Cape Breton Post

Grammy week events begin with salute to Willie Nelson

- KRISTIN M. HALL

LOS ANGELES — Kacey Musgraves, Dave Matthews and Lukas Nelson saluted the outlaw king of country music Willie Nelson with tributes and performanc­es at a famed Los Angeles studio.

The Recording Academy’s Producers and Engineers Wing honoured Nelson on Wednesday night ahead of Sunday’s Grammy Awards.

The 85-year-old Texas singersong­writer was a man of few words when he was presented with a plaque, jokingly asking if he was graduating. He thanked all the producers and engineers, adding that “I’m glad they liked me ‘cause they could have really screwed me up.”

Nelson is nominated for two Grammys: best traditiona­l pop vocal album for “My Way,” a covers album of Frank Sinatra; and best American roots performanc­e for “Last Man Standing.”

The event is regularly held in the small auditorium at The Village, the studio where Fleetwood Mac recorded their seminal record “Tusk,” Bob Dylan recorded “Forever Young” and the hit soundtrack­s for “The Bodyguard” and “Moulin Rouge” were mixed. Artists and songwriter­s including Diane Warren, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Ziggy Marley, Lisa Loeb, Feist and more attended the event.

Musgraves, who is nominated for three Grammys including album of the year, had much more to say about the “Red-Headed Stranger.”

She said her fellow Texan has an ability to bring together people, no matter their difference­s: “Underdogs, outliers, Republican­s, rappers, presidents. Everyone loves Willie,” Musgraves said.

Nelson’s songs are so iconic, “they’re never going to die, and let’s get real: He’s probably not either,” she said

Matthews played the Nelson-penned song “Funny How Time Slips Away,” and a song Matthews wrote that he got Nelson to record, called “Gravedigge­r.”

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