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Entertainment

Grammys ready to award year's best music

The Grammy Awards, dubbed "music's biggest night" by organizers, are set for a massive celebration of the past year's best in North American music on Sunday.

Jay-Z, Justin Timberlake, Kendrick Lamar, Drake among top nominees

Grammys to award music's best

11 years ago
Duration 2:56
Jay-Z, Lorde, Macklemore and Drake among this year's top nominees

The Grammy Awards, dubbed "music's biggest night" by organizers, are set for a massive celebration of the past year's best in North American music on Sunday.

Heading into the 56th annual celebration, rap heavyweight Jay-Z leads the field of contenders with nominations in nine categories. That said, a host of relative newcomers who made a major splash last year including American rappers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, New Zealand teen singer Lorde, rising U.S. hip-hop star Kendrick Lamar and emerging country artist Kacey Musgraves aren't too far behind.

Others in the running for multiple trophies include singers Bruno Mars, Justin Timberlake, Taylor Swift and singer-producer Pharrell Williams.

Canadians vying for Grammy glory on Sunday include Toronto rapper Drake, rocker Neil Young, crooner Michael Bubl and singer Robin Thicke (a dual citizen as son of Canadian actor Alan Thicke).

Some Canadians to watch on Grammy weekend:

  • Toronto hip-hop artist Drake has five nominations: best rap album for Nothing Was the Same, best rap performance for Started from the Bottom and two nods for best rap song his own Started from the Bottom and as a guest appearance on ASAP Rocky's F--kin' Problems. He's also included as a featured performer on Kendrick Lamar's album of the year nominated Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City.
  • Dual-citizen crooner Robin Thicke has three nominations: record of the year, best pop duo and group performance as well as best pop vocal album, all for Blurred Lines.
  • Canadian rock legend Neil Young and his band Crazy Horse have one nomination: best rock album for Psychedelic Pill.
  • B.C.-bred singer Michael Bubl has one nomination: best traditional pop album for To Be Loved.
  • Toronto composer Mychael Danna has one nomination: best score soundtrack for visual media for Life of Pi.
  • Toronto singer The Weeknd has one nomination: best rap song collaboration as a featured artist on Wiz Khalifa's Remember You.
  • Halifax-raised songwriter and producer Henry (Cirkut) Walter has one nomination: song of the year as co-writer of Katy Perry's Roar.
  • Ontario singer-songwriter Deric Ruttan has one nomination: best country song for co-writing Blake Shelton's Mine Would Be You.
  • Vancouver-born, Montreal singer-songwriter Jennifer Gasoi has one nomination: best children's album for Throw a Penny in the Wishing Well.

Other Canadians in the mix include:

  • Toronto's James LaBrie, frontman of best metal performance contender Dream Theater.
  • Darcy James Argue, Vancouver-born bandleader of Darcy James Argue's Secret Society, a best large jazz ensemble album nominee for Brooklyn Babylon.
  • Cologne-based Canadian performer and composer Chilly Gonzales, named on Daft Punk's album of the year nomination for Random Access Memories and also a contributor to Drake's best rap album contender Nothing Was the Same.

Nominees in central categories include:

  • Album of the year: The Blessed Unrest, Sara Bareilles; Random Access Memories, Daft Punk; Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, Kendrick Lamar; The Heist, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Red, Taylor Swift.
  • Record of the year (for performance): Get Lucky, Daft Punk & Pharrell Williams; Radioactive, Imagine Dragons; Royals, Lorde; Locked Out of Heaven, Bruno Mars; Blurred Lines, Robin Thickefeaturing T.I. & Pharrell Williams.
  • Song of the year (for songwriting): Just Give Me a Reason, Jeff Bhasker, Pink & Nate Ruess; Locked Out of Heaven, Philip Lawrence, Ari Levine & Bruno Mars; Roar, Lukasz Gottwald, Max Martin, Bonnie McKee, Katy Perry & Henry Walter; Royals, Joel Little & Ella Yelich OConnor; Same Love, Ben Haggerty, Mary Lambert & Ryan Lewis.
  • Best New Artist: James Blake; Kendrick Lamar; Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Kacey Musgraves; Ed Sheeran.

Over the past week, the U.S. Recording Academy, which administers the Grammys, has held a series of events honouring nominees and special awardwinners. Celebrations included a producers and engineers ceremony saluting Canadian rocker Neil Young on Tuesday and a Friday gala celebrating the 2014 MusiCares Person of the Year: influential singer-songwriter Carole King.

Memorable match-ups

In recent years, the Grammys broadcast has become known for unconventional or unlikely musical pairings, which have the potential to become memorable match-ups (for better or worse).

In keeping withtradition, this year's tag-team performers include metal icons Metallica performing with classical pianist Lang Lang, rapper Kendrick Lamar with alt-rockers Imagine Dragons, R&B singer Robin Thicke with power balladeers Chicago and soul legend Stevie Wonder with dance hitmakers Daft Punk.

Jay-Z and Beyonc, Katy Perry, Lorde, Pink and surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will also take the stage during the televised gala.

The Grammys officially get underway Sunday at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles at 4 p.m. ET with a pre-telecast ceremony hosted by singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper where awards in approximately 70 categories will be presented. This portion will be streamed live at Grammy.com/live.

The festivities continue Sunday evening at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with the televised Grammy gala hosted by performer LL Cool J beginning at 8 p.m. ET. The broadcast will air on CBS and Citytv.