
Chuck Crisafulli
Chuck Crisafulli is a Recording Academy/GRAMMY.com contributor.
Chuck Crisafulli is a Recording Academy/GRAMMY.com contributor.
Find out how the GRAMMY Museum's 2018 Jane Ortner Education Award recipient merges hip-hop and history for the benefit of her students at South Middle School in Oregon.
Love: It's an emotion that has inspired singers and songwriters for centuries. But what makes a great love song truly great?
Dangerous subway rides, puppies, and more. Between the awards and performances, we keyed in on host James Corden and here are the top moments we saw.
He's ready for GRAMMY Week, are you? Clive Davis reminisces about past Pre-GRAMMY Gala performances that stand out as favorites and talks current projects.
Holograms, RFID bracelets and virtual reality — learn more about the new technologies having a profound impact on the way we experience live music in concert.
The GRAMMY-winning blues guitarist sheds light on who has left him starstruck, his essential blues recordings and how his kids play into where he keeps his GRAMMY.
You've likely heard the '90s classic "Damn I Wish I Was Your Lover." Find out more about that song's "amazing little sister" and learn why mystery equals beauty in songwriting, according to Sophie B. Hawkins.
Making great music is always a challenge. But making a career of making music presents a second challenge: finding an audience who enjoys your music enough to spend money on it.
GRAMMY nominee recalls the genesis of the deep track "Everyday It's 1989" from 2008's Last Night and why — as far as songs go — the obscure rules.
(The Making Of GRAMMY-Winning Recordings series presents firsthand accounts of the creative process behind some of music's biggest recordings.
(The Making Of GRAMMY-Winning Recordings series presents firsthand accounts of the creative process behind some of music's biggest recordings.
(The Making Of GRAMMY-Winning Recordings series presents firsthand accounts of the creative process behind some of music's biggest recordings.
The sound. The look. The songs. The drama.
An offhand remark completely changed the lives of Natalie Maines, Emily Robison and Martie Maguire, collectively known as the Dixie Chicks.
The numbers are astounding: 20 weeks in the No. 1 spot on the Billboard 200 and more than 45 million copies sold worldwide.