-1 ONE FREE HOUR OF POOL w/coupon $4.00 value 1010 Willamette DR Tuesday, March 5th N..i j Wli y\ wmmsmmm McDonald Theatre I (LIKWIT KREW) 3pp6&nny< COOL NUTZ-S N A F U - DJ B-MELJLO Wsafeway masnxx | 541-431-0434 House of Records 541042-7975 RANDIER THAN THE KAMA SUTRA I Check OUt www.dailyemerald.com I DDE online edition ‘0 Brother,’ Alicia Keys, 112 top Grammy Awards By Brian McCollum Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) We were supposed to remem ber it as a bad year for the music business. But the Grammy Awards just couldn’t help themselves Wednesday night, honoring qual ity artists from front to back and leaving a glowing mark in the history books next to the entry for 2001. The biggest heart-warmer came courtesy of “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” — the bluegrass soundtrack that finally, officially, shook off its underdog status, grabbing the vaunted Album of the Year trophy. That startling victory was one of five wins for the blessedly traditional country album, which was last year’s biggest surprise commercial hit. But the bulk of attention wound up where expected: on U2 and Alicia Keys, who matched the classy showing of “O Brother.” For U2 — eight-time nominee, four-time winner — that meant opening the show with a rousing rendition of “Walk On” and clos ing with a rousing victory speech when that tune captured Record of the Year. It was a second con secutive win in that category for the Irish band, which last year won for “Beautiful Day.” No artist could top the occa sionally wide-eyed Alicia Keys, the neo-soul newcomer who started the night with six nomina tions and left with five awards, including three of the biggies: Best New Artist, Best R&B Album and Song of the Year. With her handful of golden gramophones, Keys tied Lauryn Hill’s single-night mark for most Grammy wins by a female artist. Hill, who set the stage for Keys’ blend of organic soul and cosmo politan decorum, won five awards in 1999. It got to the point where Keys seemed to run out of acceptance speeches. “You don’t know how much this humbles me,” she said. This year’s Grammys arrived with plenty of baggage: Music sales are down, labels are hurting and few new stars emerged in 2001. Grammy chief Michael Greene stepped to the stage Wednesday night to make a seem ingly desperate plea against illicit music downloads online. But for all the negative vibes lurking around the music indus try, Wednesday night was a tri umph for those who champion the good stuff popular music has to offer. Gone for good, it seems, are the Peter Utsey Emerald Lionel Hahn Knight-Ridder Direct Nelly Furtado (left) and Alicia Keys, who won the gramophone for Best New Artist, arrive the 44th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Galif., on Wednesday night. days when the Grammys gave us more reason to jeer than cheer. Wednesday highlighted what was roundly considered some of last year’s best work — music that came with the bonus of wide sales appeal. The biggest beef could be di rected at the shutout of India.Arie, a Keys peer whose eclectic take on neo-soul is con sidered superior by many critics. Arie was nominated seven times; she left empty-handed. It was the longest Grammy show in history, with an extra 30 minutes tacked onto the standard three hours to accommodate record executives’ demands for artist airtime. But host Jon Stew art — consistently spry and funny — helped keep a brisk pace, and despite live performances that seemed to spill into each other, the show rarely lagged. “O Brother” produced the night’s finest live performance, a medley of songs eloquently deliv ered by a coterie of artists that in cluded 75-year-old Ralph Stanley, who earlier took his first-ever Grammy win. ©2002, Detroit Free Press. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.