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Grammy nominations: North Carolina, represent

For the second straight year, an act with Triangle connections will be center-stage at next February's Grammy Awards. Where it was Arcade Fire this past year, next year it will be Bon Iver -- whose frontman Justin Vernon used to call Raleigh home.

Bon Iver scored nominations in the prestigious record and song of the year categories for "Holocene," a track from the group's eponymous 2011 album. That was part of a four-nomination haul including best alternative album and even best new artist.

The latter category is odd because "Bon Iver" was the group's third release -- and its first two both made the top half of the Billboard 200 album sales charts. One of the other best-new-artist nominees also has North Carolina connections, Fayetteville rapper J. Cole, nominated on the strength of his chart-topping album "Cole World: The Sideline Story."

Industry observer Sean Ross, executive editor of the Ross On Radio newsletter, cites Nicki Minaj as this year's worthiest best-new-artist nominee. But he predicts that Minaj won't win because she and J. Cole "will cancel each other out," which might allow Bon Iver to sneak in there the way Arcade Fire did for album of the year back in February.

"Then it's Bon Iver's people-who-propelled-Arcade-Fire vote versus The Band Perry's combination mainstream-audience vote and the never-insigificant 'I don't really follow new music but I hear they're good' vote," Ross said.

The nominations were announced Wednesday night at a Grammy concert at Staples Center in Los Angeles, where the awards will be presented Feb. 12. As expected, Adele's top-selling "21" album led the field with six nominations. Bruno Mars, Mumford & Sons, Rihanna and Lady Gaga all picked up multiple nominations in the major categories, too.

As for other nominations of North Carolina interest:

Eric Church, an Appalachian State alumnus from Granite Falls, was nominated for best country album, up against a field including Taylor Swift, Lady Antebellum and Jason Aldean.

North Carolina School of the Arts alumnus Jim Lauderdale, a two-time winner in past years, earned a nomination for best bluegrass album -- and also appears on a Tom T. Hall tribute album nominated for best children's album. Among Lauderdale's competition in the bluegrass category will be Brevard's Steep Canyon Rangers, sharing a nomination with comedian/banjo player Steve Martin.

Asheville guitarist Warren Haynes, a veteran of Gov't Mule and Allman Brothers, was nominated for best blues album.

Durham-based Merge Records, which captured last year's best-album Grammy with Arcade Fire, picked up a best-recording-package nomination for the expanded deluxe version of the same album. Zooey Deschanel, who records with M. Ward as the Merge duo She & Him, was also nominated in best song written for visual media, for the "Winnie the Pooh" song "So Long."

Marsalis Music, the label of Durham jazzman Branford Marsalis, scored in the category of best large jazz ensemble album for "Alma Adentro: The Puerto Rican Songbook."

Levon Helm's live album "Ramble at the Ryman," nominated for best Americana album, includes "Anna Lee," written by Greensboro's Laurelyn Dossett. That song has already been on one Grammy-winning album, Helm's "Dirt Farmer," which won best tradtional folk album in 2008.

ADDENDUM: Another nominee with local connections is recording engineer Miles Walker, who grew up in Raleigh and mostly works out of Atlanta. Walker engineered records that scored a total of eight nominations, including hits by Rhianna, Katy Perry and Wiz Khalifa, sharing the nomination on two of them -- Rhianna's album-of-the-year nod for "Loud," and Perry's record-of-the-year nomination for "Firework."

SECOND ADDENDUM: I received a pretty detailed response about who does and does not qualify as a "new" artist in Grammyland from another industry pundit, former USA Today music editor Ken Barnes. I'm fascinated in wonky stuff like this, so I'm passing along the whole thing:

As a 25-year Grammy voter, I've watched the definition of a new artist "evolve" from super-strict (one prior guest appearance on someone else's album disqualified Whitney Houston from new-artist consideration in the '80s) to the current, almost-anything-goes guidelines.

It's basically a wording problem at this point; if the category were called "best emerging artist" or "breakthrough artist" or something like that, it wouldn't be such a communications problem. Basically what the Grammys try to do is establish whether, with a particular album, an artist has achieved a breakthrough to the general public. If Bon Iver was considered a critical/indie/minority-taste hit prior to this record, then the Grammys would declare them eligible. If the Academy felt a breakthrough had occurred with a previous record, based on sales, airplay, critical acclaim, buzz, mass acceptance, etc., then no.

With only rather generally worded guidelines, it's always dicey, and standards tend to waffle. So there's always one or two "new artists" that stick in journalists' craws, for good reason.

The "House of Glam" is a nice place to visit

In this era of branding, the profile of the stylist has risen considerably. Those are the folks who pick the clothes for fashion shoots, videos, appearances; they help establish the image that creates a lasting impression.  Or at least the impression of the moment.

"The House of Glam" (Oxygen, 11 tonight; moving to Tuesdays at 10 next week, and then Wednesdays at 9, starting Nov. 3 -- I know, that's crazy) chronicles the adventures of the stylists of the B Lynn Group, an image agency that works with big name celebrities. In the first episode, everyone from P. Diddy to Rihanna to Kate Moss to Will Smith is name-dropped.

Naturally, because this is a reality show (Oh, I mean docu-series), there's drama amid all the fashion, but apropos of the atmosphere is seems to be mostly diva snits over artistic vision and compromise, and basic cattiness. It's a fashion show -- you know there has to be a lot of attitude living in this house.

What to Watch on Wednesday: Rihanna sings on "American Idol"

America's Next Top Model (8pm, CW) - The models pose at a photo shoot with comedian Ross Matthews (love him on "Chelsea Lately") and then visit New York's Garment District. Don't forget, there's an open casting call for ANTM in Raleigh - tomorrow!

American Idol (9pm, Fox) - Rihanna (left) sings and one contestant is eliminated. 

In Plain Sight (10pm, USA) - The first witnesses Mary and Marshall ever put into the protection program are in danger after a break-in. And through flashbacks we see how Mary came to join WITSEC in the first place.

Being Erica (10pm, SoapNet) - In the Season 2 finale, Erica is desperate for direction as she faces big decisions in her love life and career. This is a pretty decent little show, but I never have time to watch it. One day, I'm gonna sit down with Hulu and catch up

Top Chef Masters (11pm, Bravo) - Season Two debuts tonight with a new crop of master chefs and no shortage of egos.

What to Watch on Saturday: Stars come out for Kids' Choice Awards

NCAA Basketball Tournament (CBS) - The regional final games in Syracuse and Salt Lake City begin today at 4:30pm. Full schedule here


Kids' Choice Awards (8pm, Nickelodeon) - Kevin James hosts the 23rd annual awards show (there's an app for that) recognizing favorites of the younger crowd. Rihanna and Justin Beiber are scheduled to perform. Apolo Anton Ohno attempts a stunt with slime. Sandra Bullock, who is nominated in the Best Actress category for "Blind Side," has announced that she is skipping this year, thanks to her no good POS husband. (I'm bitter).  

Law & Order (9pm, NBC) - A repeat of the episode starring Samantha Bee as a journalist being blackmailed over an affair with a staffer. Loosely based on the David Letterman extortion case.

Dancing with the Stars (10pm, ABC) - A repeat of Monday's big debut featuring the "dancing" of Buzz Aldrin, Kate Gosselin, and Pamela Anderson (actually, Anderson wasn't that bad).

Rihanna: Chris Brown beat me 'like he had nothing to lose'

A couple of hours before "20/20" broadcast the interview of singer Rihanna by Diane Sawyer, I was involved in a three-way, sometimes loud, discussion about the Rihanna/Chris Brown incident.

The guy in the conversation, who is a good guy, basically said that it was odd that Chris Brown beat Rihanna for no reason, thus suggesting that somehow Rihanna was at fault somehow, and then said that he thought it unfair that Chris Brown was still a pariah. He feels that we (society) shouldn't hold celebrities to a higher standard, and, I guess, in real life Chris wouldn't be having it so hard.

Again, this is a good guy. And I hope he watched Rihanna's interview because she addressed all his issues.

Rihanna talks about domestic violence on "GMA"

Well, Rihanna has a new album coming out.

So it's time to talk about her relationship with Chris Brown and the night that he beat her.

And while it feels a bit like she's exploiting her own pain for a hit, this clip shows she's got some important things to say. Unlike Chris Brown's chat with Larry King, she speaks quite powerfully. (Mr. Brown apparently gives it another shot in the new revamped Vibe magazine. He's got an album coming too.)

Chris Brown says little on "Larry King Live"

After starting my morning with a looking-darn-good, but sounding-awfully-creaky Whitney ("I never left") Houston, I ended my night by watching another singer on a kind of redemption tour.

Chris Brown, his mama Joyce Hawkins and his lawyer Mark Geragos appeared on 'Larry King Live' last night, not explaining what happened between Chris and Rihanna that fateful night.

Lord knows Larry tried. He pretty much asked the same questions for the hour, trying to get Chris to explain what happened that night and what set him off.

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