Monday, February 9, 2015

Watch 57th Annual Grammy Awards Live Streaming Online


Watch 57th Annual Grammy Awards 2015 Live Streaming

http://www.officialtvstream.com.es/webcast/awards/

The 57th Annual Grammy Awards will be held on February 8, 2015, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. The show will be broadcast live by CBS at 5:00 p.m. PST (UTC-8). Rapper LL Cool J will host the show for the fourth consecutive time.[1] In all, 83 Grammy Awards will be presented, one more than in 2014.

Live Streaming LINK 1

57th Annual Grammy Awards
Date     February 8, 2015
5:00–8:30 p.m. PST
Location     Staples Center, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Host     LL Cool J

http://www.officialtvstream.com.es/webcast/awards/
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http://bannermedianetworks.com.es/scripts/click.php?a_aid=48602&a_bid=08aa203f

And the nominations for the 57th Grammy Awards are…
Album of the Year
Beck, Morning Phase
Beyonce, Beyonce
Ed Sheeran, x
Sam Smith, In the Lonely Hour
Pharrell Williams, Girl
Best New Artist
Bastille
Iggy Azalea
Brandy Clark
Haim
Sam Smith
Record of the Year
“Fancy,” Iggy Azalea ft. Charli XCX
“Chandelier,” Sia
“Stay With Me (Darkchild Version),” Sam Smith
“Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift
“All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor
Song of the Year
“Chandelier,” Sia
“All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor
“Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift
“Stay With Me (Darkchild Version),” Sam Smith
“Take Me to Church,” Hozier
Best Rap Album
The New Classic, Iggy Azalea
Because the Internet, Childish Gambino
Nobody’s Smiling, Common
The Marshall Mathers LP2, Eminem
Oxymoron, ScHoolboy Q
Blacc Hollywood, Wiz Khalifa
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
“Fancy,” Iggy Azalea ft. Charli XCX
“A Sky Full of Stars,” Coldplay
“Say Something,” A Great Big World ft. Christina Aguilera
“Bang Bang,” Ariana Grande, Jessie J & Nicki Minaj
“Dark Horse,” Katy Perry ft. Juicy J
Best Rap Performance
“3005,” Childish Gambino
“0 to 100/The Catch Up,” Drake
“Rap God,” Eminem
“i,” Kendrick Lamar
“All I Need Is You,” Lecrae
Best Alternative Music Album
This Is All Yours, alt-J
Reflektor, Arcade Fire
Melophobia, Cage the Elephant
St. Vincent, St. Vincent
Lazaretto, Jack White
Best Rock Album
Ryan Adams, Ryan Adams
Morning Phase, Beck
Turn Blue, The Black Keys
Hypnotic Eye, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
Songs of Innocence, U2
Best Rock Song
“Ain’t It Fun,” Paramore
“Blue Moon,” Beck
“Fever,” The Black Keys
“Gimme Something Good,” Ryan Adams
“Lazaretto,” Jack White
Best Country Album
Riser, Dierks Bentley
The Outsiders, Eric Church
The Way I’m Livin’, Lee Ann Womack
12 Stories, Brandy Clark
Platinum, Miranda Lambert
Best Rap/Sung Collaboration
“Blak Majik,” Common ft. Jhené Aiko
“The Monster,” Eminem ft. Rihanna
“Tuesday,” I Love Makonnen ft. Drake
“Studio,” ScHoolboy Q ft. BJ The Chicago Kid
“Bound 2,” Kanye West & Charlie Wilson
Best Rap Song
“Anaconda,” Nicki Minaj
“Bound 2,” Kanye West & Charlie Wilson
“i,” Kendrick Lamar
“We Dem Boyz,” Wiz Khalifa
“0 to 100/The Catch Up,” Drake
Best Country Song
“American Kids,” Kenny Chesney
“Automatic,” Miranda Lambert
“Give Me Back My Hometown,” Eric Church
“I’m Not Gonna Miss You,” Glen Campbell
“Meanwhile Back at Mama’s,” Tim McGraw ft. Faith Hill
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
“Gentle On My Mind,” The Band Perry
“Somethin’ Bad,” Miranda Lambert with Carrie Underwood
“Day Drinking,” Little Big Town
“Meanwhile Back At Mama’s,” Tim McGraw ft. Faith Hill
“Raise ‘Em Up,” Keith Urban ft. Eric Church
Best Country Solo Performance
“Give Me Me Back My Hometown,” Eric Church
“Invisible,” Hunter Hayes
“Automatic,” Miranda Lambert
“Something In the Water,” Carrie Underwood
“Cop Car,” Keith Urban
Best Pop Vocal Album
Ghost Stories, Coldplay
Bangerz, Miley Cyrus
My Everything, Ariana Grande
Prism, Katy Perry
x, Ed Sheeran
In the Lonely Hour, Sam Smith
Best Urban Contemporary Album
Sail Out, Jhene Aiko
Beyonce, Beyonce
X, Chris Brown
Mali Is, Mali Music
G I R L, Pharrell Williams
Beyonce Passes Dolly Parton to Become Most Grammy-Nominated Woman
Best Dance/Electronic Album
Syro, Aphex Twin
While (1, Deadmaus
Nabuma Rubberband, Little Dragon
Do It Again, Röyksopp & Robyn
Damage Control, Mat Zo
Best Dance Recording
“Never Say Never,” Basement Jaxx
“Rather Be,” Clean Bandit ft. Jess Glynne
“F for You,” Disclosure ft. Mary J. Blige
“I Got U,” Duke Dumont ft. Jax Jones
“Faded,” Zhu
Best Latin Pop Album
Tangos, Ruben Blades
Elypse, Camila
Raiz, Lila Downs, Niña Pastori & Soledad Pastorutti
Loco de Amor, Juanes
Gracias Por Estar Aqui, Marco Antonio Solis
Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media
American Hustle
Guardians of the Galaxy
Frozen
Get On Up: The James Brown Story
The Wolf of Wall Street
Best Music Video
“We Exist,” Arcade Fire
“Turn Down for What,” DJ Snake & Lil Jon
“Chandelier,” Sia
“Happy,” Pharrell Williams
“The Golden Age,” Woodkid ft. Max Richter
Best Music Film
Beyoncé & Jay Z: On The Run Tour, Beyoncé & Jay Z
Ghost Stories, Coldplay
20 Feet From Stardom, Darlene Love, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer & Judith Hill
Metallica: Through The Never, Metallica
The Truth About Love Tour: Live From Melbourne, Pink
Best Pop Solo Performance
“All of Me,” John Legend
“Chandelier,” Sia
“Stay With Me,” Sam Smith
“Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift
“Happy,” Pharrell Williams
Best Reggae Album
Ziggy Marley, Fly Rasta
Lee “Scratch” Perry, Back on the Controls
Sean Paul, Full Frequency
Shaggy, Out of Many, One Music
Sly & Robbie & Spicy Chocolate, The Reggae Power
Soja, Amid the Noise and the Haste
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album
Cheek to Cheek, Lady Gaga & Tony Bennett
Sending You a Little Christmas, Johnny Mathis
Nostalgia, Annie Lennox
Partners, Barbra Streisand
Night Songs, Barry Manilow
Best Americana Album
The River & The Thread, Rosanne Cash
Terms of My Surrener, John Hiatt
Bluesamericana, Keb’ Mo’
A Dotted Line, Nickel Creek
Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, Sturgill Simpson
Best Spoken Word Album
Actors Anonymous, James Franco
A Call to Action, Jimmy Carter
Carsick: John Waters Hitchhikes Across America, John Waters
A Fighting Chance, Elizabeth Warren
Diary of a Mad Diva, Joan Rivers
We Will Survive: True Stories of Encouragement, Inspiration and the Power of Song, Gloria Gaynor
Joan Rivers & 5 More Posthumous Grammy Award Nominees
Best Gospel Album
Help, Erica Campbell
Amazing, Ricky Dillard & New G
Withholding Nothing: Live, William McDowell
Forever Yours, Smokie Norful
Vintage Worship, Anita Wilson
Best Rock Performance
“Gimme Something Good,” Ryan Adams
“Do I Wanna Know?”, Arctic Monkeys
“Blue Moon,” Beck
“Fever,” The Black Keys
“Lazaretto,” Jack White
Best Metal Performance
“Neon Knights,” Anthrax
“High Road,” Mastodon
“Heartbreaker,” Motörhead
“The Negative One,” Slipknot
“The Last In Line,” Tenacious D
Best R&B Performance
“Drunk In Love,” Beyoncé ft. Jay Z
“New Flame,” Chris Brown ft. Usher & Rick Ross
“It’s Your World,” Jennifer Hudson ft. R. Kelly
“Like This,” Ledisi
“Good Kisser,” Usher
Best R&B Song
“Drunk In Love,” Beyonce ft. Jay Z
“Good Kisser,” Usher
“New Flame,” Chris Brown ft. Usher & Rick Ross
“Options (Wolfjames Version),” Luke James ft. Rick Ross
“The Worst,” Jhené Aiko
Best R&B Album
Islander, Bernhoft
Lift Your Spirit, Aloe Blacc
Love, Marriage & Divorce, Toni Braxton & Babyface
Black Radio 2, Robert Glasper Experiment
Give The People What They Want, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
 The Grammy telecast this evening will be all about those “Grammy Moments” — musical mash-ups featuring odd collections of artists that you won’t see anywhere else.
The show’s executive producer, Ken Ehrlich, says there are so many of these this year, he really can’t pinpoint which one people will be talking about on Monday morning.
“This year, that might be the hardest question,” Ehrlich told ABC News. “I mean, this show runs the gamut … you’ve got AC/DC, Madonna, classic artists like that, and then it’s Ariana Grande and Ed Sheeran … and these combinations this year, I think, are remarkable, all the way from Gwen Stefani and Adam Levine to Rihanna, Kanye West and Paul McCartney.”
Not only that, but Ehrlich says a real thrill for him this year is that so many artists who’ll be performing have never before graced the Grammy stage.
“At least half the show or more are people who have not been on the Grammys before,” he said. “I mean, we’ve got our standard-bearers. John Legend, we love having back. Madonna’s been on a number of times. Kanye’s been with us a certain number of times. But I mean, I’ve got AC/DC on the show! They’re not a new, young act, but they’ve never been on a Grammy show. So the idea of having these first-timers is really exciting, and it energizes all of us.”
Here are just some of the stars who’ve been announced as performing:
Solo: Madonna, AC/DC, Ariana Grande, Katy Perry, Usher, Pharrell Williams, Sia
Together: Lady Gaga & Tony Bennett; Rihanna, Paul McCartney & Kanye West; John Legend, Common and, reportedly, Beyonce; Sam Smith and Mary J. Blige; Coldplay’s Chris Martin and alt-rocker Beck; legendary crooner Tom Jones and Jessie J; Adam Levine and Gwen Stefani; Hozier and Annie Lennox; and Ed Sheeran, John Mayer, The Roots’ Questlove, jazz icon Herbie Hancock and legendary British rock band ELO, led by Jeff Lynne.
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It’s an impressive list, but Ehrlich admitted there’s one big act that got away from him this year.
“We had some serious talks with U2 and they were ready to come,” he said. “Whether it would have been a mash-up or whether it would have just been a solo performance by the band, we were talking. But then that kind of went by the wayside when Bono had his accident.”
The U2 frontman hurt himself pretty badly while bike-riding in New York City last November, and has said he may never play guitar again, but Ehrlich hears he may be on the mend.
“I’m hearing really good reports about him being much better, but unfortunately not in time for us,” he explained.
As for the acts he has booked, Ehrlich said he’s very excited about Hozier and Annie Lennox, who will duet on Hozier’s Grammy-nominated hit “Take Me to Church” and Annie’s rendition of the 1956 rock song “I Put a Spell on You.”
“I think it’s gonna be a showstopper,” he promised.
Ehrlich also teased that “Chandelier” singer Sia’s performance will be one to watch, since the Grammy-nominated Australian singer/songwriter won’t pose for publicity photos, doesn’t appear in her own videos and won’t show her face when she performs.
“It presented some challenges in terms of how we’re gonna present her, but I think when people see it they’re gonna be knocked out,” he said.
But despite all the star power on stage, Ehrlich says the Grammys are still about the little golden gramophones that some lucky artists will be taking home at the end of the night.
“I think one of the things about this show is that I think people really do care about who wins Grammys,” he said. “And I certainly know the artists care. So, you know, it makes it a more interesting show. There’s a story to it, in addition to these great performances.”