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The Grammys' Best Rock Album Category May Pit Youngish Punks Against Ageless Vets

By Andy Greene

The Grammys' Best Rock Album Category May Pit Youngish Punks Against Ageless Vets

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Leading up to the Grammy nominations on Nov. 8, Rolling Stone is breaking down 13 different categories. For each, we're predicting the nominees, as well as who will (and who should) win on Grammy night.

The Rolling Stones

It's the tiredest of tired rock critic clichés to say the Rolling Stones have made their best record since 1981's Tattoo You, but there's an actual argument that they actually pulled it off with Hackney Diamonds. Expectations were low since they hadn't released an album of original songs since 2005's A Bigger Bang, they're all in their 80s now, and drummer Charlie Watts died in 2021. But working closely with producer Andrew Watt over the course of just a few weeks, they hammered out a series of excellent songs like "Angry," "Sweet Sounds of Heaven," and "Bite My Head Off" that fit seamlessly into the set lists of their summer stadium tour. "Andrew Watt has the magic touch," says Jason Squires, program director of KFRR in Fresno, California. "And you don't count these guys out ever, ever, ever."

The Rolling Stones

Pearl Jam, Blink-182, and Green Day all released stellar albums, but none stood miles above their best work of the 2000s. Mick, Keith, and the band, meanwhile, haven't even attempted a record of new songs since the uneven A Bigger Bang. Most fans presumed they'd never get around to it. And nobody expected anything even remotely on the level of Hackney Diamonds. The album is an absolute miracle and the Stones richly deserve another Grammy: the band has been awarded a scant three Grammys across their six-decade career. "I really think it's going to the Stones this year," says SiriusXM DJ Justin Kade. "It's kind of how you give someone an MVP or lifetime achievement award."

Kade says Billie Joe Armstrong and co. are the ones to watch in this race -- and deserving. "Give Green Day their flowers," he says. "They're intelligent, funny, crazy...the whole package. They always deliver. They are the saviors of rock." But Squire won't rule out Blink-182, whose reunion tour was a massive success. "They could have just done the reunion and played shows, but they really put some effort into this," he says of One More Time. "It really reconnected them with their fans." Pearl Jam are also making some of their best work, joining superfan Andrew Watt in the studio just days after the producer finished the Stones' Hackney Diamonds. It's a classic PJ record highlighted by the anthemic "Scared of Fear," the frenetic "Running," and the mellow "Setting Sun." "Pearl Jam are survivors," Kade says. But neither he nor Squire think country legend Dolly Parton -- inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2022 -- will break on through. Her all-star collabs album Rockstar just wasn't raw enough. Says Squires, "It was a little too puffed up for me overall."

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