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Sunday, January 28, 2018

Grammys 2018: Full List Of Winners!

Wayne Sermon, from left, Daniel Platzman, Dan Reynolds, Ben McKee of Imagine Dragons arrives at the 60th annual Grammy Awards at Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018, in New York.AP

  • Most stars wore black and a Time's Up pin in support of the movement at the Golden Globes earlier this month.
Here's the full list of winners of the 60th Grammy Awards

Best Pop Solo Performance: Ed Sheeran, Shape of You

Best Pop Vocal Album: Ed Sheeran, Divide

Best New Artist: Alessia Cara

Best Pop Duo/Group Performance: Portugal. The Man, Feel It StillBest Traditional Pop Vocal Album: Various Artists; Dae Bennett, producer, Tony Bennett Celebrates 90

Best Dance Recording: LCD Soundsystem, Tonite

Best Dance/Electronic Album: Kraftwerk, 3-D The Catalogue

Best Music Video:HUMBLE, Kendrick Lamar

Best Music Film:The Defiant Ones

Best Rap/Sung Performance: Kendrick Lamar featuring Rihanna, LOYALTY

Best Contemporary Instrumental Album: Jeff Lorber Fusion, Prototype

Best Rock Performance: Leonard Cohen, You Want It Darker

Best Metal Performance: Mastodon, Sultan's Curse

Best Rock Song: Foo Fighters, Run

Best Rock Album: The War on Drugs, A Deeper Understanding

Best Alternative Music Album: The National, Sleep Well Beast

Best R&B Performance: Bruno Mars, That's What I Like

Best Traditional R&B Performance: Childish Gambino, Redbone

Best Urban Contemporary Album: The Weeknd, Starboy

Best R&B Album: Bruno Mars, 24K Magic

Best Rap Performance: Kendrick Lamar, HUMBLE

Best Rap Song:HUMBLE, Duckworth, Asheton Hogan and M. Williams II, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar)

Best Country Solo Performance:Either Way, Chris Stapleton

Best Country Duo/Group Performance:Better Man, Little Big Town

Best Country Song:Broken Halos, Mike Henderson and Chris Stapleton (Chris Stapleton)

Best New Age Album:Dancing on Water, Peter Kater

Best Improvised Jazz Solo:Miles Beyond, John McLaughlin, soloist

Best Jazz Vocal Album:Dreams and Daggers, Cecile McLorin Salvant

Best Jazz Instrumental Album:Rebirth Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album: Bringin' It

Best Latin Jazz Album:Jazz Tango

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album:Chain Breaker, Zach Williams

Best Roots Gospel Album:Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope,Reba McEntire

Best Latin Pop Album:El Dorado, Shakira

Best Tropical Latin Album:Salsa Big Band

Best American Roots Performance:Killer Diller Blues, Alabama Shake

Best American Roots Song:If We Were Vampires, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Best Americana Album:The Nashville Sound, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Best Bluegrass Album:Laws of Gravity and All the Rage

Best Traditional Blues Album:Blue & Lonesome, The Rolling Stones

Best Contemporary Blues Album:TajMo - Taj Mahal and Keb' Mo'

Best Folk Album:Mental Illness

Best Regional Roots Music Album:Kalenda - Lost Bayou

Ramblers Best Reggae Album:Stony Hill, Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley

Best World Music Album:Shaka Zulu Revisited: 30th Anniversary Celebration, Ladysmith Black Mambazo

Best Children's Album:Feel What U Feel, Lisa Loeb

Best Spoken Word Album (Includes Poetry, Audio Books and Storytelling):The Princess Diarist, Carrie Fisher

Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media:La La Land

Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media:La La Land

Best Song Written for Visual Media:How Far I'll Go

Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals:Putin

Best Album Notes:Live at the Whisky A Go Go: The Complete Recordings - Lynell George

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical:Greg Kurstin

Best Remixed Recording:You Move (Latroit Remix)

Best Surround Sound Album:Early Americans

Best Engineered Album, Classical:Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Barber: Adagio

Producer of the Year, Classical: David Frost

Best Orchestral Performance:Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Barber: Adagio

Best Opera Recording:Berg: Wozzeck

Best Choral Performance:Bryars: The Fifth Century - Donald Nally, conductor (PRISM Quartet and The Crossing)

Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance:Death & the Maiden - Patricia Kopatchinskaja and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra

Best Classical Instrumental Solo:Transcendental, Daniil Trifonov

Best Classical Solo Vocal Album:Crazy Girl Crazy, Barbara Hannigan

Best Classical Compendium:Higdon: All Things Majestic, Viola Concerto & Oboe Concerto

Best Contemporary Classical Composition:Viola Concerto

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Dozens of Grammy Award performers and attendees wore or held white roses Sunday to support of the Time's Up movement, in an awards season where every awards show has confronted sexual misconduct in show business.

"My message on this is for everybody to treat each other like we want to be treated," said Reba McEntire, winner for best roots gospel album. "It's the golden rule."

Singer-songwriter Ledisi, who had three nominations and who performed at the Women's March in Las Vegas last weekend, had this thought: "It's important for us to call out this madness."

Most stars wore black and a Time's Up pin in support of the movement at the Golden Globes earlier this month. Fewer wore roses at the Grammys, but there was still a sober and serious air in the air.

"I was just saying to someone that it's so commonplace that most of the time women don't even know they've been harassed," said Andra Day, nominated for two R&B Grammys.

"So I think talking about it and changing the narrative about how we should be treated, particularly in this business but across all industries, is important. It's exciting. We're on a precipice right now."

The sexual misconduct scandals that have rocked politics, media and Hollywood haven't so far upended the music industry. Inside the auditorium, the acceptance speeches largely avoided the issue as the show reached its midpoint.

Record mogul Russell Simmons is perhaps the biggest industry name accused of sexual misconduct. Former Epic label head L.A. Reid has also faced accusations and Kesha, the pop singer, has been at war with her former mentor and producer Dr. Luke, who she claims raped and drugged her.

Songwriter Diane Warren predicted that a reckoning will come to the music industry. "It's going to," she said. "One hundred percent. It's the worst."

Ever a rocker, Warren skipped the rose on the red carpet but wore two white gloves - one with the word "girl" and one with "power.

"I didn't want to wear the rose. I'm a rebel," she said.

The Time's Up movement supports women with legal and financial help who raise sexual misconduct complaints. While female musicians from every background and genre - from country to rock and rap - spoke in favor of it, many men made a point of wearing the pin.

Dan Reynolds, lead singer of rock-rappers Imagine Dragons, said his three daughters are aspiring artists and he wore a Time's Up pin in their honor.

"I want a different industry for them than there is right now," he said, adding that he saw his wife suffer neglect and abuse in the music industry.

"It's time to talk about that and confront it and to change that landscape. That's all I can hope as a dad - for my daughters, it's a different landscape.

The white rose was chosen in part because it could be done quickly but also because the color has been long used as part of the women's suffragist movement

The men included Justin Paul, who with Benj Pasek, won a Grammy for his cast album of "Dear Evan Hansen." He wore a pin in support of "all of the brave women, and men as well, who have spoken up."

Allen Hughes, the director of "The Defiant Ones," actually came to the Grammys wearing two small roses on his lapel.

"I'm a feminist," he explained.

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