The 60th annual Grammy Awards—which will be held this weekend at Madison Square Garden in New York City—hold a lot of intrigue for music aficionados, regardless of what genre they're into.
Who will be crowned as the night's biggest winners? Which deserving winner will get snubbed? And most importantly, what insane live collaborations will there be at this year's ceremony?
Though the industry's biggest night has taken some heat over the years for not being sufficiently representative of modern rock (Jethro Tull's Crest of a Knave winning Best Metal album over Metallica's …And Justice for All, anyone?), this year's list of nominees actually covers a decent amount of ground in the Rock, Metal and Blues categories.
The Best Rock Performance category offers everything from the haunting, reserved smoothness of Leonard Cohen's "You Want It Darker" to Chris Cornell's politically charged anthem, "The Promise," to the typical Foo Fighters exuberance of "Run." Throw in Icelandic indie rockers Kaleo, and Nothing More's "Go To War" and you've got one of the more fascinating assemblages of nominees in the whole ceremony.
Foo Fighters and Nothing More appear once again—with "Run" and "Go To War" respectively—in the Best Rock Song category, which also features appearances from Metallica—who, name be damned, are now formally a "Rock" band instead of a "Metal" one apparently—up-and-comer K. Flay and—in a first for the band—Avenged Sevenfold.
Nothing More made it a trifecta with their nomination in the Best Rock Album category, which also features Mastodon, Queens of the Stone Age with—in what is likely the only time you'll ever see these bands together in any context, bar a festival poster or two—Metallica and indie stalwarts The War on Drugs.
Mastodon managed