The Classical Brit awards took place last night – they're much like the pop Brits only Joss Stone isn't around to ramble incoherently and Lauren Laverne isn't contractually obliged to describe a phoned-in, off-key Oasis set as "amazing."
They're not the only differences between the Classical Brits and the pop Brits, though – the Classical Brits are unique in that they're the only Brits ceremony that still think Paul McCartney is any good at making music. Paul McCartney's classical, partly Latin oratorio for his dead wife Linda entitled Ecce Cor Meum won the Best Album award at last night's Classical Brits, a choice that some critics are deriding as pandering to celebrity culture. To those people we say 'just be thankful that Sting didn't win anything, you dusty old bastard.'
Let's call it The Curse Of The Bassist. Inevitably, when a bassist has spent enough time hitting the four same bass strings over and over again while all the girls look at the singer, they're going to want to prove themselves. Tragically, most of them seem to want to do this by wanking up a pretentious slab of classical music to make them look cleverer and more deep than they actually are.
Last year Roger Waters from Pink Floyd decided to set the standard by winning a Classical Brit for an opera he cruelly decided to subject people to and, eager to maximise on this win, two other bassists decided that they'd give this bloody classical thing a go this year too.
That's why both Sting and Paul McCartney got Classical Brits nominations this year; Paul McCartney for his hour-long oratorio for his dead wife Linda Ecce Cor Meum and Sting for his abominably bad collection of godawful Elizabethan lute songs that he inexplicably chose to sing like someone was trying to push a length of plastic tubing into his throat during the recording sessions. And the good news – well, the marginally better news anyway – is that Paul McCartney won the Best Album Classical Brit, allowing him to do his "aw shucks, you really like little old billion-selling millionaire megastar me?" shtick for the first time in a few years. The Independent reports:
Picking up his award, Sir Paul said: "It's such a huge honour for me to get this. If you'd told me as a kid in Liverpool that I would be at the Royal Albert Hall picking up an award I would not have believed you. How proud would my mum and dad have been if they had known this could happen?''
Although the classical music purists have dismissed Ecce Cor Meum as "easy listening soup," winning a Classical Brit means that Paul McCartney is at once both validated as a classical artist and able to forget that he's being divorced by a one-legged woman who wants £10,000 from him every day. Paul McCartney wasn't the only winner at the Classical Brits last night, but he was the only one you'll have heard of, so we won't bother telling you the others.
Plus, Paul McCartney winning a Classical Brit means that Sting didn't get the chance to. While Sting might have temporarily been upset that his unspeakably pretentious 16th Century masturbatolute album Songs From The Labyrinth didn't win the award, thus depriving him of another chance to take his shirt off and aim his nipples at various appalled pensioners, we're sure that Sting can return to his seven houses, think about all the money he'll make from the reunion of The Police and sit back safe in the knowledge that – by publishing a book of his own lyrics – he's already obliterated the Classical Brits in terms of pretention anyway.
So our sincerest congratulations go to Paul McCartney for winning a Classical Brit award – and for also making the first classical album ever that says "I didn't fucking stab you in the arm you one-legged bastard" when you play it backwards. True story.
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Brian Quinn says
Paul McCartney winning a Classical Award. How pathetic. It seems that such awards are now given to the biggest named celebrities who will turn up to receive them. This gives the event more prestige. Strange that no deceased artists ever win any awards.
Annie McCarthy says
Songs From The Labyrointh was a wonderful album and frankly I don’t care what you think.SO take your oipinion about Sting and Stick it.
Chris in Cyprus says
Perhaps if the awards are held in a Nursing Home in Eastbourne next year Macca and Sting will turn up again. Lets just hope that they don’t do a joint album so that they win.