<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/issues/2021-spring/grammys-gold-rush.html" dsn="news"><item_date>12/15/2020 12:00:00 AM</item_date><category_header/><title>Grammys Gold Rush</title><subheader>UNT alumni and faculty reap nominations for music's most prestigious award in an array of categories -- from jazz and opera to metal and rap.</subheader><description>UNT alumni, faculty reap nominations in an array of categories.</description><author>Heather Noel</author><photographer> </photographer><image><img src="" width="900" height="676" alt="" title="Lecrae Moore"/></image><taxonomy-story-type/><taxonomy-cultural-story-category>Music</taxonomy-cultural-story-category><taxonomy-news-sections/><taxonomy-college-department>College of Music</taxonomy-college-department><taxonomy-tags>culture</taxonomy-tags><type>story</type><categories/><relationships/><main-content>
    
    
  
    Continuing the legacy of creative excellence, more than a dozen UNT alumni and faculty have earned nominations or collaborated on projects nominated in the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards.

From Best Country Song to Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album, UNT faculty and alumni were recognized across 15 categories in the nominations announced Nov. 24.

Winners at the March 14 ceremony include Bobby Sessions, co-writer of the Best Rap Song; Snarky Puppy, Best Contemporary Instrumental Album; and Latonia Moore, Best Opera Recording. 

College of Music faculty member Scott Tixier performed violin on John Legend’s “Bigger Love,” winner of Best R&amp;B Album. Saxophonist Dave Pietro (’87) played with the Maria Schneider Orchestra, which won for Best Instrumental Composition and Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album.

Over the years, alumni, faculty and staff from the globally respected College of Music have worked on numerous Grammy-nominated and Grammy-winning projects. Seven nominations alone have gone to students, composers and arrangers in UNT's premier jazz ensemble, the One O'Clock Lab Band, in previous years.

"We're proud to see that many of our College of Music alumni and faculty members have been nominated for or contributed to Grammy-nominated projects for 2021. Although not the only measurement of success, being nominated for a Grammy is an extraordinary accomplishment and we send a heartfelt congratulations to all who were recognized," College of Music Dean John W. Richmond says.

Alumni and faculty from across UNT colleges and schools were nominated or part of projects nominated in the 2021 awards (people with UNT ties in bold):
  


  
    
      
      
        Norah Jones      
    
    Best American Roots Performance

  Mavis Staples and alumna Norah Jones – "I'll Be Gone"

Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella

  Jeremy Levy Jazz Orchestra – "Uranus: The Magician"
  Alumni Tom Luer (tenor saxophone) and Jeff Driskill (tenor saxophone)


  Remy Le Boeuf – "Honeymooners"
  Faculty member Philip Dizack (trumpet) and alumnus Ben Kono (tenor saxophone and clarinet)


  Becca Stevens featuring Jacob Collier – Talia Billig, Nic Hard &amp; Becca Stevens – "Slow Burn"
  Alumni Justin Stanton (keyboards) and Nate Werth (percussion)

Best Contemporary Instrumental Album

  Alumni Michael League, Shaun Martin, Justin Stanton, Chris Bullock and Mike Maher of Snarky Puppy – "Live at The Royal Albert Hall"
  


  
    
      
      
        Lecrae Moore      
    
    Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song


	Alumnus Lecrae Moore – "Sunday Morning"


Best Country Song


	Alumna Maren Morris – "The Bones"


Best Gospel Performance/Song


	Alumnus Lecrae Moore – "Come Together"


Best Instrumental Composition


	Remy Le Bouef – "Strata"
	Alumnus Ben Kono (tenor saxophone and clarinet)



	Maria Schneider – "Sputnik"
	Alumnus Dave Pietro (alto saxophone, clarinet, piccolo, flute and alto flute)


Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album


	Maria Schneider Orchestra – "Data Lords"
	Alumnus Dave Pietro (alto saxophone, clarinet, piccolo, flute and alto flute)


Best Latin Jazz Album


	Poncho Sanchez – "Trane's Delight"
	Alumnus Ross Schodek (bass)


Best Metal Performance


	Power Trip – "Executioner's Tax (Swing of The Axe) – Live"
	Alumni Riley Gale and Blake Ibanez


Best Opera Recording


	Metropolitan Opera – "Porgy and Bess"
	Alumna Latonia Moore as Serena


Best Rap Song


	Alumnus Bobby Sessions, Beyoncé, Shawn Carter, Brittany Hazzard, Derrick Milano, Terius Nash, Megan Pete, Jordan Kyle Lanier Thorpe &amp; Anthony White – "Savage"


Best R&amp;B Album


	John Legend – "Bigger Love"
	Faculty member Scott Tixier (jazz violin)


Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album


	Harry Connick, Jr. – "True Love: A Celebration of Cole Porter"
	Alumnus Dan Higgins (saxophone)


Music Educator Award


	Alumna Michelle Herring Folta, an associate professor of choral/general music education at Columbus State University in Georgia, is one of 10 finalists for the award recognizing educators who have made a significant and lasting contribution to the field of music education.

  


  
    Read about how guitarist Blake Ibanez relishes the band Power Trip's Grammy Award nomination after lead singer Riley Gale's death and a tumultuous year.
  



    
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