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Album covers shot in NYC
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Billy Joel to Beastie Boys: 9 New York album cover billy-joel-beastie-boys-9-new-york-album-covers

Billy Joel to Beastie Boys: 9 New York album covers

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Explore the inside stories behind these iconic album covers shot on location in the Big Apple
THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
May 15, 2017 - 2:36 am

With New York's stature as one of the most iconic cities in the world, it's no surprise that the Big Apple has served as the backdrop for many an album cover. For adventurists and music buffs alike, searching out those locations can be a fun addition to a wider music landmark tour of NYC. To point you in the right direction, we've collected nine classic album covers shot in, to quote former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, "the Capital of the World" — from Steely Dan and LL Cool J to Led Zeppelin, Vampire Weekend and Billy Joel.

Kiss, Dressed To Kill

Kiss turned to their New York hometown for the cover of their third album, 1975's Dressed To Kill. Though the combination of suits and their theatrical makeup seems incongruous, the band settled on this sharp-dressed shot, taken by photographer Bob Gruen, at the southwest corner of 23rd Street and Eighth Avenue. Despite the low budget and borrowed suits (courtesy of their manager, Bill Aucoin), many Kiss fans have made a NYC pilgrimage to recreate this classic album cover.

Led Zeppelin, Physical Graffiti 

One of the most notable New York covers of all time, the cover shot for Led Zeppelin's 1975 double-album, Physical Graffiti, was taken at St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Avenue A. The building still stands today, and those with a sharp eye will realize album designer Peter Corriston had to cut the top floor of the building out of the photo in order to fit the square album cover.

Bob Dylan, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan

For Dylan, 1963's The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan marked him as an incomparable songwriter with tracks such as "Blowin' In The Wind," "Masters Of War" and "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall." The album cover for this work is also a classic. Photographed by Don Hunstein, the image shows Dylan and then-girlfriend Suze Rotolo cozying up for a winter stroll down Jones Street and West Fourth Street. (Cinema fans will recall that Cameron Crowe worked in multiple nods to this album cover in his 2001 film, Vanilla Sky, starring Tom Cruise.)

Beastie Boys, Paul's Boutique

Following up their hit debut album, Licensed To Ill, was a tall order for the Beastie Boys. Enter their sophomore effort, 1989's Paul's Boutique. The cover art, captured by Jeremy Shatan, looks down Ludlow Street from a vantage point at 99 Rivington Street where a sports storefront was garnished with a Paul's Boutique sign for the photograph. Up until 2007, a Paul's Boutique restaurant occupied this place in honor of the album's title.

New York to host the 60th GRAMMY Awards

LL Cool J, Bigger & Deffer (BAD)

LL Cool J took it back to Queens-based Andrew Jackson High School — incidentally, the school he dropped out of after releasing his successful debut single "I Need A Beat" at the age of 14 — for the cover of one of his best-selling albums, 1987's Bigger & Deffer (BAD). The back cover of the album was taken in his grandmother's basement where he was living at the time of the shoot. Glen E. Friedman served as photographer for both images.

Billy Joel, Turnstiles

A longtime resident of New York, Joel tapped the downtown Manhattan Astor Place subway station for the cover art for 1976's Turnstiles. The neighborhood is familiar to diehard Joel fans, as it is located near local clubs such as the Bottom Line where Joel played in his early days. Joel has said each character in the photo, shot by Jerry Abramowitz, represents a song on the album. Bonus fact: He used the same neighborhood to film the music video for 1986's "A Matter Of Trust."

Vampire Weekend, Modern Vampires Of The City

Encapsulating a stark look back at a smog-covered New York City skyline, Vampire Weekend used an image by New York Times photographer Neal Boenzi for their sophomore album, Modern Vampires Of The City. The photo was taken from the top of the Empire State Building in 1966 during a smog epidemic. "The image looks old, but also seems like it might be a rendering of some kind of future," band member Rostam Batmanglij told Pitchfork.

Steely Dan, Pretzel Logic

As New York natives, Steely Dan sought to capture the essence of their hometown for their third album, 1974's Pretzel Logic, so they went straight to the hot dog and pretzel vendors that litter street corners. Taken by photographer Raeanne Rubenstein, the album's cover was shot on the Central Park side of East 79th and Fifth Avenue. The vendor featured declined to sign a release, but the record label discovered he was operating without a license, so they took the shot anyway, gambling that the vendor wouldn't sue.

Neil Young, After The Gold Rush

Arguably Young's most iconic album cover, the artwork for 1970's After The Gold Rush was part of a spontaneous photo shoot by a young Joel Bernstein. Graham Nash was on hand as well, but he was cropped out of the final cover. The dark image was set in the West Village at the intersection of Sullivan and West Third Street outside New York University School of Law.

Take our tour of New York's iconic music landmarks

GRAMMY winners from New York
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9 GRAMMY winners from New York lady-gaga-jay-z-9-grammy-winners-new-york

Lady Gaga to Jay Z: 9 GRAMMY winners from New York

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Christina Aguilera, Marc Anthony, Tony Bennett, and Barbra Streisand also make our list of multiple GRAMMY winners with roots in the host city of the 60th GRAMMY Awards
Tim McPhate
GRAMMYs
May 15, 2017 - 2:36 am

New York is home to Wall Street, the Statue of Liberty, Times Square, and Broadway. And on Jan. 28, 2018, the city will serve as the home for the 60th GRAMMY Awards. New York has also been called home by some of the biggest stars in entertainment. It's no wonder everyone from Liza Minnelli and Frank Sinatra to Jay Z say if you can make it in New York, you can make it anywhere. Here's a list of nine GRAMMY-winning New Yorkers who did it their way. 

Christina Aguilera

Staten Island-born Christina Aguilera was a mainstay in New York City in the late '90s and early '00s as a frequent guest on MTV"s "Total Request Live," which listed her "Dirrty" as the show's fifth greatest video on its final countdown. A week after winning the Best Pop Duo/Group Performance GRAMMY with A Great Big World for "Say Something," the five-time GRAMMY winner returned to her home state for a New York-themed halftime performance at the 2015 NBA All-Star Game.  

Marc Anthony

Marc Anthony's East Harlem neighborhood has definitely impacted his career. "Being from New York, there was Latin music in the house and salsa coming out of my brother's room," Anthony told The Latin Recording Academy when he was named their 2016 Person of the Year. "I'd go out in the street and it was Marvin Gaye and Gladys Knight and Aretha [Franklin]. I think I ended up being a melting pop of musical sensibilities." That melting pot has helped Anthony earn two GRAMMYs and five Latin GRAMMYs. 

Tony Bennett

Though he may have left his heart in San Francisco, Tony Bennett performed for the first time in 1946 at Shangri-La nightclub in Astoria, Queens, the city in which he was born. It was all uphill from there, with Bennett earning 18 GRAMMYs to date. Several of his career achievements have featured nods to his hometown, including GRAMMY nominations for 1990's Astoria: Portrait Of The Artist and 2001's "New York State Of Mind" (with Billy Joel), and 1994's Album Of The Year GRAMMY winner MTV Unplugged, which was recorded at New York's Sony Studios.

GRAMMYs

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Billy Joel - New York State Of Mind (from Live at Shea Stadium) ft. Tony Bennett

Mariah Carey

Despite telling Complex she was "dropped here" as a "fairyland experience," Mariah Carey was born in Long Island. She began singing and writing songs at Harborfields High School in Greenlawn, N.Y., and her resulting career has been anything but fantasy, including a 1990 Best New Artist GRAMMY, a GRAMMY nomination for 1992's MTV Unplugged EP, which was recorded in Astoria Studios in Queens, and, most recently, an infamous New Year's Eve performance in Times Square, to which the five-time GRAMMY-winning diva jokingly responded: "S*** happens."

Danger Mouse

Producer/engineer/mixer Danger Mouse told The New York Times he was influenced by fellow New Yorker and GRAMMY winner Woody Allen, whose films taught him to take a "director's role within music." So far that approach has worked for Danger Mouse, who was born in White Plains. He's earned six GRAMMYs, including wins for solo projects, as one-half of Gnarls Barkley and his production for Adele, the Black Keys and his Broken Bells project.

Jay Z

With 21 GRAMMY wins, Jay Z is one of the top GRAMMY winners of all time and the top hip-hop artist from New York. (He's just two wins behind the top GRAMMY-winning New Yorker, John Williams). The Brooklyn rapper's GRAMMY-winning catalog is peppered with references to his hometown. From "Numb/Encore" to "Empire State Of Mind," his chart-topping collaboration with fellow New Yorker Alicia Keys, Hova has good reason to claim he's the King of New York.

Top GRAMMY winners: Where does Jay Z rank?

Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga once tweeted she'd "bleed for [her] hometown." Thus it's no surprise the six-time GRAMMY winner, born in Manhattan as Stefani Germanotta, made the city of New York the subject of her 2011 hit "Marry The Night," which is featured on her Album Of The Year -nominated chart-topper, Born This Way. "New York is not just a tan that you'll never lose," Gaga sings. The 13-minute-plus video was shot throughout the city and was described as a "nod to New York downtown refinement."

GRAMMYs

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Lady Gaga - Marry The Night (Official Video)

Chris Rock

From his stint on "Saturday Night Live" and his Brooklyn-based sitcom "Everybody Hates Chris" to his role as Pookie in 1991's New Jack City, Chris Rock is a New Yorker through and through. The South Carolina-born/Brooklyn-raised comedian can even be found sitting in the front row at Knicks games despite the team's inability to make the NBA Finals since 1999. Coincidentally, that was the same year Rock released his Best Spoken Comedy Album-winning Bigger And Blacker, which was recorded at Harlem's famed Apollo Theater.    

Barbra Streisand

New York has been good to Brooklyn native Barbra Streisand, beginning with her turn in the Broadway musicals "I Can Get It For You Wholesale" (1962) and "Funny Girl" (1964), the latter leading to her first Oscar win for her performance in the 1968 film adaptation. In 1963 she recorded her debut album, The Barbra Streisand Album, at Columbia's Studio A in New York City. It earned Babs an Album Of The Year GRAMMY, the first of eight GRAMMY wins, and launched a musical legacy that has resulted in GRAMMY Legend and Lifetime Achievement Awards.   

Another bite out of the Big Apple

In addition to the artists above, these 12 multiple-GRAMMY winners also hail from New York:

Beastie Boys
Mary J. Blige
Sean "Diddy" Combs
Billy Joel
Alicia Keys
Norah Jones
Cyndi Lauper
Al Schmitt
Simon & Garfunkel
Steely Dan
Hezekiah Walker
John Williams

Beastie Boys, Kiss and Billy Joel: 9 album covers shot in New York

Michael Jackson performs at the 30th Annual GRAMMY Awards in 1988

Michael Jackson performs at the 30th Annual GRAMMY Awards in 1988

Photo: Sam Emerson

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Revisit 13 Classic New York GRAMMY Moments do-you-remember-these-13-new-york-grammy-moments

Do You Remember These 13 New York GRAMMY Moments?

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With the announcement of Music's Biggest Night's return to Madison Square Garden, look back at these 13 unforgettable GRAMMY moments that took place in the Big Apple
Tim McPhate
GRAMMYs
May 15, 2017 - 2:36 am

Start spreading the news: Music's Biggest Night is set to return to New York City for the 60th GRAMMY Awards on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018, marking the first time the telecast will air from New York's Madison Square Garden in 15 years.

It will be the 11th time the GRAMMYs will be broadcast from New York, and the third time in history the show will emanate from the prestigious arena, following the 39th GRAMMY Awards (1997) and 45th GRAMMY Awards (2003).

As The Recording Academy prepares for the amazing moments in store for its milestone 60th telecast, look back at these 13 unforgettable GRAMMY memories from past shows in the Big Apple.

 

Remember these NYC GRAMMY moments?

14th GRAMMY Awards

Felt Forum, March 14, 1972

Carole King's crowning GRAMMY night

It was a night of historic firsts. The 14th GRAMMY Awards marked the first time the GRAMMYs broadcast from New York, with the Felt Forum doing the honors. (Today, the Felt Forum is now The Theater at Madison Square Garden.) The show also marked the first time a woman won multiple awards in the General Field categories. Carole King, a Brill Building alumnus, took home Record Of The Year for "It's Too Late," Song Of The Year for "You've Got A Friend" and Album Of The Year for Tapestry.

9 times women made GRAMMY history

17th GRAMMY Awards

Uris Theater, March 1, 1975

Stevie Wonder fulfills Album Of The Year repeat

In 1975 the GRAMMYs returned to New York at the Uris Theater (now the Gershwin Theatre) for an all-star telecast that included Roberta Flack, the Spinners, Aretha Franklin, and John Lennon and Yoko Ono. But it was Stevie Wonder who made headlines, winning five awards. More notably, he became the first artist to win Album Of The Year in consecutive years, taking the prize for Fulfillingness' First Finale following Innervisions' win the prior year.

David Bowie makes his lone GRAMMY appearance

It's not often that a presenter can steal the show at the GRAMMYs, but if anyone could it would be David Bowie. The Thin White Duke was on hand to present the award for Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female, which ultimately went to Aretha Franklin. "I am honored to have been selected to perform this particular task," the dapper Bowie said. "My personal award is having the opportunity to salute ce premiere femme noir." In her acceptance, Franklin responded, "Wow, this is so good I could kiss David Bowie."

23rd GRAMMY Awards

Radio City Music Hall, Feb. 25, 1981

Christopher Cross sails away with a GRAMMY record

With his breezy pop-rock sound, Christopher Cross took flight with his 1979 self-titled debut solo album and hits such as "Ride Like The Wind," "Never Be The Same" and the lilting "Sailing," which took home Song and Record Of The Year honors at the 23rd GRAMMYs. The unassuming Texan became the first artist to sweep all four General Field GRAMMY categories, also winning Best New Artist and Album Of The Year. "It's definitely a dream come true," Cross said in his final acceptance for Record Of The Year. And it's a GRAMMY feat that has not yet been duplicated.

30th GRAMMY Awards

Radio City Music Hall, March 2, 1988

Michael Jackson's amazing GRAMMY performance debut

Though a veteran in terms of GRAMMY wins, Michael Jackson had yet to perform on the GRAMMY stage until the 30th GRAMMYs in 1988. The seasoned performer mesmerized the Radio City Music Hall audience and the millions tuning in with a medley of "The Way You Make Me Feel" and "Man In The Mirror," two No. 1 hits from his chart-topping album Bad. It would be the King of Pop's lone GRAMMY performance, adding to the legend of what some consider the most iconic performance in GRAMMY history. 

10 reasons Michael Jackson became the King of Pop

Run DMC become the first rap act to perform on the GRAMMYs

Run DMC loom large in GRAMMY history. The Kings from Queens were the first rap act to score a GRAMMY nomination, earning a nod for 1986 for Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal for Raising Hell. The trio also became the first rap act to perform on Music's Biggest Night, turning in a hard rendition of "Tougher Than Leather" at the 30th GRAMMY Awards. Their performance spawned a lineage of signature GRAMMY rap moments, including M.C. Hammer, Eminem and Elton John, Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar, A Tribe Called Quest and Anderson .Paak, and Chance The Rapper. Run DMC would later become the first rap act to receive a Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement Award. 

36th GRAMMY Awards

Radio City Music Hall, March 1, 1994

NYC love for Whitney Houston

The New Jersey-born Whitney Houston was riding another crest of popularity following the release of The Bodyguard, the hit film in which she starred that spawned the biggest-selling soundtrack of all time. Opening the show on a high note, Houston hypnotized the audience with a magical performance of "I Will Always Love You." The star also netted three awards, including her first two career General Field category GRAMMYs: Record Of The Year for "I Will Always ..." and Album Of The Year for the soundtrack.

The Chairman becomes a GRAMMY Legend

Already a Lifetime Achievement Award and Trustees Award recipient, in 1994 Frank Sinatra added a GRAMMY Legend Award to his mantle. With a touching introduction from Bono, the pride of Hoboken, N.J., was visibly moved as the audience welcomed him with a standing ovation. "Thank you very much. That's the best welcome I ever had," the Chairman said. The poignant moment was not without controversy, however, as television cameras cut off the broadcast during Ol' Blue Eyes' remarks. "This is live television and I'm sure Mr. Sinatra will get even by cutting this show off in another hour," joked host Garry Shandling.

39th GRAMMY Awards

Madison Square Garden, Feb. 26, 1997

Teenage LeAnn Rimes makes GRAMMY history

While most '90s teens were listening to Oasis or watching Clueless, LeAnn Rimes had grander career aspirations. The country starlet won her first career award for Best New Artist at the ripe young age of 14, making her the youngest person to ever win a GRAMMY. The 39th show was also notable for being the first time the GRAMMYs were broadcast from an arena, with Madison Square Garden fittingly doing the honors. 

40th GRAMMY Awards

Radio City Music Hall, Feb. 25, 1998

Bob Dylan gets soy bombed

The GRAMMYs' 40th birthday party got wild with one of the most bizarre live performance moments ever. Bob Dylan was turning in a rootsy rendition of "Love Sick" when background dancer Michael Portnoy — who took off his shirt to reveal the words "Soy Bomb" scrawled across his chest — went off-script and proceeded to dance along in a spastic manner. Undeterred, Dylan finished his song without further casualty. Later, the folk legend took home Album Of The Year for Time Out Of Mind. His son, Jakob, won a GRAMMY with his band the Wallflowers, making it a truly unforgettable family evening.

Shawn Colvin's speech is Wu-Tanged

Years before Kanye West, Wu-Tang Clan's Ol' Dirty Bastard arguably created the template for how to interrupt a speech at the 40th GRAMMY Awards. As Shawn Colvin began her acceptance for Song Of The Year for "Sunny Came Home," Ol' Dirty Bastard rushed the stage to steal the mic. "I went and bought me an outfit today that cost me a lot of money," he said. "Because I figured that Wu-Tang was going to win. I don't know how you all see it, but when it comes to the children, Wu-Tang is for the children." Apparently, so was John Denver, who ended up taking Best Musical Album For Children that year.

Watch: The GRAMMYs' unexpected moments

45th GRAMMY Awards

Madison Square Garden, Feb. 23, 2003

Simon & Garfunkel break their silence

The legendary New York-based duo, whose history with the city included a momentous concert in Central Park in 1981, broke their acrimonious silence by performing a stunning acoustic version of their first hit, "The Sounds Of Silence," (GRAMMY Hall Of Fame, 2004). The heartfelt reunion — which segued into a massively successful tour — was spawned by the pair's presentation of The Academy's Lifetime Achievement Award.

The Boss helps NYC rise back up

The 45th GRAMMY Awards at Madison Square Garden not only marked the show's first return to New York in five years, it was the first since Sept. 11, 2001. Bruce Springsteen, New Jersey's favorite son, performed a rollicking rendition of "The Rising," a song bottling the resiliency of the city and its residents. Springsteen also led the show finale, a Joe Strummer tribute featuring Steven Van Zandt, Elvis Costello and Dave Grohl. Fittingly, the Boss' presence punctuated this emotional musical homecoming, which was arguably the city's first major positive event since the terrorist attacks.

Cast your vote: What is your favorite song that name checks New York?

 

Tom Petty at the 2017 MusiCares Person of the Year gala

Tom Petty

Photo: Michael Kovac/WireImage.com

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Who Are The Person Of The Year Recipients? who-are-all-musicares-person-year-recipients

Who Are All The MusiCares Person Of The Year Recipients?

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Take a look at the entire roster of 28 MusiCares Person of the Year honorees and learn about their philanthropic activities
Renée Fabian
MusiCares
Dec 22, 2017 - 9:22 am

Since its inception in 1989, MusiCares has provided a safety net for music people in times of need, including resources and services covering a wide range of financial, medical and personal emergencies.

In order to support these life-saving programs, MusiCares created their signature gala, Person of the Year, in 1991 when they honored David Crosby in New York prior to the 33rd GRAMMY Awards.

Hosted each year during GRAMMY Week, the Person of the Year gala has continued to grow in size and prominence, while the theme has remained constant: to honor an artist who has not only made lasting contributions to the music world but who has also demonstrated extraordinary humanitarian and philanthropic efforts.

It's also doubled as an important reminder of the critical work that MusiCares undertakes year-round, oftentimes with the honorees themselves providing compelling testimonials.

"I'm proud to be here tonight for MusiCares. I think a lot of this organization. They've helped many people," Bob Dylan said during his Person of the Year acceptance speech in 2015. "I'd like to personally thank them for what they did for a friend of mine, Billy Lee Riley. … MusiCares paid for my friend's doctor bills, mortgage and gave him spending money. They were able to at least make his life comfortable, tolerable to the end. That is something that can't be repaid. Any organization that would do that would have to have my blessing."

You already know their music accomplishments, so let's take a focused look at the generous giving that helped gain these 28 esteemed artists the honor of MusiCares Person of the Year.

Fleetwood Mac, 2018

The first band to receive the honor, Fleetwood Mac — Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Christine McVie, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks — have supported numerous causes both together and individually. Organizations supported include the Elton John AIDS Foundation, U.K. music therapy charity Nordoff Robbins, the Red Cross, Starkey Hearing Foundation, and the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund.

GRAMMYs

Tom Petty, 2017

Watch: Tom Petty's 2017 MusiCares speech

Leaving his mark on the world of giving, the late Petty supported a variety of causes throughout the years. This included Los Angeles-based program for the homeless Midnight Mission, for which Petty played numerous benefit concerts. He was honored with the organization's Golden Heart Award in 2011. He also supported Safety Harbor Kids, which helps orphan, foster and homeless children, environmental organization Rock the Earth, and the Special Olympics.

Lionel Richie, 2016

Lionel Richie In Conversation With Pharrell Williams

Richie's philanthropic contributions span anti-poverty and anti-human trafficking initiatives, fighting famine, and support for HIV/AIDS research and women's issues. Most notably, he co-wrote "We Are The World" with Michael Jackson in 1985, the proceeds of which went to famine relief through USA For Africa. Other organizations he has championed include the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center, Unicef, and the Art of Elysium.

Bob Dylan, 2015

Dylan has quietly donated to causes such as Amnesty International, City of Hope, End Hunger Network, and K9 Connection across his career. He performed during George Harrison's Album Of The Year-winning The Concert For Bangladesh in 1971 to benefit relief efforts for East Pakistan refugees. In 2009 he donated all the royalties from his best-selling Christmas album, Christmas In The Heart, to Feeding America.

Carole King, 2014

Carole King: MusiCares Person Of The Year Interview

King tirelessly works to give back. She raised more than $1.5 million with fellow Person of the Year honoree James Taylor for environmental causes during their 2010 Troubadour Reunion tour. In 2016 she lent her voice to a reimagining of Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "What the World Needs Now Is Love" to benefit victims of the Orlando Pulse Nightclub shooting. She's also been an ardent supporter of MusiCares and the GRAMMY Museum.

Bruce Springsteen, 2013

The all-American singer/songwriter has taken on a variety of causes across his career. This includes the Thrill Hill Foundation, which he founded in 1987 to provide grants for AIDS and medical research, food services, and youth programs. He has worked with Stand Up for Heroes, which provides support to veterans, and regularly contributes to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Paul McCartney, 2012

The former Beatles member has supported more than 40 charities in his career, spanning issues such as disaster relief, animal rights, hunger, and more. McCartney had a hand in organizing the Concert for New York City in 2001, which raised more than $36 million through the Robin Hood Foundation for families of victims who died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. In 2012 he headlined the 12-12-12 Concert for Sandy Relief, another benefit concert hosted by the Robin Hood Foundation.

Barbra Streisand, 2011

Founded in 1986, The Streisand Foundation has provided grants to a number of organizations over the years, awarding more than $25 million to more than 800 groups. More recently, Union of Concerned Scientists, Brennan Center for Justice, Planned Parenthood, and Mother Jones, among others, received noteworthy grants from the legendary singer's foundation.

Neil Young, 2010

Young has a long history of giving back, including co-founding Farm Aid and participating in the organization's annual concert series to raise funds for family farms in the U.S. Since 1986, he and his ex-wife, Pegi, organized and hosted the all-acoustic Bridge School Benefit Concert, which supports the Bridge School he helped found to support children through augmentative and alternative means of communication.

Neil Diamond, 2009

With a career's worth of charity efforts spanning three decades, Diamond's initiatives have included donating proceeds from tour program books at concerts to various charities, giving royalties from his 1969 hit "Sweet Caroline" to organizations benefitting the victims of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, raising $1.7 million to help rebuild homes destroyed by Hurricane Ike on Oak Island, Texas, in 2008, and performing at the 2010 Stand Up To Cancer telecast.

Aretha Franklin, 2008

Franklin contributes regularly to the United Negro College Fund and was the first woman to receive their Award of Excellence in 2007. She has also contributed to Easter Seal, Rainbow PUSH Coalition, Barbara Davis Center for Diabetes, Feeding America, Sting's Rainforest Foundation, and to food banks in her local Detroit area.

Don Henley, 2007

Eagles band member Henley is a co-founder of the Recording Artists' Coalition, now part of the Recording Academy's Advocacy office. To honor the literature and legacy of Henry David Thoreau, Henley also founded the Walden Woods Project in 1990, and established the Caddo Lake Institute in 1993 to fund and promote the vast wetland areas of East Texas.

James Taylor, 2006

Taylor performed at No Nukes, the anti-nuclear power benefit concert in 1979. He has donated proceeds from his ticket sales to causes such as the Berkshire Natural Resources Council, which works toward land conservation and environmental advocacy. In 2017 Taylor donated used guitar strings to be recycled into jewelry benefitting Tuberville, a non-profit that helps build stronger communities through potatoes, and headlined a Variety the Children's Charity of St. Louis benefit.

Brian Wilson, 2005

Wilson's philanthropic efforts have focused on the Carl Wilson Foundation to help fund cancer research, founded in 1999 on behalf of his late brother Carl, who was also a member of the Beach Boys. He also partnered with the Campaign to Change Direction in 2015, which promotes mental health awareness. He performed at Live Aid in 1985 and the 20th-anniversary companion, Live 8, making him one of the few artists to perform at both benefit concerts.

Sting, 2004

Over the years, Sting has been a passionate supporter of Amnesty International, which advocates for human rights worldwide. In 1989 he and wife Trudie Styler started the Rainforest Foundation International to promote global awareness of the need to conserve tropical rain forests and to support forests' indigenous peoples.

Bono, 2003

U2's Bono is a co-founder of the global campaign and advocacy organization ONE, which takes action to end extreme poverty by lobbying world leaders. For example, in 2003 he helped lobby for overseas aid to Africa, which resulted in a promise from former President George W. Bush to increase aid by an extra $5 billion a year for poor countries.

Billy Joel, 2002

In 1978 Joel founded Charity Begins At Home with the mission to fund nonprofit agencies in need in the Tri-State area. In 2007 more than $400,000 was distributed to 80 nonprofit agencies that provide care for those afflicted by child abuse, autism, cystic fibrosis, Parkinson's disease, emotional disabilities, and cancer. He has given to the Elton John AIDS Foundation, Rainforest Foundation and provided funding for an arts scholarship for students in need in Long Island, as well as advocacy to preserve his current hometown of Oyster Bay, N.Y.

Paul Simon, 2001

In 1987 Simon, along with pediatrician/child advocate Irwin Redlener, founded the Children's Health Fund, which provides comprehensive health care to medically underserved children in the United States by developing and supporting innovative primary care medical programs. Simon has also raised funds for worthy causes such as amFAR, Autism Speaks and the Nature Conservancy.

Elton John, 2000

John established the Elton John AIDS Foundation in 1992 to support innovative HIV prevention programs, eliminate discrimination associated with HIV and AIDS, provide care and support services for people living with the disease, and to eradicate HIV/AIDS completely. The U.S. and U.K. branches of the organization have jointly raised more than $385 million for projects in 55 countries around the world.

Stevie Wonder, 1999

Wonder was one of the strong proponents behind making Martin Luther King Jr. Day a national holiday, which former President Ronald Reagan signed into law in 1983. In 1985 Wonder participated in the recording of "We Are The World" to raise funds to end hunger through USA For Africa. Wonder has also earned recognition for his work with the President's Committee on Employment of People with Disabilities, the Children's Diabetes Foundation and Junior Blind of America. He provides toys for children and families in need with his annual House Full of Toys benefit concert.

Luciano Pavarotti, 1998

In 1992 Pavarotti created Pavarotti & Friends, a series of charity concerts that brought together a diverse group of artists to benefit medical, vocational and education initiatives in Bosnia, Cambodia, Kosovo, Guatemala, Liberia, and Tibet, and for Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan, Angola, Zambia, and Iraq. The concert ran almost yearly through 2003, and included performers such as Bryan Adams, Mariah Carey, Eric Clapton, Sheryl Crow, and B.B. King, among others.

Phil Collins, 1997

Collins supported Live Aid in 1985 for Ethiopian famine relief by playing both in the U.S. and abroad. He founded the Little Dreams Foundation in 2000 with his now ex-wife Orianne to support young talents in both the arts and sports. He is also an advocate for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Quincy Jones, 1996

Jones was one of the architects, along with Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie, behind USA For Africa's We Are The World benefit concert and album in 1985, which has raised more than $63 million for Ethiopian famine relief. Through the Quincy Jones Foundation, the GRAMMY winner raises awareness and resources for global initiatives that support conflict resolution, malaria eradication, clean water, and efforts to restore the Gulf Coast.

Tony Bennett, 1995

In 2001 Bennett established the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts, a New York public high school offering an extensive arts curriculum. He and his wife, Susan Benedetto, expanded on this initiative by founding Exploring the Arts in 1999, which works to provide an arts education to students in New York and Los Angeles. The United Nations presented Bennett with its Humanitarian Award in 2007.

Gloria Estefan, 1994

Estefan established the Gloria Estefan Foundation in 1997, which promotes health, education and cultural development. The foundation has made donations to the American Red Cross, Save The Children and UNICEF, among others. Each year the foundation also donates to no-kill shelters throughout the U.S. Estefan was feted as the 2008 Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year, making her the first artist to receive both Person of the Year honors.

Natalie Cole, 1993

After beating addiction early in her career, Cole learned in 2009 she would need a kidney transplant as a result of an addiction-related complication. Following her kidney transplant, Cole became a spokesperson for the University Kidney Research Organization. The late GRAMMY winner also supported charity events benefitting multiple sclerosis and teamed with Aloe Blacc in 2015 to sing at the annual Songs of Hope charity benefit with proceeds benefitting the independent cancer research institution City of Hope.

Bonnie Raitt, 1992

Social activism has always been part of Raitt's career. She co-founded Musicians United for Safe Energy and performed at the No Nukes benefit concert in 1979. She's also a founding member of the Rhythm & Blues Foundation, which works to advocate for early generation R&B artists. Recently, she partnered with the Guacamole Fund to donate a portion of her tour proceeds to benefit local organizations that work toward safe and sustainable energy, environmental protection, and peace.

David Crosby, 1991

The inaugural Person of the Year honoree, Crosby was chosen for his philanthropic efforts for Farm Aid. He performed at the annual Farm Aid in 1990 and 2000 in support of the organization's mission of raising awareness about the loss of family farms and to raise funds to keep families on their land.

2018 MusiCares Person Of The Year: Fleetwood Mac

Gord Downie

Gord Downie

Photo: Mark Horton/WireImage.com

News
Drake, Rush, Chuck D Remember Gord Downie drake-rush-neil-young-chuck-d-remember-gord-downie

Drake, Rush, Neil Young, Chuck D Remember Gord Downie

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Artists around the world pay tribute to the late Tragically Hip frontman
Renée Fabian
GRAMMYs
Oct 19, 2017 - 11:25 am

There are few Canadian rock icons as beloved as Tragically Hip frontman Gord Downie, who died on Oct. 17 at age 53 following a battle with brain cancer. Following his death, there has been an outpouring of support from the music community around the world and across genres, with artists such as Drake, Neil Young, Chuck D, Rush, Sarah McLachlan, and Kiss' Paul Stanley paying respects to their late colleague.

Rest In Peace legend so glad we got to meet and have this conversation. You will be forever treasured by this country and missed by the world

A post shared by champagnepapi (@champagnepapi) on Oct 18, 2017 at 8:49pm PDT

it's a sad sad day for Canada and Canadian music... rest in peace Gord.. and thank you... pic.twitter.com/canJevOCDw

— Rush (@rushtheband) October 18, 2017

Rest in Music Gord Downie @thehipdotcom The Tragically Hip salutes

— Chuck D (@MrChuckD) October 18, 2017

RIP Gord Downie. I join his fans, family friends and Tragically Hip mourning the loss to cancer of this beloved Canadian icon. @thehipdotcom pic.twitter.com/6xTOInFKhA

— Paul Stanley (@PaulStanleyLive) October 19, 2017

I’m so sorry Gord Downie has passed. He was a passionate activist, a wonderful artist &an extraordinary human being. He’ll be sorely missed.

— Paula Abdul (@PaulaAbdul) October 18, 2017

It was a privilege to witness Gord Downie’s creative genius, he was such a force in the Canadian music industry. XoS pic.twitter.com/2Mn3cLZSNy

— Sarah McLachlan (@SarahMcLachlan) October 18, 2017

Read More: Tragically Hip's Gord Downie Dies At 53

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Some of the content on this site expresses viewpoints and opinions that are not those of the Recording Academy and its Affiliates. Responsibility for the accuracy of information provided in stories not written by or specifically prepared for the Academy and its Affiliates lies with the story's original source or writer. Content on this site does not reflect an endorsement or recommendation of any artist or music by the Recording Academy and its Affiliates.