NEW YORK (AP) " The Latest on the 60th annual Grammy Awards being presented Sunday night in New York (all times local):
4:15 p.m.
Jay-Z's producer says he doesn't want to enflame tensions between Donald Trump and Jay-Z.
No. I.D., who produced Jay-Z's Grammy-nominated "4:44," says he hopes the rap legend and Trump are able to talk about their differences after Jay-Z criticized the president and Trump fired back.
The producer says the back-and-forth is "a conversation that needs to occur."
Trump tweeted Sunday the wanted Jay-Z to know at "because of my policies," unemployment among black Americans is at the "LOWEST RATE EVER RECORDED!" That appeared to be in response to a CNN interview in which the rapper said the president's vulgar comments about African countries and Haiti were "disappointing" and "hurtful."
Guitarist Robert Randolph just learned about the president's tweet Sunday afternoon but wasn't sure calling out Jay-Z or his wife, Beyonce, was the wisest decision. He jokes, "Now it's a rap battle!"
" Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet.
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4:10 p.m.
The late engineer Tom Coyne has won a posthumous Grammy Award for his work on Bruno Mars' "24K Magic."
It's the seventh Grammy for Coyne, who died in April from cancer. Coyne, the master engineer on the album, shared in the award for best engineered album, non-classical, with engineers Serban Ghenea, John Hanes and Charles Moniz.
Coyne worked on hit recordings for Adele, Beyonce, Metallica and Taylor Swift in his decades-long career. He won last year for Adele's Record of the Year winner "Hello." Coyne earned 37 nominations in total before his death.
Ghenea and Hanes, who accepted the Grammy, dedicate the award to Coyne.
"I know this would have been really special for him," Ghenea said backstage. "He's won many Grammys before but never the best engineered album. This would have meant a lot to him."
" Jake Coyle (@jakecoyleAP) backstage at the Grammy Awards.
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4:05 p.m.
Carrie Fisher has won a posthumous Grammy Award for her "The Princess Diarist."
Fisher died in December 2016 at age 60. The Grammy is awarded for her audio recording of her memoir based on diaries she kept around the time she starred in the first "Star Wars" film in 1977.
The announcement was greeted with loud cheers in the theater where dozens of early Grammy Awards are being announced Sunday.
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3:50 p.m.
Tom Petty is on the minds of many entering the Grammy Awards.
Singer-songwriter Lisa Loeb calls Petty's music "the soundtrack of my life." She says she was at his final concert at the Hollywood Bowl in late September.
Petty died in October at age 66 from an accidental drug overdose. She called his final performance an amazing concert, and says he is such a loss.
Petty is one of several high-profile artists who died over the past year, including Chris Cornell, Gregg Allman, Chester Bennington and, most recently, Dolores O'Riordan of The Cranberries.
Songwriter Diane Warren called the loss of Petty a shame, adding "There are so many great artists who didn't have to go."
Country superstar Reba McEntire called Petty a great mentor, a cool dude and a sweet person. She says what she loved about Petty was that "he knew what he wanted and he wasn't going to take any route left or right."
" Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet.
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3:30 p.m.
The 60th annual Grammy Awards are underway with the first awards being handed out in the dance and electronic music categories.
LCD Soundsystem won the first awarded handed out Sunday during the Grammys pre-telecast ceremony that hands out dozens of honors in various genres.
The festivities are being led by musician Paul Shaffer, who laid out the ground rules: including telling winners to stand up and announce themselves when they win.
LCD Soundsystem won for best dance recording for its song "Tonight."
No one from band was on hand to accept the honor, which led Shaffer to call over a young woman who was on stage to assist winners and by calling her "darling" and handing her the Grammy.
Shaffer told the woman, "When I say darling, I mean it with the utmost, #MeToo kind of respect."
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2:45 p.m.
The sea of black at the Golden Globes has given way to a small forest of flowers at the Grammys.
Plenty of musicians and artists took to the red carpet Sunday sporting white roses to show their solidarity with the Time's Up organization, which hopes to support women with legal and financial help who raise sexual misconduct complaints.
Allen Hughes is the director of the "The Defiant Ones" and wore two small roses on his lapel. He says he believes every voice should be heard and that's why he wore the roses. Plus, he says, "I'm a feminist."
Most stars wore black and a Time's Up pin in support of the movement at the Golden Globes earlier this month. Fewer wore roses at the Grammys, but some were just being rock stars.
Songwriter Diane Warren skipped the rose but wore two white gloves " one with the word "girl" and one with "power." She's a nominee for the 15th time.
She says, "I didn't want to wear the rose. I'm a rebel."
" Mark Kennedy (@KennedyTwits) on the Grammys red carpet.
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10 a.m.
Though Adele's win for album of the year at last year's Grammys wasn't a complete surprise, it marked another loss for Beyonce in the show's major category.
The Recording Academy was heavily criticized for not rewarding "Lemonade," an album that moved the needle and dominated pop culture in different ways than Adele's colossal sales.
Critics felt the Academy failed to recognize the artistic elements of an R&B-based album, in the same ways they have passed over albums by Kanye West, Eminem and Mariah Carey for projects by rock, country and jazz artists.
But Sunday's Grammys are almost guaranteeing this year is different. Most of the album, song and record of the year nominees are rap, R&B and Latino artists, including Jay-Z, Kendrick Lamar, Bruno Mars, Luis Fonsi and Childish Gambino.
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Online:
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