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Grammy Awards of 2000

The 43rd Annual Grammy Awards were presented at Los Angeles' Staples Center on February 21, 2001.

Awards

  • Record: “Beautiful Day”, U2
  • Album: "Two Against Nature", Steely Dan (Giant Records)
  • Song: “Beautiful Day” U2, songwriters
  • New Artist: Shelby Lynne
  • Female Pop Vocal: “I Try”, Macy Gray
  • Male Pop Vocal: “She Walks This Earth (Soberana Rosa)” Sting
  • Pop Duo or Group with Vocals: “Cousin Dupree” Steely Dan
  • Pop Collaboration with Vocals: “Is You Is, or Is You Ain't (My Baby)” B. B. King and Dr. John
  • Pop Instrumental: “Caravan”, The Brian Setzer Orchestra
  • Dance Recording: “Who Let the Dogs Out”, Baha Men
  • Pop Instrumental Album: "Symphony No. 1", Joe Jackson (Sony Classical)
  • Pop Vocal Album: "Two Against Nature", Steely Dan (Giant Records)
  • Traditional Pop Vocal Album: "Both Sides Now", Joni Mitchell (Reprise Records)
  • Female Rock Vocal: “There Goes the Neighborhood”, Sheryl Crow
  • Male Rock Vocal: “Again”, Lenny Kravitz
  • Rock Duo or Group with Vocals: “Beautiful Day”, U2
  • Hard Rock: “Guerrilla Radio”, Rage Against the Machine
  • Metal: “Elite”, Deftones
  • Rock Instrumental: “The Call of the Ktulu”, Metallica with Michael Kamen conducting the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra
  • Rock Song: “With Arms Wide Open”, Scott Stapp and Mark Tremonti, songwriters (Creed)
  • Rock Album: "There Is Nothing Left to Lose", Foo Fighters (RC/Roswell Records) , Radiohead (Radiohead)
  • Female R&B Vocal: “He Wasn't Man Enough”, Toni Braxton
  • Male R&B Vocal: “Untitled (How Does it Feel)”, D'Angelo
  • R&B Duo or Group with Vocals: “Say My Name”, Destiny's Child
  • R&B Song: “Say My Name”, LaShawn Daniels, Fred Jerkins III, Rodney Jerkins, Beyoncé Knowles, LeToya Luckett, LaTavia Roberson, and Kelendria Rowland, songwriters (Destiny's Child)
  • R&B Album: "Voodoo", D'Angelo (Cheeba Sound/Virgin Records America)
  • Traditional R&B Vocal Performance: "Ear-Resistible", The Temptations
  • Rap Solo: "The Real Slim Shady”, Eminem
  • Rap Duo or Group: “Forgot about Dre”, Dr. Dre featuring Eminem
  • Rap Album: "The Marshall Mathers LP", Eminem
  • Female Country Vocal: “Breathe”, Faith Hill
  • Male Country Vocal: “Solitary Man”, Johnny Cash
  • Country Duo or Group with Vocals: “Cherokee Maiden”, Asleep at the Wheel
  • Country Collaboration with Vocals: “Let's Make Love”, Faith Hill and Tim McGraw
  • Country Instrumental: “Leaving Cottondale”, Alison Brown with Béla Fleck
  • Country Song: “I Hope You Dance”, Mark D. Sanders and Tia Sillers, songwriters (Lee Ann Womack)
  • Country Album: "Breathe", Faith Hill (Warner Brothers Records)
  • Bluegrass Album: "The Grass Is Blue", Dolly Parton (Sugar Hill Records)
  • New Age Album: "Thinking of You", Kitaro (Domo Records)
  • Contemporary Jazz: "Outbound", Béla Fleck and the Flecktones
  • Jazz Vocal: "In the Moment - Live in Concert", Dianne Reeves
  • Jazz Instrumental, Solo: “(Go) Get It”, Pat Metheny
  • Jazz Instrumental, Individual or Group: "Contemporary Jazz", Branford Marsalis (Columbia Records)
  • Large Jazz Ensemble: "52nd Street Themes", Joe Lovano (Blue Note Records)
  • Latin Jazz: "Live at the Village Vanguard", Chucho Valdés
  • Rock Gospel Album: "Double Take", Petra (artist) (Word Records)
  • Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album: ''"If I Left the Zoo"'\', Jars of Clay (Essential Records)
  • Southern Gospel, Country Gospel, or Bluegrass Gospel Album: "Soldier of the Cross", Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder (Skaggs Family Records)
  • Traditional Soul Gospel Album: "You Can Make It", Shirley Caesar (Myrrh Records)
  • Contemporary Soul Gospel Album: "Thankful", Mary Mary (Columbi/C2/li>
  • Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus: "Live - God Is Working", Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir; Carol Cymbala, choir director (M2.0 Music)
  • Latin Pop Album: "Shakira - MTV Unplugged", Shakira
  • Latin Rock/Alternative Album: "Uno", La Ley
  • Tropical Latin Album: "Alma Caribeña", Gloria Estefan
  • Salsa Album: "Masterpiece/Obra Maestra", Tito Puente and Eddie Palmieri
  • Mexican Merengue Album: "Olga Viva, Viva Olga", Olga Tañón
  • Mexican-American Album: "Por Una Mujer Bonita", Pepe Aguilar
  • Tejano Album: "¿Qué Es Música Tejana?", The Legends
  • Traditional Blues Album: "Riding with the King", B. B. King and Eric Clapton (Reprise Records)
  • Contemporary Blues Album: "Shoutin' in Key", Taj Mahal (artist) and the Phantom Blues Band (Hannibal Records)
  • Traditional Folk Album: "Public Domain - Songs from the Wild Land", Dave Alvin (HighTone)
  • Contemporary Folk Album: "Red Dirt Girl", Emmylou Harris (Nonesuch Records)
  • Native American Music Album: "Gathering of Nations Pow Wow", Various Artists (Soar (record company))
  • Reggae Album: "Art and Life", Beenie Man (Virgin Records America)
  • World Music Album: "João Voz e Violão", João Gilberto (Verve Records)
  • Polka Album: "Touched by a Polka", Jimmy Sturr (Rounder Records)
  • Musical Album for Children: "Woody's Roundup Featuring Riders in the Sky", Riders in the Sky (Walt Disney Records)
  • Spoken Word Album for Children: "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" (J. K. Rowling), Jim Dale (Listening Library)
  • Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album: "The Measure of a Man", Sidney Poitier (Harper Audio)
  • Spoken Comedy Album: "Braindroppings", George Carlin (HighBridge Audio)
  • Musical Show Album: Elton John and Tim Rice's "Aida" (Buena Vista Records)
  • Best Compilation Soundtrack Album: "Almost Famous", Various Artists (DreamWorks Records)
  • Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture or for Television: "American Beauty", Thomas Newman, composer
  • Song Written for a Motion Picture or for Television: “When She Loved Me” (from Toy Story 2), Randy Newman, songwriter
  • Instrumental Composition: “Theme from Angela's Ashes”, John Williams, composer
  • Instrumental Arrangement: “Spain for Sextet and Orchestra” Chick Corea, arranger
  • Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocals: “Both Sides Now”, Vince Mendoza, arranger
  • Best Recording Package: "Music", Kevin Reagan, art director (Maveric/Warner Brothers Records)
  • Best Boxed Recording Package: "Miles Davis and John Coltrane: The Complete Columbia Recordings 1955–1961", Frank Harkins and Arnold Levine, art directors (Columbi/Legacy Recordings) Miles DavisJohn Coltrane, Bob Blumenthal, album notes writer
  • Historical Album: "Louis Armstrong: The Complete Hot Five and Hot Seven Recordings" (Columbi/Legacy Recordings) , Phil Burnett, Roger Nichols, Dave Russell and Elliot Scheiner, engineers (Giant Records)
  • Producer, Non-Classical: Dr. Dre
  • Remixer, Non-Classical: Hex Hector
  • Best-Engineered Album, Classical: "Dvorák: Requiem, Op. 89; Sym. No. 9, Op. 95 'From the New World'", John Eargle, engineer
  • Classical Producer: Steven Epstein
  • Classical Album: "Shostakovich: The String Quartets", Emerson String Quartet (Deutsche Grammophon)
  • Orchestral Performance: "Mahler: Sym. No. 10", Sir Simon Rattle (Berliner Philharmonics) (EMI Classics)
  • Opera Recording: "Busoni: Doktor Faust", Kent Nagano, conductor (Erato)
  • Choral Performance: "Penderecki: Credo", Helmuth Rilling, conductor (Oregon Bach Festival Cho.; Oregon Bach Festival Orch.)
  • Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra: "Maw: Violin Concerto", Joshua Bell, violin; Sir Roger Norrington, conductor
  • Instrumental Soloist without Orchestra: "Dreams of a World (Works of Lauro, Ruiz-Pipo, Duarte, etc.)", Sharon Isbin, guitar
  • Chamber Music: "Shostakovich: The String Quartets", Emerson String Quartet
  • Small Ensemble Performance (with or without Conductor): “Shadow Dances (Stravinsky Miniatures - Tango; Suite No. 1; Octet, etc.)”, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
  • Classical Vocal: "The Vivaldi Album (Dell'aura al sussurrar; Alma oppressa, etc.)", Cecilia Bartoli, mezzo soprano
  • Classical Contemporary Composition: "Crumb: Star-Child", George Crumb, composer
  • Classical Crossover Album: "Appalachian Journey (1B; Misty Moonlight Waltz; Indecision, etc.)", Yo-Yo Ma, cello; Edgar Meyer, double bass; Mark O'Connor, violin (Alison Krauss, fiddle and vocals; James Taylor, vocals)
  • Music Video, Short Form: “Learn to Fly” (Foo Fighters), Jesse Peretz, video director
  • Music Video, Long Form: "Gimme Some Truth - The Making of John Lennon's Imagine Album" (John Lennon), Andrew Solt, video director




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