The complete list of winners
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General Field
Record of the Year: “Don’t Know Why,” Norah Jones (Jones, Arif Mardin and Jay Newland, producers; Arif Mardin and Jay Newland, engineers/mixers).
Album of the Year: “Come Away With Me,” Norah Jones (Jones, Arif Mardin, Jay Newland and Craig Street, producers; Husky Huskolds, Arif Mardin and Jay Newland, engineers/mixers; Ted Jensen, mastering engineer).
Song of the Year: “Don’t Know Why,” Jesse Harris (Norah Jones, artist).
Best New Artist: Norah Jones.
Pop Field
Female Pop Vocal
Performance: “Don’t Know Why,” Norah Jones.
Male Pop Vocal Performance: “Your Body Is a Wonderland,” John Mayer.
Pop Duo or Group With Vocal: “Hey Baby,” No Doubt.
Pop Collaboration With
Vocals: “The Game of Love,” Santana and Michelle Branch.
Pop Instrumental
Performance: “Auld Lang Syne,” B.B. King.
Pop Instrumental Album: “Just Chillin’,” Norman Brown.
Pop Vocal Album: “Come Away With Me,” Norah Jones.
Dance Field
Best Dance Recording: “Days Go By,” Dirty Vegas (Ben Harris, Paul Harris and Steve Smith, producers).
Traditional Pop Field
Traditional Pop Vocal Album: “Playin’ With My Friends: Bennett Sings the Blues,” Tony Bennett.
Rock Field
Female Rock Vocal
Performance: “Steve McQueen,” Sheryl Crow.
Male Rock Vocal Performance: “The Rising,” Bruce Springsteen.
Rock Performance by a
Duo or Group With Vocal: “In My Place,” Coldplay.
Hard Rock Performance: “All My Life,” Foo Fighters.
Metal Performance: “Here to Stay,” Korn.
Rock Instrumental
Performance: “Approaching Pavonis Mons by Balloon (Utopia Planitia),” the Flaming Lips.
Best Rock Song: “The Rising,” Bruce Springsteen (Springsteen, artist).
Best Rock Album: “The Rising,” Bruce Springsteen.
Alternative Field
Best Alternative Music Album: “A Rush of Blood to the Head,” Coldplay.
R&B; Field
Female R&B; Vocal
Performance: “He Think I Don’t Know,” Mary J. Blige.
Male R&B; Vocal Performance: “U Don’t Have to Call,” Usher.
R&B; Duo or Group With
Vocal: “Love’s in Need of Love Today,” Stevie Wonder and Take Six.
Traditional R&B; Vocal
Performance: “What’s Going On,” Chaka Khan and the Funk Brothers.
Urban/Alternative
Performance: “Little Things,” India.Arie.
Best R&B; Song: “Love of My Life (An Ode to Hip-Hop),” Erykah Badu, Robert Ozuna, James Poyser, Raphael Saadiq and Glen Standridge (Erykah Badu featuring Common, artist).
Best R&B; Album: “Voyage to India,” India.Arie.
Best Contemporary
R&B; Album: “Ashanti,” Ashanti.
Rap Field
Female Rap Solo
Performance: “Scream a.k.a Itchin’,” Missy Elliott.
Male Rap Solo Performance: “Hot in Herre,” Nelly.
Rap Performance by a
Duo or Group: “The Whole World,” OutKast featuring Killer Mike.
Best Rap/Sung Collaboration: “Dilemma,” Nelly featuring Kelly Rowland.
Best Rap Album: “The Eminem Show,” Eminem.
Country Field
Female Country Vocal
Performance: “Cry,” Faith Hill.
Male Country Vocal
Performance: “Give My Love to Rose,” Johnny Cash.
Country Performance by a
Duo or Group With Vocal: “Long Time Gone,” Dixie Chicks.
Country Collaboration
With Vocals: “Mendocino County Line,” Willie Nelson with Lee Ann Womack.
Country Instrumental
Performance: “Lil’ Jack Slade,” Dixie Chicks.
Best Country Song: “Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning),” Alan Jackson (Jackson, artist).
Best Country Album: “Home,” Dixie Chicks.
Best Bluegrass Album: “Lost in the Lonesome Pines,” Jim Lauderdale, Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys.
New Age Field
Best New Age Album: “Acoustic Garden,” Eric Tingstad & Nancy Rumbel.
Jazz Field
Contemporary Jazz Album: “Speaking of Now,” Pat Metheny Group.
Jazz Vocal Album: “Live in Paris,” Diana Krall.
Jazz Instrumental Solo: “My Ship,” Herbie Hancock, soloist. Track from: “Directions in Music” (Herbie Hancock, Michael Brecker & Roy Hargrove).
Jazz Instrumental Album,
Individual or Group: “Directions in Music,” Herbie Hancock, Michael Brecker & Roy Hargrove.
Large Jazz Ensemble Album: “What Goes Around,” Dave Holland Big Band.
Latin Jazz Album: “The Gathering,” Caribbean Jazz Project.
Gospel Field
Rock Gospel Album: “Come Together,” Third Day.
Pop/Contemporary Gospel
Album: “The Eleventh Hour,” Jars of Clay.
Southern, Country or
Bluegrass Gospel Album: “We Called Him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood Tribute Album,” the Jordanaires, Larry Ford & the Light Crust Doughboys.
Traditional Soul Gospel
Album: “Higher Ground,” the Blind Boys of Alabama.
Contemporary Soul Gospel
Album: “Sidebars,” Eartha.
Best Gospel Choir or
Chorus Album: “Be Glad,” Carol Cymbala, choir director; Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir.
Latin Field
Latin Pop Album: “Caraluna,” Bacilos.
Latin Rock/Alternative Album: “Revolucion de Amor,” Mana.
Traditional Tropical Latin
Album: “El Arte Del Sabor,” Bebo Valdes Trio With Israel Lopez “Cachao” & Carlos “Patato” Valdes.
Salsa Album: “La Negra Tiene Tumbao,” Celia Cruz.
Merengue Album: “Latino,” Grupo Mania.
Mexican/Mexican
American Album: “Lo Dijo El Corazon,” Joan Sebastian.
Tejano Album: “Acuerdate,” Emilio Navaira.
Blues Field
Traditional Blues Album: “A Christmas Celebration of Hope,” B.B. King.
Contemporary Blues Album: “Don’t Give Up on Me,” Solomon Burke.
Folk Field
Traditional Folk Album: “Legacy,” Doc Watson & David Holt.
Contemporary Folk Album: “This Side,” Nickel Creek.
Native American Music
Album: “Beneath the Raven Moon,” Mary Youngblood.
Reggae Field
Best Reggae Album: “Jamaican E.T.,” Lee “Scratch” Perry.
World Music Field
Best World Music Album: “Mundo,” Ruben Blades.
Polka Field
Best Polka Album: “Top of the World,” Jimmy Sturr.
Children’s Field
Best Musical Album for
Children: “Monsters, Inc. -- Scream Factory Favorites,” Riders in the Sky.
Best Spoken Word Album
for Children: “There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly,” Tom Chapin.
Spoken Word Field
Best Spoken Word Album: “A Song Flung Up to Heaven,” Maya Angelou.
Best Spoken Comedy Album: “Robin Williams -- Live 2002,” Robin Williams.
Musical Show Field
Best Musical Show Album: “Hairspray,” Marc Shaiman, producer; Scott Wittman, lyricist; Marc Shaiman, composer and lyricist (Original Broadway Cast).
Film/TV/Visual Media Field
Compilation Soundtrack
Album for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media: “Standing in the Shadows of Motown,” various artists.
Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture,
Television or Other Visual
Media: “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” Howard Shore.
Best Song Written for a
Motion Picture, Television
or Other Visual Media: “If I Didn’t Have You,” Randy Newman (Newman, artist); Track from: “Monsters, Inc.”
Composing/Arranging Field
Best Instrumental
Composition: “Six Feet Under Title Theme,” Thomas Newman.
Best Instrumental
Arrangement: “Six Feet Under Title Theme,” Thomas Newman (Newman, artist).
Best Instrumental
Arrangement Accompanying
Vocalist(s): “Mean Old Man,” Dave Grusin (James Taylor, artist).
Package Field
Best Recording Package: “Home,” Kevin Reagan, art director (Dixie Chicks).
Best Boxed or Special Limited
Edition Package: “Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues: The Worlds of Charley Patton,” Susan Archie, art director (Charley Patton).
Album Notes Field
Best Album Notes: “Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues: The Worlds af Charley Patton,” David Evans (Charley Patton).
Historical Field
Best Historical Album: “Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues: The Worlds of Charley Patton,” Dean Blackwood, compilation producer; David Glasser and Christopher King, mastering engineers.
Production Field
Best Engineered Album,
Non-Classical “Come Away With Me,” Husky Huskolds, Arif Mardin and Jay Newland, engineers (Norah Jones, artist).
Producer of the Year,
Non-Classical: Arif Mardin.
Best Remixed Recording,
Non-Classical “Hella Good (Roger Sanchez Remix Main),” Roger Sanchez (No Doubt, artist).
Best Remixed Recording,
Non-Classical “Hella Good (Roger Sanchez Remix Main),” Roger Sanchez (No Doubt, artist).
Engineered Album, Classical: Vaughan Williams: “A Sea Symphony,” Michael Bishop.
Producer of the Year,
Classical: Robert Woods.
Classical Field
Classical Album: Vaughan Williams: “A Sea Symphony,” Robert Spano, conductor; Thomas C. Moore, producer.
Orchestral Performance: Mahler: Symphony No. 6, Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor, San Francisco Symphony.
Opera Recording: Wagner: “Tannhauser,” Daniel Barenboim, Jane Eaglen, Thomas Hampson, Waltraud Meier, Rene Pape, Peter Seiffert; Christoph Classen, producer.
Choral Performance: Vaughan Williams: “A Sea Symphony,” Robert Spano, conductor, Norman Mackenzie, chorus director.
Instrumental Soloist(s)
Performance With Orchestra: Brahms/Stravinsky: Violin Concertos, Hilary Hahn, Neville Marriner, conductor.
Instrumental Soloist
Performance Without Orchestra: Chopin: Etudes, Opus 10 and Opus 25, Murray Perahia.
Chamber Music Performance: Beethoven: String Quartets: “Razumovsky,” Opus 59, 1-3; “Harp” Opus 74, Takacs Quartet.
Small Ensemble Performance
With or Without Conductor: Tavener: Lamentations and Praises, Chanticleer, Joseph Jennings, conductor.
Classical Vocal Performance: “Bel Canto,” Renee Fleming.
Classical Contemporary
Composition: John Tavener: “Lamentations and Praises.”
Classical Crossover Album: “Previn Conducts Korngold,” London Symphony Orchestra, Andre Previn, conductor.
Music Video Field
Best Short Form Music Video: “Without Me,” Eminem, Joseph Kahn, director; Greg Tharp, producer.
Best Long Form Music Video: “Westway to the World,” the Clash, Don Letts, director.
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