"When
I was drinking years ago, I used to imagine things that weren't there
were frightening. Then I got sober and two robots called me and asked me
to make an album," quipped Paul Williams, one of the featured artists
in "Random Access Memories."
Photo: EPA
Formed
in the early 1990s by French DJs Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de
Homem-Christo, Daft Punk were pioneers of the electronic dance music
phenomenon that has recently swept the US mainstream pop industry.
Lorde,
17, won the Grammy for song of the year with her breakout hit "Royals,"
sharing the award for songwriters with Joel Little. They triumphed over
the writers behind Katy Perry's "Roar" and Bruno Mars' "Locked Out of
Heaven," among others.
Photo: EPA
The
music industry's glamorous gathering also saw the two surviving
Beatles, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, come together for a rare joint
performance coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the British group's
breakthrough on American television.
Photo: AFP
With
McCartney at the piano and Starr at his drums, the two played a new
song, "Queenie Eye," a catchy tune that hearkened back to the Beatles'
trademark hits. It was only the fourth time they had performed together
on stage since a 2002 concert to honor the late George Harrison. John
Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, and son Sean Lennon were in the crowd dancing
along on Sunday.
Alicia Keys Photo: EPA
The Recording Academy also anointed Seattle-based rapper-producer newcomers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis with the Grammy for best new artist.
"Before there was any
media,
before there was any buzz about us, before there was a story, there was
our fans and it spread organically through them," said Macklemore,
whose real name is Ben Haggerty, as he accepted the best new artist
award for the duo.
In keeping with the newcomer trend, Kacey Musgraves won best country album with "Same Trailer Different Park."
Kicking
off the three-and-a-half-hour show, Beyonce and rapper husband Jay Z
sang "Drunk in Love," her first public performance since her surprise
self-titled album in December, a game-changer in the music industry for
its stealth release.
Madonna emerged in a white suit and cowboy hat to conclude the singing ceremony with "Open Your Heart."
Photo: EPA
The
56th Grammy Awards, the music industry's top honors handed out by the
Recording Academy across 82 categories, may be remembered more for its
performances and unscripted moments than the awards that are bestowed.
Daft Punk, Zeppelin win early awards at Grammys
Music's
top stars hit the red carpet Sunday for the Grammys, with veteran
rapper Jay-Z leading nominations but a host of younger acts hoping for
glory on the industry's biggest night.
French
electro duo Daft Punk were among early winners, taking the prizes for
best dance/electronica album and sound engineering in a pre-show segment
before the three-hour telecast starting from 5:00 pm (0100 GMT).
Older
acts were also up for honors at music's version of the Oscars, among
them the Rolling Stones, Black Sabbath and the Beatles, whose surviving
members were due to perform.
Led
Zeppelin won best rock album for "Celebration Day," recorded at their
2007 live reunion show at London's O2 Arena, in the pre-telecast section
of the show, while the Gipsy Kings and South Africa's Ladysmith Black
Mambazo shared the world music Grammy.
Rapper
Kendrick Lamar, pop diva Taylor Swift, chart-topper Justin Timberlake
and Seattle hip hop duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis are also among those
vying for prizes at the show in Los Angeles.
The
show was set to feature some eye-popping collaborations, including
rockers Metallica with acclaimed Chinese pianist Lang Lang and Lamar
with rock group Imagine Dragons.
In
another likely spectacular moment, 34 couples were expected to marry
during Macklemore & Ryan Lewis's performance of their song "Same
Love," which uses rap to tackle the issue of same-sex marriage,
according to media reports.
Surviving
Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr were due to perform as Recording
Academy organizers belatedly bestow a Lifetime Achievement Award on the
Fab Four.
Performers
at the awards show include a who's who of music's finest, ranging from
Katy Perry and Robin Thicke to veterans Carole King, Chicago and
Madonna.
The
first couple of hip-hop, Jay-Z and Beyonce, are also expected to
perform at the show, brought forward from its usual February date to
avoid media conflicts with the Sochi Winter Olympics.
Many
of the stars turned out Saturday night for legendary music producer
Clive Davis's annual pre-Grammys party at the Beverly Hilton hotel -
where pop icon Whitney Houston died in her hotel bathroom on the eve of
the 2012 show.
Going
into Sunday's show, Jay-Z scored the most nominations with nine nods,
followed by California hip-hop star Lamar, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis,
Timberlake and Pharrell Williams with seven each, while Canadian rapper
Drake scored five. Tipped
by many for coveted Record Of The Year was Daft Punk's "Get Lucky," but
rival nominees include Kiwi teenager Lorde's "Royals," "Radioactive" by
Imagine Dragons and Hawaiian crooner Bruno Mars's "Locked Out Of
Heaven."
Thicke's
"Blurred Lines," made infamous by Miley Cyrus's twerking at last year's
MTV Video Music Awards show, is also competing for the evening's top
prize.
In
the Album of the Year category, Swift's "Red" will compete with Daft
Punk's "Random Access Memories," Macklemore & Ryan Lewis's "The
Heist," Lamar's "Good Kid, M.A.A.D City" and Sara Bareilles's "The
Blessed Unrest."
Shortlisted
for Song of the Year - for songwriters - were "Just Give Me A Reason"
sung by Pink, "Locked Out Of Heaven" sung by Mars, "Roar" sung by Perry,
"Royals" sung by Lorde and "Same Love" sung by Macklemore & Ryan
Lewis.
Macklemore
& Ryan Lewis was also nominated for Best New Artist, against Lamar,
country singer Kacey Musgraves and British singer-songwriters James
Blake and Ed Sheeran. Among
older stars, Best Rock Song contenders included "God is Dead?" by Black
Sabbath, "Doom and Gloom" by the Rolling Stones and "Cut Me Some Slack"
by McCartney with surviving members of grunge icons Nirvana. The
Grammys show, at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, will
climax with a rock supergroup featuring Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the
Stone Age, Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl and Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey
Buckingham.
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