U2's four Grammy's this week consolidates their position as the biggest rock
group in the world writes Brian Boyd.
U2 won four Grammy awards at the US Music Industry annual prize-giving event
in Los Angeles late on Wednesday night, consolidating their position as the
biggest rock group in the world.
The Donegal singer Enya also carried off one of the prestigious awards,
winning in the Best New Age Album category for her work A Day Without Rain.
All eyes though were on the Dublin quartet who, over 20 years after their
forming, remain at the top of the global music pile. U2 celebrated wins for
Best Rock Album, Best Group Rock Performance, Best Group Pop Performance and
Record Of The Year.
All the awards were in recognition of their current album All That You Can't
Leave Behind and their ongoing world tour. Lead singer Bono said: "Being
Irish, if you get eight nominations and get no awards, they wouldn't let you
back in the country. So this is a public safety issue." U2 have won Grammys
before, but last night's haul was a record amount for them. It also brought
their Grammy total to 14 - a world record for any band. Industry observers
point to the fact that no other band besides U2 has remained commercially
popular and, for the most part, critically acclaimed for such a long period
of time in the ephemeral world of rock/pop music. The band's All That You
Can't Leave Behind is one of their biggest sellers over their nine album
career and their live show routinely breaks box-office records.
Enya's success came as no surprise. The ex-Clannad singer has always enjoyed
huge sales in the US and, rather uniquely in the music world, she manages to
sell millions of records while keeping a low personal profile.
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Report from Irish Times
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