It started with
Celine Dion and Elvis Presley singing together at the “American Idol”
special “Idol Gives Back.” Then tonight, Alicia Keys sang a duet with
Frank Sinatra. “Yeah, Frank,” she coaxed, while the two-dimensional
Sinatra did his part. We get what they were going for, but the whole
singing-with-ghosts thing feels pretty forced to us.
The
Grammys provide some random moments for all ages.
FROM the long march of dead and living
forebears, to the Aretha-led
gospel invocation, to Tom Hanks shouting about the Beatles as if they
were running for president -- and on up to the surprise winner for best
album, Herbie Hancock's beatification of the Joni Mitchell songbook --
this year's
Grammy
Awards
ceremony Sunday night at Staples Center was all about casting around
for belief. Uncertainty permeated this night of nights for major-label
pop, as its makers sought a way forward in what can only be described
as a fog.
In the end, two beacons stood out, demanding a choice: Should music
lovers get behind the earnest showbiz convictions of its young alpha
queen, Alicia Keys, who now completely owns the pop glamour role once
held by Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey? Or dare they invest in the
tattered dramatic realism of
Amy
Winehouse, whose poignant midrehab performance followed in the
unpredictable tradition of rock 'n' roll?
Kanye
West
offered a third path, highlighting his genre-defiant collaboration with
the French electronic duo Daft Punk in a live performance that was
typically stylish and surreal. But he didn't own this night, even
though he won four Grammys and gave one great speech, managing to shush
the get-offstage music to pay proper tribute to his recently deceased
mother. West's confidence is almost singular among today's major
artists; he knows where he's going, no matter what happens around him.
Others are less certain about whether to passionately pursue showbiz or
to invest in something riskier and more raw.
The show's producers put their trust in both women. Keys opened the
evening, sitting at the piano and dueting awkwardly with a hologram of
Frank Sinatra (one would have hoped Celine Dion's weird dance with the
shadow Elvis during last season's "Idol Gives Back" gala would have
killed off this idea) and later delivering her massive hit "No One"
with the bellowing fervor her many fans so admire.
Her real gift, however, is for craft and polish, for selling feeling in
a package so graceful and well-measured that it utterly convinces. She
represents the best outcome for pop as defined by "American Idol,"
country music and theatrical reworkings such as the soundtrack winner,
Cirque du Soleil's Beatles tribute "Love." With her biracial mix of
hip-hop and rock influences, she's a model for the mainstream in a
globally minded America.
Winehouse is obviously an iffier proposition. Beamed in by satellite
from a London soundstage decorated speak-easy style, she pushed her way
through two songs from "Back to Black," the album that won her five
statues (her creative partner Mark Ronson also won for producer of the
year). Off-key at times, her drawled syllables sometimes veering
uncomfortably close to blackface, she nonetheless was the most exciting
performer of the evening. Her desperation to do well was palpably
human, and her delivery was a gamble -- a harder push, and a more
electric one, than you usually see during a staged event like the
Grammys.
Cheering like a punk rocker when she won record of the year, Winehouse
stood for all the rough-and-ready strivers who made popular music a
rebel's sport -- and who still make it interesting in the margins,
where the Grammys mostly only go off-camera.
She had companions this evening -- in fellow best-new-artist nominee
Feist, whose handcrafted chamber pop also provided warmth amid the
evening's glitz; in Grammy pioneer Keely Smith, who showed her wacky
humor despite being saddled with collaborators Kid Rock and Dave Koz;
and in Tina Turner, whose rasp is for the ages, and who, at 68, dared
to wear skin-tight silver lamé.
The academy, however, is mostly on Keys' side. From
Carrie
Underwood classily mimicking Nancy Sinatra to
Beyoncé
slicking up Tina's style while onstage with her, the night's superstars
threw in their lot with pop's razzle-dazzle masquerade. Even those old
punks the Foo Fighters continued their upmarket trick of playing with a
mini-orchestra.
But the classic soul that Winehouse reinterprets points toward another
way -- an investment in the immediacy and daring that turned pop into a
movement during the era she mines.
No matter what the numbers are, music always burns brightest when
telling stories and capturing feelings we urgently need to share.
For all her over-discussed troubles, Winehouse is a force for that
connectedness, and she deserved to be celebrated Sunday night. "Camden
town is burning, burning down, burning down!" she shouted upon winning,
referring to a real fire that ravaged her native London over the
weekend. But she might have been talking about the fire she's
delivered, one that we can only hope will spread.
ann.powers@latimes.com