Grammys Complete List Of Winners

Winners at Sunday’s 50th Annual Grammy Awards:

Album of the Year: “River: The Joni Letters,” Herbie Hancock.

Record of the Year: “Rehab,” Amy Winehouse.

Song of the Year: “Rehab,” Amy Winehouse (Amy Winehouse).

New Artist: Amy Winehouse.

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical: Mark Ronson.

Pop Vocal Album: “Back to Black,” Amy Winehouse.

Female Pop Vocal Performance: “Rehab,” Amy Winehouse.

Male Pop Vocal Performance: “What Goes Around…Comes Around,”
Justin Timberlake.

Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals: “Makes Me
Wonder,” Maroon 5.

Pop Collaboration With Vocals: “Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved
On),” Robert Plant & Alison Krauss.

Pop Instrumental Album: “The Mix-Up,” Beastie Boys.

Pop Instrumental Performance: “One Week Last Summer,” Joni
Mitchell.

Traditional Pop Vocal Album: “Call Me Irresponsible,” Michael
Buble.

Alternative Music Album: “Icky Thump,” The White Stripes.

Rock Album: “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace,” Foo Fighters.

Rock Song: “Radio Nowhere,” Bruce Springsteen, songwriter
(Bruce Springsteen).

Solo Rock Vocal Performance: “Radio Nowhere,” Bruce
Springsteen.

Rock Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals: “Icky Thump,”
The White Stripes.

Hard Rock Performance: “The Pretender,” Foo Fighters.
Metal Performance: “Final Six,” Slayer.

Rock Instrumental Performance: “Once Upon a Time in The West,”
Bruce Springsteen.

Rap Album: “Graduation,” Kanye West.

Rap Solo Performance: “Stronger,” Kanye West.

Rap Performance by a Duo or Group: “Southside,” Common,
featuring Kanye West.

Rap/Sung Collaboration: “Umbrella,” Rihanna Featuring Jay-Z.

Rap Song: “Good Life,” Aldrin Davis, Mike Dean, Faheem Najm &
Kanye West, songwriters (J. Ingram & Q. Jones, songwriters) (Kanye
West Featuring T-Pain).

Country Album: “These Days,” Vince Gill.

Country Song: “Before He Cheats,” Josh Kear & Chris Tompkins,
songwriters (Carrie Underwood).

Female Country Vocal Performance: “Before He Cheats,” Carrie
Underwood.

Male Country Vocal Performance: “Stupid Boy,” Keith Urban.

Country Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals: “How Long,”
Eagles.

Country Collaboration With Vocals: “Lost Highway,” Willie
Nelson & Ray Price.

Country Instrumental Performance: “Throttleneck,” Brad
Paisley.

R&B Album: “Funk This,” Chaka Khan.

R&B Song: “No One,” Dirty Harry, Kerry Brothers & Alicia Keys,
songwriters (Alicia Keys).

Contemporary R&B Album: “Because of You,” Ne-Yo.

Female R&B Vocal Performance: Alicia Keys.

Male R&B Vocal Performance: “Future Baby Mama,” Prince.
R&B Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals:

“Disrespectful,” Chaka Khan, featuring Mary J. Blige.

Traditional R&B Vocal Performance: “In My Songs,” Gerald
Levert.

Urban/Alternative Performance: “Daydreamin’,” Lupe Fiasco,
featuring Jill Scott.

Dance Recording: “LoveStoned/I Think She Knows,” Justin
Timberlake, Nate (Danja) Hills, Timbaland & Justin Timberlake,
producers; Jimmy Douglass & Timbaland, mixers.

Electronic/Dance Album: “We Are the Night,” The Chemical
Brothers.

Bluegrass Album: “The Bluegrass Diaries,” Jim Lauderdale.

Traditional Blues Album: “Last of the Great Mississippi Delta
Bluesmen: Live In Dallas,” Henry James Townsend, Joe Willie
“Pinetop” Perkins, Robert Lockwood Jr. & David “Honeyboy”
Edwards.

Contemporary Blues Album: “The Road to Escondido,” JJ Cale &
Eric Clapton.

New Age Album: “Crestone,” Paul Winter Consort.

Contemporary Jazz Album: “River: The Joni Letters,” Herbie
Hancock.

Jazz Vocal Album: “Avant Gershwin,” Patti Austin.

Jazz Instrumental Solo: “Anagram,” Michael Brecker, soloist.

Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group: “Pilgrimage,”
Michael Brecker.

Large Jazz Ensemble Album: “A Tale of God’s Will (A Requiem for
Katrina),” Terence Blanchard.

Latin Jazz Album: “Funk Tango,” Paquito D’Rivera Quintet.

Latin Pop Album: “El Tren De Los Momentos,” Alejandro Sanz.

Latin Rock or Alternative Album: “No Hay Espacio,”
Black:Guayaba.

Latin Urban Album: “Residente O Visitante,” Calle 13.

Tropical Latin Album: “La Llave De Mi Corazon,” Juan Luis
Guerra.

Mexican/Mexican-American Album: “100 (Percent) Mexicano,” Pepe
Aguilar.

Tejano Album: “Before the Next Teardrop Falls,” Little Joe &
La Familia.

Norteno Album: “Detalles Y Emociones,” Los Tigres Del Norte.

Banda Album: “Te Va A Gustar,” El Chapo.

Traditional Folk Album: “Dirt Farmer,” Levon Helm.

Contemporary Folk/Americana Album: “Washington Square
Serenade,” Steve Earle.

Native American Music Album: “Totemic Flute Chants,” Johnny
Whitehorse.

Hawaiian Music Album: “Treasures of Hawaiian Slack Key
Guitar,” Various Artists, Daniel Ho, George Kahumoku Jr., Paul
Konwiser & Wayne Wong, producers.

Zydeco or Cajun Music Album: “Live! Worldwide,” Terrance
Simien & The Zydeco Experience.

Reggae: “Mind Control,” Stephen Marley.

Traditional World Music Album: “African Spirit,” Soweto Gospel
Choir.

Contemporary World Music Album: “Djin Djin,” Angelique Kidjo.

Polka Album: “Come Share the Wine,” Jimmy Sturr and His
Orchestra.

Gospel Performance: “Blessed & Highly Favored,” The Clark
Sisters; “Never Gonna Break My Faith,” Aretha Franklin & Mary J.
Blige (Featuring The Harlem Boys Choir). (Tie.)

Gospel Song: “Blessed & Highly Favored,” Karen Clark-Sheard,
songwriter (The Clark Sisters).

Rock or Rap Gospel Album: “Before the Daylight’s Shot,” Ashley
Cleveland.

Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album: “A Deeper Level,” Israel and
New Breed.

Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album: “Salt of the
Earth,” Ricky Skaggs & The Whites.

Traditional Gospel Album: “Live — One Last Time,” The Clark
Sisters.

Contemporary R&B Gospel Album: “Free to Worship,” Fred
Hammond.

Compilation Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture, Television or
Other Visual Media: Love (The Beatles) George Martin & Giles
Martin, producers (Apple Records/Capitol Records).

Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture, Television or Other
Visual Media: “Ratatouille,” Michael Giacchino, composer.

Song Written for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual
Media: “Love You I Do (From Dreamgirls),” Siedah Garrett & Henry
Krieger, songwriters (Jennifer Hudson).

Musical Show Album: “Spring Awakening,” Duncan Sheik,
producer; Duncan Sheik, composer; Steven Sater, lyricist (Original
Broadway Cast With Jonathan Groff, Lea Michele & Others).

Musical Album for Children: “A Green and Red Christmas,” The
Muppets.

Spoken Word: “The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the
American Dream,” Barack Obama.

Spoken Word Album for Children: “Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows,” Jim Dale.

Comedy Album: “The Distant Future,” Flight of the Conchords.
Instrumental Composition: “Cerulean Skies,” Maria Schneider,
composer (Maria Schneider Orchestra).

Instrumental Arrangement: “In a Silent Way,” Vince Mendoza,
arranger (Joe Zawinul).

Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s): “I’m Gonna
Live Till I Die,” John Clayton, arranger (Queen Latifah).

Engineered Album, Non-Classical: “Beauty & Crime,” Tchad
Blake, Cameron Craig, Emery Dobyns & Jimmy Hogarth, engineers
(Suzanne Vega).

Remixed Recording, Non-Classical: “Bring the Noise (Benny
Benassi Sfaction Remix),” Benny Benassi, remixer (Public Enemy).

Surround Sound: “Love,” Paul Hicks, surround mix engineer; Tim
Young, surround mastering engineer; George Martin & Giles Martin,
surround producers (The Beatles).

Classical Album: “Tower: Made in America,” Leonard Slatkin,
conductor; Tim Handley, producer; Tim Handley, engineer/mixer
(Nashville Symphony).

Orchestral Performance: “Tower: Made in America,” Leonard
Slatkin, conductor (Nashville Symphony).

Producer of the Year, Classical: Judith Sherman.

Engineered Album, Classical: “Grechaninov: Passion Week,” John
Newton, engineer (Charles Bruffy, Phoenix Bach Choir & Kansas City
Chorale).

Opera Recording: “Humperdinck: Hansel & Gretel,” Sir Charles
Mackerras, conductor; Rebecca Evans, Jane Henschel & Jennifer
Larmore; Brian Couzens, producer (Sarah Coppen, Diana Montague &
Sarah Tynan; New London Children’s Choir; Philharmonia Orchestra).

Choral Performance: “Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem,” Simon
Rattle, conductor; Simon Halsey, chorus master (Thomas Quasthoff &
Dorothea Roschmann; Rundfunkchor Berlin; Berliner Philharmoniker).

Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (With Orchestra):
“Barber/Korngold/Walton: Violin Concertos,” Bramwell Tovey,
conductor; James Ehnes (Vancouver Symphony Orchestra).

Instrumental Soloist Performance (Without Orchestra):
“Beethoven Sonatas, Vol. 3,” Garrick Ohlsson.

Chamber Music Performance: “Strange Imaginary Animals,” Eighth
Blackbird.

Small Ensemble Performance: “Stravinsky: Apollo, Concerto in D;
Prokofiev: 20 Visions Fugitives,” Yuri Bashmet, conductor; Moscow
Soloists.

Classical Vocal Performance: “Lorraine Hunt Lieberson Sings
Peter Lieberson: Neruda Songs,” Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (James
Levine; Boston Symphony Orchestra).

Classical Contemporary Composition: “Made in America,” Joan
Tower (Leonard Slatkin, conductor; Nashville Symphony Orchestra).
Classical Crossover Album: “A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John
Coltrane,” Turtle Island Quartet.

Short Form Music Video: “God’s Gonna Cut You Down,” Johnny
Cash.

Long Form Music Video: “The Confessions Tour,” Madonna.
Recording Package: “Cassadaga,” Zachary Nipper, art director
(Bright Eyes).

Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package: “What It Is!: Funky
Soul and Rare Grooves (1967-1977),” Masaki Koike, art director.
Album Notes: “John Work, III: Recording Black Culture,” Bruce
Nemerov, album notes writer.

Historical Album: “The Live Wire — Woody Guthrie in Performance
1949,” Nora Guthrie & Jorge Arevalo Mateus, compilation producers;
Jamie Howarth, Steve Rosenthal, Warren Russell-Smith & Dr. Kevin
Short, mastering engineers (Woody Guthrie).

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