the success of “Hamilton,” one of the byproducts was that people were going back and looking at American history. Does it make you hopeful to think that people that will be watching “Underground” might further explore that particular period in American history?

    I hope so. I hope people watch this show and are inspired to study that era of American history. Not because we want to wallow in the misery or the oppression, but because it’s important.

    When we talk about what’s happening in America now, we talk about the racial divide we still have in America — some of these issues that we’re talking about right now with the police and with race relations, you can’t talk about them if you don’t understand America’s history with race relations, and you can understand America’s history with that unless you understand slavery.

    So whenever we’re thinking about what’s happening in America now, without context of history, then we’re operating with a handicap, because you have to know what happened before for you to understand what’s happening now.

    You have to understand what Hitler did, and what FDR did with the internment camps in Japan, for you to understand why it’s dangerous to hear Donald Trump talking about registering all Muslims, and banning all Muslims. You have to understand history to understand why that’s a slippery slope and why you don’t want to go down there. So without that context, it’s hard for you to understand what’s happening now.

    Do you consider your projects, as a producer, and your music part of your personal activism? Did you always have aspirations of activism?

    I always had aspirations of activism. I always thought that part of the role of an artist was to tell the truth about what’s happening and the change you want to see. I’ve always listened to artists who did that — Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, and Paul Robeson — and who used their platform to fight for justice, so I always thought that’s what part of being an artist was, and I still think that’s what it is, for me.

    That doesn’t mean every song I write is about my activism, but I write about the things I’m interested in, and I’m interested in things I experience myself. I use the success I’ve gained, in some part, to highlight issues I think are of concern and hopefully galvanize people to make change.

    Whats at the top of your list right now?

    There are a lot of things right now. I just don’t want our new president to get us into some stupid war and start a stupid nuclear arms race, or something crazy like that. Those are the big concerns. But then, there’s whether millions of people will lose health care, whether we’ll continue to work towards ending mass incarceration, whether our schools will continue to improve, whether communities that have been left behind will get the help that they need to advance.

    There are so many concerns, and my worry is that Trump will be on the opposite side of all those issues of where he should be and where I would like him to be.

    How are you staying hopeful these days in the face of that?

    Shows like “Underground” really help me feel hopeful because you realize that America has been through some terrible times, but the courage and the wherewithal and the organization and the passion of groups like the Underground Railroad and the Abolitionist Movement defied the odds and brought us closer to freedom and justice. That means, to me, that the people still have power. Even when we’re discouraged by current events, we know we have the power to help make change happen.

    How do you feel about television and film producing and acting vs. the musical side of your career?

    Television and film are different. Personally, as a fan, I get more excited about a great television series than a great movie, just because you can immerse yourself in it and binge and follow a story for quite a long period of time, which gives you the opportunity to really dive into the subject, in a way that you can’t really do in a two-hour film.

    As a fan and even as a producer, the idea of a television series and its impact is fun. This story, you could do a movie about it, but there are so many twists and turns, so much suspense, and so many characters you can explore, that it’s exciting to do a multi-season series.

    And music is number one. It’s not even close! Music has been my entrée into producing because a lot of the projects we get involved with, as a film and TV company, have some aspect of music and I get involved in that, as well. And then, acting is something I haven’t prioritized, but if the right things come along, like it did with “La La Land,” then I’ll do it.

    What’s the appeal for you in taking on a new version of “Beauty and the Beast’s” title song, and how do you feel you and Ariana Grande compliment each other dueting on that song?

    It’s such an iconic song, and as a singer, it’s like a great challenge to try to remake a song that people already love quite a bit. Ariana’s a wonderful singer. I felt like we’d make a good team to try to tackle it. So when Disney reached out to me, I agreed to do it.

    Was it special to you when you were growing up?

    I love that song, and I thought the film was great back then. I was a little older by then. What was that, 20 years ago? So I was a teenager. So I wasn’t that young. That song was obviously a really important song, and the film was really important. So as an artist, it’s a bit of a challenge to take on something like that where people already love the original and trying to make your own version that honors the original but is new as well.

    You just opened your first Broadway show, a production of August Wilson’s “Jitney.” Anything else on your bucket list?

    No, not really — not that I can think of right now! I just want to focus on doing what I do as well as I can do it. So for me, when we go on tour this year, I want to put on the best tour that I’ve done. When I made my album last year, I was trying to make the best album I’ve ever made. So that’s the standard I want to hold myself to is trying to make the best content I can make, and focus on quality, and the rest will take care of itself.

    Has being a new father changed the way that you approach music or your production projects?

    I think it gives you some perspective. I think it helps you think about what life means and what you’re trying to do in your life, and what’s important to you, career-wise. Because some things you just cast aside because you’re like, “I don’t have time for all this.” I need to be a good father, and a good husband, and I need to focus on things I really care about in my career, and not do things I don’t really care about, that don’t excite me.

    But also, especially when I was making the album, it made me think more about what legacy means, what history means, what life means, what death means even. I wrote more about that on this album than I ever had before.

  • Beyonce (and Her Twins) Set to Perform at 2017 Grammys

    Jay Z Holds Get Out The Vote Concert In Support Of Hillary ClintonEarlier this week, Grammys?

    Entertainment Tonight is reporting that Queen Bey is set to take the stage at the upcoming awards show, though details of the performance are being kept under wraps for now. ET says that “multiple sources” have confirmed Beyonce’s planned appearance, and that the singer, who is nominated for nine trophies at this year’s ceremony for her visual album “Lemonade,” “was spotted on Thursday rehearsing at a secret location in Los Angeles, California, with a glam squad, camera crew and her team of dancers all in tow.”

    The superstar used a similar platform to celebrate her pregnancy with her and husband Jay-Z’s first child, daughter Blue Ivy Carter, when she revealed she was expecting while performing at the MTV Video Music Awards in 2011. Though the cat’s already out of the bag now, we expect some similar moves from Bey when she hits the stage next weekend.

    Beyonce will be in good company among the already-announced group of performers: Adele was recently confirmed to sing, and artists including The Weeknd, Daft Punk, Alicia Keys, A Tribe Called Quest, Dave Grohl, John Legend, Bruno Mars, Metallica, Carrie Underwood, and Keith Urban are also set to take the stage.

    The Grammys will air live on CBS on Sunday, February 12.

    [via: Entertainment Tonight]

  • Adele Will Perform at the 2017 Grammys, So Prepare for an Epic Sing-Along on Your Couch

    Adele Live 2016 - North American Tour In Austin, TXThough she was nominated for a boatload of awards for her record-shattering album “25,” it was unclear whether or not superstar Adele would be performing at the 2017 Grammys. Well, wonder no more: CBS has just confirmed that the singer will indeed take the stage at next month’s ceremony.

    Adele, who’s up for some of the biggest awards of the night (Album Of The Year, Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year, Best Pop Solo Performance, and Best Pop Vocal Album), will perform a track from “25” during the Grammys broadcast, according to CBS. It’s unclear which song she’ll choose, though “Hello” is the obvious selection, since it’s been singled out for several individual trophies (and was also the lead single from “25”).

    This will be the fourth time Adele has performed at the prestigious awards show. She’s already racked up 10 Grammys throughout her career, stretching back to when she took home the hardware for Best New Artist in 2009. She last took home Album of the Year, Song of the Year, and Record of the Year in 2012 for her album “21” and the smash single “Rolling in the Deep.”

    In addition to Adele, other performers announced for the night include John Legend, Metallica, and a duet between Keith Urban and Carrie Underwood. James Corden will host the ceremony, which is slated to air on CBS on Sunday, February 12.

    [via: Variety]

  • Prepare for a Show: Grammy Performers Include John Legend, Carrie Underwood, and More

    Photo Call For WGN America's 'Underground' And 'Outsiders'As always, the upcoming Grammy Awards will feature an all-star list of performers.

    The Recording Academy gave us a preview of what to expect when the show airs Feb. 12 by announcing some of its big-name acts on Wednesday. The night is shaping up to have something for everyone. So far, we can look forward to John Legend, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, and Metallica taking the stage.

    “Music’s Biggest Night” is usually big on collaborations, and this year, we’re getting one from country singers Underwood and Urban. They’ll present a united front for at least a song on a night when they’re squaring off for the Grammy for Best Country Solo Performance. Urban is also nominated in the Best Country Album category.

    Neither Metallica nor Legend is nominated this year, but the Recording Academy has honored them plenty of times in the past. Metallica is an eight-time winner, and Legend has taken home a whopping 10 statues over the years.

    We’re in for a good show when the 59th annual Grammy Awards airs on Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. ET.

  • ‘Stranger Things,’ ‘Suicide Squad’ Soundtracks Receive Grammy Nominations

    Stranger ThingsThis morning’s Grammy nominations included some of the year’s biggest and most buzzed-about television shows and movies.

    Netflix’s ’80s-era supernatural drama “Stranger Things” earned two nominations for both volumes of its original soundtrack, while movies as diverse as “Suicide Squad,” “Straight Outta Compton,” and “Amy” will battle for the compilation prize.

    Here are the nominees:

    Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media

    • “Amy” by Various Artists
    • “Miles Ahead” by Miles Davis & Various Artists
    • “Straight Outta Compton” by Various Artists
    • “Suicide Squad (Collector’s Edition)” by Various Artists
    • “Vinyl: The Essentials Season 1” by Various Artists

    Best Score/Soundtrack for Visual Media

    • “Bridge of Spies” by Thimas Newman, composer
    • “Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight” by Ennio Morricone, composer
    • “The Revenant” by Alva Noto & Ryuichi Sakamoto, composers
    • “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” by John Williams, Composer
    • “Stranger Things Volume 1” by Kyle Dixon & Michael Stein, composers
    • “Stranger Things Volume 2” by Kyle Dixon & Michael Stein, composers

    Best Song Written for Visual Media

    • “Alice Through the Looking Glass” – “Just Like Fire” (P!nk)
    • “Snowden” – “The Veil” (Peter Gabriel)
    • “Suicide Squad” – “Heathens” (Twenty One Pilots)
    • “Suicide Squad” – “Purple Lamborghini” (Skrillex & Rick Ross)
    • “Trolls” – “Can’t Stop the Feeling!” (Justin Timberlake and cast)
    • “Zootopia” – “Try Everything” (Shakira)

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