T Bone Burnett used to hide its Grammy Awards for views

T Bone Burnett used to keep his Grammy Awards hidden away.
The 77 -year -old Studio Wizard – who has worked with greatnesses, including Elvis, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson and Sir Ringo Starr – admitted that he put the 13 trophies he has been awarded over the years in his closet because watching them would put him under pressure to achieve more.
He said to Grammy.com: “When I lived in Los Angeles there was a period when we won the award by price. Grammys and Oscars and Baftas and American Music or CMA. And I got them all in a closet because the last thing You will think about when you make music is whether you get a trophy for it.
However, when he moved to Nashville, he decided to put some of them on screen to remind himself of his successes.
He added: “But when I moved to Nashville, I actually brought them out. I have a shelf for Grammys. I enjoy them now. In Los Angeles it felt for me Gauche to show a bunch of trophies. And I still have only a few of them because there are too many, but I like to see them. I’m old now, I’m 76, so it’s good to remember that I used to do it. “
Burnett served Grammys for soundtrack including ‘O brother, where are you?’, ‘Cold Mountain’, ‘Walk the Line’ and ‘Crazy Heart’.
And the producer-and-songwriter could be set to add another trophy to his collection, with his solo album ‘The Other Side’ nominated for Best Americana album at this year’s Ceremony, which takes place on February 2nd at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
Meanwhile, Burnett recently collaborated with the Beatles drummer Ringo, 84, on his land album ‘Look Up’, as he says is his “thank you” to the music legend “for everything he has given us”.
He said, “In many ways, it’s the culmination of a dream I’ve lived since 1964. It was a chance to give something back to Ringo for everything I feel he has given us. It was a way of saying ‘thank you’.
“It’s a pretty deep record. I’m really proud of it, I have to say, even though I understand that Pride goes before a fall. I love the record. The last song on it is ‘grateful’, it’s a song he wrote, and it’s the most personal, honest song I think he has ever recorded. And I think it was Varpen and Woof of the whole record; The whole record is about gratitude. “