Jay-Z,
Pharrell Williams and Macklemore and Lewis are among the stars who will be
vying for glory when the prestigious Grammy Awards are handed out later.
The
Los Angeles ceremony is the biggest night in the US music calendar.
Rap
giant Jay-Z leads the field with nine nominations, while pop hitmaker Williams
and hip-hop duo Macklemore and Lewis are among the acts with seven.
British
nominees include Ed Sheeran, James Blake and Sir Paul McCartney, who will
perform at the event.
The
ceremony is known for its heavyweight on-stage collaborations and this year’s
highlights will include Daft Punk, Nile Rodgers and Pharrell Williams being
joined by Stevie Wonder to perform their hit Get Lucky.
Queens
of the Stone Age will join forces with Nine Inch Nails, Dave Grohl and Lindsey
Buckingham are to close the show, while Jay-Z is expected to duet with his wife
Beyonce.
Jay-Z
has the most nominations, up for awards including best rap song and best rap
album. But he was left out of the three main categories – song, record and
album of the year.
Rapper
Macklemore and producer Ryan Lewis, who found fame after self-releasing their
album The Heist, are up for awards including album of the year, best new artist
and song of the year for Same Love.
Pharrell
Williams is listed twice for record of the year and twice for album of the year
thanks to his work with Daft Punk, Robin Thicke and Kendrick Lamar.
LA
rapper Lamar also has seven nominations including album of the year for Good
Kid, M.A.A.D City, plus best rap album, best rap performance and best new
artist.
Justin
Timberlake has seven nominations including best pop solo performance and best
R&B song – but he was shut out of the main three categories.
Other
leading contenders include 17-year-old New Zealand singer Lorde, who is up for
record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance for her hit
Royals.
There
are five nominations each for Canadian hip-hop star Drake and mastering
engineer Bob Ludwig, who is rewarded for his work with Daft Punk and the
Rolling Stones.
The
Rolling Stones will go up against Sir Paul McCartney in the best rock song
category.
The
Stones’ Doom And Gloom, from their 50th anniversary album GRRR!, is up against
Cut Me Some Slack, a collaboration between Sir Paul and the surviving members
of Nirvana.
The
other nominees in that category are veteran metal band Black Sabbath, stadium
rockers Muse and US singer-guitarist Gary Clark Jr, the only non-British
nominee on that shortlist.
Black
Sabbath have two more nods – for best rock album and metal performance.
Meanwhile,
two of the five nominees for best new artist are Brits – Mercury Prize winner
James Blake and singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran.
Rock
legend David Bowie’s comeback has earned nominations for best rock performance
and best rock album. In both categories, fellow veterans Led Zeppelin are also
nominated thanks to a live album recorded at their reunion concert in 2007.
Other
British contenders include Calvin Harris, who is up for best dance/electronica
album for 18 Months and best dance recording for Sweet Nothing with Florence
and the Machine’s Florence Welch.
UK
acts Duke Dumont and Disclosure are also named in the dance categories, while
Adele’s James Bond theme Skyfall is in the running for one of the soundtrack
awards.
No comments:
Post a Comment