Underwood Added To Grammys; Bradley, Lynn To Be Honored
With the Grammy Awards coming up on Sunday, Jan. 31, more performers are being revealed, and surrounding special events are being finalized. Carrie Underwood has been added to a Michael Jackson tribute along with Celine Dion, Jennifer Hudson, Smokey Robinson, and Usher. The performance will feature the 3-D mini-movie for “Earth Song” that was created by Jackson as the centerpiece of his much anticipated This Is It tour, but was never seen by the public. This will be the first time a major awards show broadcasts in 3-D. CBS, which is airing the show has partnered with Target to offer free 3-D Grammy Glasses for viewers at home. From Sunday, Jan. 24, through Sunday, Jan. 31, Target stores nationwide will have the same glasses which will also be worn by the live audience at the LA Staples Center.
The MJ tribute joins previously announced performances by nominees Beyoncé, the Black Eyed Peas, Bon Jovi, the Dave Matthews Band, Green Day, Lady Antebellum, Lady Gaga, Maxwell, P!nk, Taylor Swift, and the Zac Brown Band.
The Recording Academy will also salute Nashvillians Harold Bradley and Loretta Lynn at the Special Merit Awards Ceremony. Lynn will receive a Lifetime Achievement Award and Bradley will be honored with a Trustees Award. Also being honored that day at the Wilshire Ebell Theater are Leonard Cohen, David “Honeyboy” Edwards, Walter C. Miller, the late Bobby Darin, the late Thomas Edison, and the late Florence Greenberg; as well as representatives of AKG Acoustics Gmbh.
Among the Grammy’s promotional tools to promote the show is the WereAllFans.com Web site, which uses the FanBuzz Visualizer to compose pictures of Grammy-nominated artists using real-time, fan-generated YouTube, Twitter, and Flickr postings.



Charlie Daniels was vacationing in Colorado when he suffered a mild stroke while snowmobiling on Friday, Jan. 15. He was treated at Mercy Regional Medical Center in Durango, CO then airlifted to Swedish Medical Center in Denver, CO. Daniels was released from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday, Jan. 17. He is recuperating at his home in Colorado, where he has been on vacation since Dec. 27.
Taylor Swift and Keith Urban are among the A-list celebs set to sing on the all-star television concert special Hope for Haiti Now: A Global Benefit for Earthquake Relief. For the two-hour telethon this Friday, Jan. 22, at 8/7 CT, there will be performances by Wyclef Jean, Bruce Springsteen, Jennifer Hudson, Mary J. Blige, Shakira, and Sting in New York City; Alicia Keys, Christina Aguilera, Dave Matthews, John Legend, Justin Timberlake, Stevie Wonder, and Swift, and a group performance by Urban, Kid Rock, and Sheryl Crow in Los Angeles; and Coldplay, and a group performance by Bono, The Edge, Jay-Z, and Rihanna in a newly added London location. The show will air on all the major networks, many cable channels, and will be streamed online at a number of sites (complete list below).
In addition to musical performances, Wyclef Jean in New York City, George Clooney in Los Angeles, and CNN’s Anderson Cooper reporting from Haiti, Hope for Haiti Now will feature more than one hundred of the biggest names in film, television, and music supporting the cause with testimonials and by answering phones during the telethon.
W.C. Handy: The Life And Times Of The Man Who Made The Blues by David Robertson. Knopf, 2009.

John Allen (Bug Music) is newly re-elected and joins returning Board Members Kay Clary (BMI), Tamara Saviano (Ellis Creative), Amanda Hale-Ornales (New West Records), Tift Merritt (artist), Brad First (SXSW), Fred Boenig (Artist Development Group), Giannitrapani, McFadden, Scott, and Moss.