The "1st Annual Latin Grammy Awards" were held in Los Angeles at the Staples Center on Friday, September 13, 2000. The big winners were Luis Miguel, Carlos Santana and Maná with 3 awards; Juan Luis Guerra, Shakira, Fito Páez and Emilio Estefan Jr. received 2 trophies each.
Winners were chosen by voting members of the Latin Academy from a list of finalists. The ceremony was broadcast live on CBS and was seen in more than 100 countries across the world. The two-hour show was the first bilingual broadcast ever to air on network television during prime time.
History
On
January 20 2000 the
Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences announced that the inaugural
Latin Grammy Awards were going to take place on
September 15 2000 in
Los Angeles and the awards ceremony would be broadcast in the
United States by
CBS, which will also distribute it to other countries. Nominations in 40 categories were expected to be released in
August 2000.
The list of nominees for the 1st Annual Latin Grammy Awards, slated for September 13 2000 in Los Angeles, was unveiled on Friday, July 7 2000 in a Miami ceremony hosted by Michael Greene, President of the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences.
Leading the chase for statuettes were Marc Anthony, Shakira and Fito Paez with five nominations each. Juan Luis Guerra, Carlos Vives, and Maná, garnered four nominations. Earning three nominations were Luis Miguel, along with La Ley. Ricky Martin earned for two nominations. Christina Aguilera, received a nod on the Latin side of the musical divide for the Spanish-language remake of "Genie in a Bottle" titled "Genio Atrapado". In addition to the awards, Emilio Estefan Jr. was honored as the Latin Academy's First Person of the Year. That award was presented during a dinner on September 11 2000 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.
The awards were organized by the Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (LARAS), incorporated by NARAS in 1997. LARAS is a membership-based association of musicians, producers, engineers and other recording professionals. The list of final nominees revealed was a result of balloting by LARAS members.
Live telecast
The list of hosts for the first-ever Latin Grammy Awards, included
Gloria Estefan,
Antonio Banderas,
Jimmy Smits,
Andy García and
Jennifer Lopez, who also was announced to perform her hit single "
No Me Ames" with
Marc Anthony, but Anthony (with six nominations that night) did not attend the show citing complications with his (then) wife's pregnancy.
Son By Four also were announced performing a duet with boy band 'N Sync, with some singing in Spanish by the american band.
The telecast kicked off with a tribute to the late Tito Puente featuring Ricky Martin, Celia Cruz, and Gloria Estefan. Performances throughout the show included Santana & Maná, 'N Sync & Son By Four, Christina Aguilera, Shakira, Miami Sound Machine and Alejandro Fernández.
The two-hour show was the first bilingual broadcast ever to air on network television during prime time. It was broadcasted around the world, either simultaneously or live on tape.
Compilation album
On
September 12 2000 Sony Discos released the first "Latin Grammy Nominees CD" to coincide with the inaugural awards with nominees from three categories,
Record of the Year,
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Best Tropical Song, with a portion of the proceeds to support the Latin Academy Of Recording Arts and Sciences for community-outreach efforts. It was expected that various
labels took turns releasing Latin Grammy sets each year.
Nominations and winners
The nominations were announced on
July 7,
2000 and the winners were revealed on
September 13 2000, including
Maná,
Luis Miguel and
Santana each grabbing three trophies at the event. Santana and Maná won
Record of the Year for the track "
Corazón Espinado" from Santana's album,
Supernatural and the same track was honored for Rock Duo or Group with Vocal. Maná also won Best Pop Performance and Santana won Best Pop Instrumental.
Amarte Es Un Placer, by
mexican pop singer Luis Miguel won
Album of the Year, Best Pop Album and Best Male Pop Performance. Marc Anthony's "
Dímelo" picked up
Song of the Year, and at age 73,
Ibrahim Ferrer won
Best New Artist.
Emilio Estefan Jr., who was up for six honors, won only two awards: Producer of the Year and the
Music Video award for directing his wife
Gloria's "
No Me Dejes de Querer". Meanwhile,
Carlos Vives, also with six nominees, went home with no trophies.
Tito Puente won posthumously for Traditional Tropical Performance for the title track from his final album,
Mambo Birdland. His son and daughter accepted the award on his behalf. Winners were chosen by voting members of the Latin Academy from a list of finalists. The ceremony was broadcast live on CBS and was seen in more than 100 countries across the world.
Following is the list of nominees and winners from each category. The winners are selected in bold.
General Field
(awarded to the songwriter) Pop Field
Best Pop Duo or Group with Vocal Performance
Best Pop Instrumental Performance
Best Pop Vocal Album
Rock Field
Best Rock Duo or Group with Vocal Performance
songwriters award- "Al Lado del Camino" — Fito Paez
- "Aquí" — La Ley
- "Fín" — Jaguares
- Saúl Hernández, songwriter
- "Puente" — Gustavo Cerati
- Gustavo Cerati, songwriter
- "Si Señor" — Control Machete
Best Rock Album
Tropial Field
Best Salsa Performance
Best Merengue Performance
Best Traditional Tropical Performance
Best Tropical Song
songwriters awardRegional
Best Ranchero Performance
Best Banda Performance
- Esperando Un Ángel — Arkangel R-15
- Lo Mejor De Mi Vida — Banda el Recodo
- Rancheras de Oro — Banda Machos
- Mil Gracias — Banda Maguey
- La Reina del Pueblo con Banda — Graciela Beltrán
- El Rey del Jaripeo — Joan Sebastian
Best Grupero Performance
Best Tejano Performance
Best Norteño Performance
- ¡Oh! Que Gusto — Grupo Atrapado
- Contigo — Intocable
- Herencia de Familia — Los Tigres del Norte
- Al Por Mayor — Los Tucanes De Tijuana
- La Leyenda Continúa... — Cornelio Reyna Jr. with Ramon Ayala y sus Bravos del Norte
Best Regional Song
songwriters awardTraditional
Best Folk Album
Best Tango Album
- Bien de Arriba — Nestor Marconi Trio
- Eterno Buenos Aires — Rodolfo Mederos
- Nuevo Quinteto Real — Nuevo Quinteto Real
- Tangos de Terciopelo — Quinteto Argentino de Cuerdas
- Postales del Alma — Lito Vitale & Juan Carlos Baglietto
Best Flamenco Album
Jazz Field
Best Jazz Album
Brazilian Field
Best Contemporary Pop Album
Best Brazilian Rock Album
Best Samba/Pagode Album
- Claridade — Alcione
- Lusofonia — Martínho Da Vila
- Zeca Pagodinho Ao Vivo — Zeca Pagodinho
- Tudo Azul — Velha Guarda Da Portela
- Velha Guarda Da Mangueira E Convidados — Velha Guarda Da Mangueira
Best MPB (Musica Popular Brasileira)
Best Sertaneja Album
- Zezé Di Camargo & Luciano — Zezé Di Camargo & Luciano
- Tempo — Leonardo
- Ao Vivo—A Majestade, O Sabiá — Roberta Miranda
- Sérgio Reis E Convidados — Sérgio Reis
- Nada Foi Em Vão — Wilson & Soraya
Best Brazilian Roots/Regional Album
- Tempo Destino: 25 Anos Ao Vivo — Nilson Chaves
- Você Vai Ver O Que É Bom — Dominguinhos
- Sanfonemas — Toninho Ferragutti
- Carlos Malta E Pife Muderno — Carlos Malta E Pife Muderno
- Pixinguinha — Paulo Moura e os Batutas
Best Brazilian Song
(songwriter award)Children's Field
Best Latin Chidren's Album
- A Mis Niños de 30 Años — Miliki
- José Morato & Oscar Gómez, producers
- El Diario de Daniela — Daniela Luján
- Alejandro Abaroa, producer
- Ellas Cantan a Cri Cri — Various Artists
- Lullabies of Latin America: Canciones de Cuna de Latinoamerica — Maria Del Rey
- Primavera — Eliana
- Leandro Lehart, Lincoln Olivetti and Joáo Plinta, producers
Classical Field
Best Classical Album
- La Dolores - Tomás Bretón — Antoni Ros Marbá, Elisabete Matos, Manuel Lanza, Plácido Domingo & Tito Beltrán
- Música De Dos Mundos: Music From Two Worlds — Aldo Antognazzi, Paquito D'Rivera and Brenda Feliciano
- Pablo Voitzuk and Diego Zapico, producers
- Salmo De Las Américas — José María Vitier
- Enrique Pérez Mesa, producer
- Sensamayá: The Music Of Silvestre Revueltas — Esa-Pekka Salonen
- Twentieth Century Mexican Symphonic Music, Vol. 1 — Eduardo Diazmuñoz with La Filarmónica de la Ciudad de Mexico
- Eduardo Diazmuñoz and Ana Lara, producers
Production Field
Best Engineered Album
- Abre — Fito Paez
- Buena Vista Social Club Presents Ibrahim Ferrer — Ibrahim Ferrer
- João Gilberto Voz e Violão — João Gilberto
- Ni Es Lo Mismo Ni Es Igual — Juan Luis Guerra
- Carlos Álvarez, Mike Couzzi, Bolívar Gómez, Miguel Hernández, Luis Mansilla, Carlos Ordehl, Eric Ramos, July Ruiz, and Eric Schilling, engineers
- Revés/Yo Soy — Café Tacuba
- Joe Chiccarelli, engineer
Producer of the Year
Music Video Field
References