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    U2 Appreciates Grammy Recognition

    (1/7/02, 6 p.m. ET) — With “Beautiful Day” a Grammy favorite last year, three different songs up for Grammy honors this year, and two nominations for the album All That You Can’t Leave Behind, the members of U2 said they’re pleased they were recognized for the quality of their songs. The band’s eight nominations top all nominees for the 44th Annual Grammy Awards, which will be held in Los Angeles on February 27.

    “It was great when ‘Beautiful Day’ did so well last year, and we’re thrilled that the album received eight nominations,” said U2 in a statement. “Especially the three other songs highlighted, because we’ve always felt that this album was not about any one song. Thank you.”

    The band’s “Walk On” was nominated for record of the year and best rock song. “Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of” is up for song of the year and best pop performance by duo or group with vocal. “Elevation” is nominated for best rock song and best rock performance by a duo or group with vocal. The band’s album, All That You Can’t Leave Behind, is up for album of the year and best rock album.

    U2 start work on new album

    U2 have begun work on the follow-up to All That You Can’t Leave Behind.

    New tracks being worked on include one called Electrical Storm, according to
    reports.

    Frontman Bono says the band have “hit form” following their Elevation World
    Tour of 2001.

    Canadian website www.canoe.com/jam reports Bono told Irish music magazine
    Hot Press: “The band is so tight, coming straight off the tour. We’ve hit
    form.”

    U2 are also thought to be working on the soundtrack for the upcoming Martin
    Scorsese film Gangs Of New York, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Cameron Diaz
    and Daniel Day-Lewis.

    It tells the story of Irish and Italian immigrants in New York at the turn
    of the century.

    Irish Band U2, Soul Divas Lead Grammy Nominations

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Irish rock band U2, which enjoyed a triumphant 2001
    playing to sold-out crowds in support of its acclaimed new album, led the
    list of nominees on Friday for the Grammy Awards, the music industry’s top
    prizes.

    U2 picked up eight nominations, including the key album, song and record of
    the year categories, organizers announced at a news conference in Beverly
    Hills.

    The group’s four members were “thrilled and really excited, and not at all
    blase,” U2 manager Paul McGuinness told Reuters from the band’s Dublin base
    after he tracked them down across Europe to break the good news. “There’s a
    lot of very distinguished records on this list.”

    In a field largely devoid of the controversy that dogged the 2001 Grammys
    when badboy rapper Eminem grabbed all the attention, soulful newcomers India
    Arie, 26, and Alicia Keys, 20, received seven and six nods each,
    respectively.

    Classical conductor and composer Pierre Boulez, who already has 23 Grammys,
    also picked up six nominations. Among the acts with five nominations were
    bluegrass musician Alison Krauss, R&B singer Brian McKnight and R&B duo
    Outkast.

    Five artists received four nominations each: producer T-Bone Burnett,
    Canadian pop singer Nelly Furtado, rock band Train, Aerosmith singer Steven
    Tyler and country-rocker Lucinda Williams.

    Tireless troubadour Bob Dylan was among the many acts to score three
    nominations, including album of the year for his acclaimed “Love and
    Theft,” the 43rd release of his career.

    Arie and Keys will compete against each other in six races, including best
    new artist, a closely watched category that also includes pop singers David
    Gray and Furtado and rock band Linkin Park. Grammy winners will be announced
    during ceremonies on Feb. 27 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

    SONGWRITING BACK IN STYLE

    The awards, which honor artists in 101 categories, ranging from pop, rock
    and soul to classical, spoken word and polka, appeared to favor acclaimed
    singer/songwriters over disposable acts whose songs are written for them by
    producers. All the contenders for the song of the year category, which
    honors the songwriter, performed their own tunes.

    “If we can get back to the great singer/songwriters, music will just
    improve overnight,” said Stevie Nicks, a Grammy nominee in the female rock
    vocal category.

    U2’s mournful “Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of,” a tribute to
    Australian rocker Michael Hutchence who killed himself in 1997, will compete
    for song of the year against Arie’s “Video,” Keys’ “Fallin’,” Furtado’s
    “I’m Like A Bird” and Train’s “Drops of Jupiter.”

    U2 — singer Bono, guitarist the Edge, bass player Adam Clayton and drummer
    Larry Mullen Jr. — already has 10 Grammys, including album of the year for
    its 1987 opus “The Joshua Tree,” which has sold about 17 million copies
    worldwide.

    Its contender for the 2002 race, “All That You Can’t Leave Behind,” has
    sold just over 10 million copies worldwide since its October 2000 release,
    McGuinness said, and is on track to surpass “The Joshua Tree.”

    Other album of the year nominees this year, besides U2 and Dylan, were
    Arie’s “Acoustic Soul,” Outkast’s “Stankonia” and the soundtrack to the
    movie “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”

    U2 won the record and song of the year races last year for ”Beautiful
    Day,” a track released before the Grammys’ Sept. 30 cutoff date.

    Its record of the year candidate this year is “Walk On,” which is
    dedicated to Burmese political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi. Also competing
    were Arie’s “Video,” Keys’ “Fallin’,” OutKast’s “Ms. Jackson” and
    Train’s “Drops of Jupiter.”

    U2 WILL PERFORM AT GRAMMYS

    U2 will perform at the Grammys, McGuinness confirmed, and is considering
    touring Europe in the summer. The group played 115 shows across North
    America and Europe in 2001.

    U2 was also nominated for rock album, and the pop (”Stuck in a Moment You
    Can’t Get Out Of”) and rock (”Elevation”) vocal performance categories.
    “Elevation” and “Walk On” are competing against each other for rock
    song.

    Arie and Keys will also compete against each other for female R&B vocal
    performance, R&B song and R&B album. The only category where they are not
    head to head is album of the year, where Keys’ “Songs In A Minor” was a
    surprise omission. The acclaimed work was the best selling debut album of
    2001 in the United States, selling 4.1 million units since June.

    Arie brushed off talk of a battle of the divas.

    “I’m just gonna pray that I will get whatever I deserve,” she said.
    “Anything’s possible (on the night). Nothing’s ever going to stop me from
    making music, so it’s not that serious. As long as I’m always inspired,
    that’s the most important thing.”

    The Dylan album was important but a “a little inaccessible” to some Grammy
    voters, said Michael Greene, president of the National Academy of Recording
    Arts & Sciences, which may have accounted for its relative paucity of nods.

    Dylan’s groundbreaking albums of the 1960s and 1970s were famously
    overlooked by Grammy voters, fueling complaints that the awards are
    hopelessly out of touch. Overdue recognition finally came in 1998 when his
    previous release “Time Out of Mind” won three Grammys, including album of
    the year.

    ? Reuters, 2002.

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