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AWARDS DATABASE
All of the winners, all of the nominees, all of the awards shows.
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Looking down: Images of Ray Charles hover in the background while Bonnie Raitt and Billy Preston perform.
(Robert Gauthier / LAT)
Sentimental flightRay Charles proves a much-loved favorite. But isn't it a bit late?
Few artists in the history of American pop are more deserving of the Grammys' top award than the late Ray Charles, so it was hard to feel too disappointed Sunday when his "Genius Loves Company" was named album of the year — even if the award was 40 years too late. In sports, it's known as a makeup call.
Because the Recording Academy did such a dismal job for years in saluting talent that didn't fit into the comfortable boundaries of mainstream pop, many of the greatest artists in the '50s, '60s and '70s were ignored. An embarrassing number of artists who have won Lifetime Achievement Awards from the academy were never honored with a high-profile Grammy during their most creative years. It's a list that stretches from Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix and the Rolling Stones to, until Sunday, Ray Charles. Makeup calls struck four times in the last seven years in the album of the year category: Bob Dylan in 1998, Carlos Santana in 2000, Steely Dan in 2001 and now Brother Ray. Only Dylan, honored for his widely heralded "Time Out of Mind" album, was a deserving choice. Though it may seem sacrilegious to suggest it after Charles' dominant showing Sunday, when he won a total of six awards, the academy needs to stop this cycle, even if it means something as drastic as adding a new Grammy category. They already have 107, so why not? Category 108 — best album by an artist we should have honored in the album of the year category more than 25 years ago but didn't. By continuing to honor the past, the Grammy organization is compounding its long-running credibility problem by not recognizing the truly deserving artists of today. Charles' posthumous collection, which featured the soul music great in duets with such Norah Jones, B.B. King and others, was endearing, but more for the celebration of Charles' legacy than the music itself. When future generations want to sample the greatness of the man whose mix of R&B and gospel helped create the rich soul genre, they most certainly won't turn first (or second or third) to "Genius Loves Company." Better choices are such classics as "The Genius of Ray Charles," which was overlooked by the Grammy voters in 1961 when the award went to a Bob Newhart comedy album, or the trailblazing "Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music," which was nominated for best album in 1963 but lost to a Vaughn Meader comedy collection. Indeed, "Genius Loves Company" was the weakest of this year's five nominees, which also included Kanye West, Alicia Keys, Usher and Green Day. It falls short particularly when compared to West's "The College Dropout," by far the most honored album of 2004. By contrast, Charles' victory in the record of the year category, for his duet with Norah Jones on "Here We Go Again," was far more deserving — a simply enchanting vocal pairing on a lovely romantic ballad. Grammy voters would have better served Charles' legacy — and their own credibility — by honoring West, Keys or Usher in the album of the year category. The young artists, in effect, are children of Charles' great musical vision. Their emergence last year as leaders in a hip-hop/R&B field so rich and diverse that it has become the dominant sound in American pop was saluted Sunday even if they didn't win the evening's top prize. Indeed, it felt much of the evening as if a torch were being passed to this new generation of stars, who are all in their 20s. Mavis Staples of the Staple Singers joined with West in a striking presentation of his uplifting, spiritual-tinged hit, "Jesus Walks." Jamie Foxx, sitting in for Charles (whom he plays in the Oscar-nominated film "Ray"), teamed with Keys on one of Charles' most celebrated numbers, "Georgia on My Mind." In an equally dramatic moment, James Brown, the godfather of soul, traded a few dance steps with Usher, who has become pop's premier song and dance man. ("The new godson!" Brown beamed at the end of the number.) Though these three young artists did pick up 10 Grammys among them in lesser categories, ranging from rap album (West's "The College Dropout) to R&B performance by a duo or group with vocals (Usher and Keys teaming on "My Boo"), their failure to win in the top category was a serious misjudgment.
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