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    Ananova: U2 and Enya scoop Grammy awards

    U2 and Enya scoop Grammy awards

    U2 won four accolades at the Grammy awards ceremony in Los Angeles.

    Enya won best new age album for A Day Without Rain and Eric Clapton’s Reptile won best pop instrumental performance.

    U2 with their awards (AP)

    Coldplay were among the other British and Irish winners, taking the alternative music album award for Parachutes.

    U2 scooped the best rock album title for All That You Can’t Leave Behind, best group rock performance for Elevation, best group pop performance for Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of and record of the year for their Walk On.

    “Being Irish, if you get eight nominations and got no awards they wouldn’t let you back in the country,” U2’s lead singer Bono joked. “So this is a public safety issue.”

    Radiohead took the best recording package award with Amnesiac (Special Limited Edition) and Dido won the remixed of the year, non-classical title, with Deep Dish, Thank You (Deep Dish Vocal Remix).

    Sade won the pop vocal album award with Lovers Rock.

    However, old-time country and neosoul were the big winners at today’s, with the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack and R&B newcomer Alicia Keys each winning five awards.

    The O Brother soundtrack scored a surprise victory by beating Keys and U2 for album of the year. The album that country music radio shunned also earned producer of the year for the man who conceived it, T Bone Burnett.

    Keys, whose debut disc Songs In A Minor dazzled critics and fans with its sassy soul and classical influences, was named best new artist. Her other awards included song of the year, best R&B performance by a female and best R&B song for her No 1 smash, Fallin’, and best R&B album.

    Real Video from the Grammy’s

    U2audio.com is offering some clips from the Grammy Awards in RealVideo.

    U2 open the Grammy Awards with Walk
    On

    U2 Wins:

    Best Pop
    Duo or Group with Vocal

    Best
    Rock Duo or Group with Vocal

    Record
    of the Year

    Congrats to U2 again!! Let’s go for a 3 year straight.

    U2 Wins Record of the Year Grammy

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Irish rock band U2 on Wednesday won the record-of-the-year Grammy Award for the second consecutive year, this time for “Walk On,” a ballad dedicated to Burmese dissident Aung San Suu Kyi.

    U2, which led the nominees at this year’s Grammys with nods in eight categories, ended up with four awards at the ceremony. The band’s career haul now stands at 14 Grammys, including the 2001 record of the year Grammy for “Beautiful Day.”

    U2’s members — singer Bono, guitarist the Edge, bassist Adam Clayton and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. — beat out India.Arie’s “Video,” Alicia Keys’ “Fallin’,” Outkast’s “Ms. Jackson” and San Francisco rock band Train’s “Drops of Jupiter.”

    The record of the year Grammy, which also goes to the song’s producers, engineers and mixers, is for a commercially released single or track from a current year’s album.

    © Reuters, 2002. All rights reserved.

    Mock the Devil U2, Christian?

    As the names of those lost on Sept. 11 scrolled up a towering
    screen, the singer kept reciting a verse from Psalm 51, in which King
    David pleaded for God’s mercy.
    “Oh Lord, open my lips,” he said, “that my mouth shall show forth thy
    praise.” Then the music rose in a crescendo, soaring into U2’s vision
    of a new heaven and earth, of a city “where there’s no sorrow and no
    shame, where the streets have no name.”
    This didn’t happen in a safe Christian sanctuary. This happened at
    halftime of Super Bowl XXXVI, in front of 131 million or so viewers
    around the world. But anyone who felt blindsided by this display of
    prayer hasn’t listened carefully to this band’s music, said the Rev.
    Steve Stockman, author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2 and
    Presbyterian chaplain of Queen’s University in Belfast, Northern
    Ireland.
    “I think they have been clear ? for nearly25 years now ? about the
    role Christian faith plays in their music. They’re not hiding
    anything,” he said. “At the same time, they have always left big
    spiritual questions hanging out there ? unanswered. That is an
    interesting way to talk about art and that’s an interesting way to
    live out your faith, especially when you’re trying to do it in front
    of millions of people.”
    Stockman has never met the band. Still, there is no shortage of
    quotable material since Bono, in particular, has never been able to
    keep his mouth shut when it comes to sin, grace, temptation,
    damnation, salvation and revelation. Two others ? drummer Larry
    Mullen Jr., and guitarist Dave “The Edge” Evans ? have long
    identified themselves as Christians. Bassist Adam Clayton remains a
    spiritual free agent.
    The key, said Stockman, is that U2 emerged in Dublin, Ireland, in a
    culturally Catholic land in which it was impossible to be sucked into
    an evangelical subculture of “Christian radio” and “Christian music.”
    The tiny number of Protestants prevented the creation of
    a “Christian” marketplace. Thus, U2 plunged into real rock ‘n’ roll
    because that was the only game in town. The band didn’t collide
    with “Contemporary Christian Music” until its first American tours.
    While secular scribes rarely ridicule the band’s faith,
    the “Christian press and Christians in general have been the
    doubters,” keen to “denounce the band’s Christian members as lost,”
    noted Stockman. Many have heaped “condemnation on their lifestyles,
    which include smoking cigars, drinking Jack Daniels and using
    language that is not common currency at Southern Baptist conventions.”
    It also helps to know that Bono has always had a love-hate
    relationship with rock stardom. In the early days, other Christians
    said the band should break up or flee into “Christian rock,” arguing
    that fame always corrupts. The members of U2 decided otherwise, and,
    early on, Bono began speaking out about his faith and his doubts, his
    joys, and his failures.
    “I don’t believe in preaching at people,” he told me, during a 1982
    interview. A constant theme in his music, he added, is the soul-
    spinning confusion that results when spirituality, sensuality, ego
    and sin form a potion that is both intoxicating and toxic. “The truth
    is that we are all sinners. I always include myself in the ‘we.’ …
    I’m not telling everybody that I have the answers. I’m trying to get
    across the difficulty that I have being what I am.”
    Bono took this inner conflict on stage during the media-drenched Zoo
    TV shows of the mid-1990s. The key moment was when the singer morphed
    into a devilish alter ego named Mister MacPhisto, who wore a
    glittering gold Las Vegas lounge suit and cheesy red horns.
    Night after night, Bono would pull some girl out of the audience to
    join in his “Elvis-devil dance.” Stockman’s book includes a
    fascinating account of what happened one night in Wales, when one of
    these dance partners had an agenda of her own.
    “Are you still a believer?”, she asked. “If so, what are you doing
    dressed up as the devil?”
    Their voices hidden by the music, Bono gave her a serious
    answer. “Have you read The Screwtape Letters, a book by C.S. Lewis
    that a lot of intense Christians are plugged into? They are letters
    from the devil. That’s where I got the whole philosophy of mock-the-
    devil-and-he-will-flee-from-you,” said Bono.
    Yes, the girl said, she had read The Screwtape Letters. She
    understood that Lewis had turned sin inside out in order to make a
    case for faith.
    “Then you know what I am doing,” said Bono.
    But no matter what happens on stage, plenty of believers remain
    convinced that Bono’s devil suit was highly appropriate. While the
    singer and his band mates have made some mistakes, Stockman said he
    is convinced that the controversies that continually swirl around U2
    are actually evidence of deeper divisions among believers.
    U2 is attacking, in word and deed, the modern church’s retreat from
    art and popular culture.
    The church “has put a spiritual hierarchy on jobs,” said
    Stockman. “Ministers and missionaries are on top, then perhaps
    doctors and nurses come next and so on to the bottom, where artists
    appear. Artists of whatever kind have to compromise everything to
    entertain. Art is fluffy froth that is no good in the Kingdom of God.
    What nonsense.”

    By Terry Mattingly, associate professor of mass media and religion at
    Palm Beach Atlantic College.

    Tough Competition At Grammys

    Wednesday will be the biggest night of the year for the mainstream
    music world, the 44th Annual Grammy Awards, which will be presented at
    the Staples Center here and broadcast on CBS. The consensus is that
    the nominations for most of the main awards are likely to prevent a
    repeat of embarrassing episodes in which winners made the Grammys look
    out of touch.

    No doubt there will be gaffes and embarrassments this year, in
    addition to the usual panache and revealing outfits, but here are some
    other things to watch for: A manager joked recently that he wanted to
    represent U2 so that he could “take them to the next level.” The joke
    is that after a hugely successful album and tour in which U2 restaked
    its claim as one of the most vital rock acts in the world, the band
    could not possibly get any bigger. But at the Grammy ceremony, it
    seems likely that it will. The band is nominated for eight awards
    (more than any other act), including three of the top ones: best
    album, best record (given to a single) and best song (presented to
    songwriters). At the least, U2 seems likely to walk away with the top
    honor, the album prize, for “All That You Can’t Leave Behind.” This is
    good news for Grammy viewers, because Bono is not one to let the
    opportunity for a speech go by without making it memorable.

    What may prevent U2 from a near sweep of awards akin to Santana’s in
    2000 is Alicia Keys, the singer and pianist, whose first hit,
    “Fallin’,” is also a favorite for the record and the song prizes. Ms.
    Keys was nominated for six awards, and in each of those categories she
    is competing with the talented neo-soul newcomer India.Arie, who was
    nominated for seven awards. Her CD, “Acoustic Soul,” was nominated for
    best album, while Ms. Keys’s album, “Songs in A Minor,” was not.

    This may show a slight quirk in a relatively recent Grammy
    innovation, a screening committee of about 25 members who oversee the
    final nominations in the top four categories. The committee was
    created in 1995 by the organizers of the Grammys, the National Academy
    of Recording Arts and Sciences, after Tony Bennett walked away with
    the best album award for his “MTV Unplugged.”

    True to its mission, the committee has selected a high-quality list
    of recordings to compete for best album: Bob Dylan’s “Love and Theft”
    (U2’s closest competition here), Outkast’s “Stankonia,” the “O
    Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack, “Acoustic Soul” and the U2 CD.
    But it seems that the committee considered “Acoustic Soul” and “Songs
    in A Minor” too similar to compete for top album and picked a favorite.

    Mariah Carey’s woes didn’t begin this year. At the Grammys in 1996
    she was nominated for six awards, tied with Alanis Morissette for the
    most nominations. It was hard for her to conceal her disappointment
    when she won nothing. This year, part of the suspense will be seeing
    whether India.Arie and Train (up for four awards) are shut out by
    competition with better brand recognition.

    - The New York Times, Neil Strauss

    U2achtung.com: RUMORED Tourdates

    19/07 – Amsterdam (HOL) – Arena
    20/07 – Amsterdam (HOL) – Arena
    23/07 – G?teborg (SUE) – Ullevi Stadion
    ??/?? – Oslo (NOR) – Vallehovin Stadion
    ??/?? – Hannovre (ALL) – Niedersachsenstadion
    01/08 – Bruxelles (BEL) – Stade du Roi Baudoin
    ??/?? – Switzerland
    ??/?? – Gelsenkirchen (ALL) – Schale 04 Arena
    ??/?? – Munich (ALL) – Olympiastadion
    ??/?? – Prague (TCH)
    12/08 – Vienna (AUT) – Ernst Happel Stadion
    15/08 – Zagreb (CRO) – Maksimir Stadion
    18/08 – Sarajevo (BOS) – Stadion Kosevo
    20/08 – Nice (FRA) – Nikaia
    ??/?? – Italiy
    24/08 – Lisbonne (POR) – Stadio Alvalade
    ??/?? – Madrid (ESP) – Santiago Bernabeu
    28/08 – Paris (FRA) – Stade de France
    ??/?? – London (UK) – Hyde Park
    ??/?? – Belfast (UK)
    ??/?? – Dublin (IRL) – Phoenix Park

    These are rumored dates! NO OFFICIAL dates have been released! The above list courtesy of U2achtung.com

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