Tame Impala will wave the flag for Australia at the 63rd Grammy Awards (2021)
He is one of the most sought after artists and would sell out arenas and fields the world over if not for the COVID-19 pandemic, yet Kevin Parker, the man behind hallucinogenic/psychedelic rock outfit Tame Impala, is discreetly looking at an all the more serene re-visitation of the stage.
The Australian entertainer says he is anxious to play more modest settings over the late spring in front of a greater visit through his smash hit collection The Slow Rush, which has been delayed until the finish of one year from now.
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Kevin Parker's hallucinogenic pop wizardry is remunerated with a couple of Grammy selections for The Slow Rush, Tame Impala's fourth collection.
The Slow Rush is up for Best Alternative Music Album, and the single 'Lost in Yesterday' is up for Best Rock Song, a classification that additionally includes tracks by Phoebe Bridgers, Big Thief, Fiona Apple, and Brittany Howard.
In the United States, the album gave Tame Impala a most noteworthy ever graph appearance with a No. 3 introductions on the Billboard 200, upping the ante than their past best with Currents.
As indicated by Billboard, The Slow Rush scored 110,000 identical album units in its first week, around 80,000 of that figure coming in collection deals, effectively beating the 45,000 first-week deals of Currents.
In the U.K., The Slow Rush additionally opened at No. 3, approaching their best situation with Currents, which proceeded to win Parker and Co. the Brit Award for Best International Group, poking out U2 for the title.
Earlier today at ARIA, Kevin Parker won Album of the Year — the third time they've done as such — and Best Rock Album for The Slow Rush, the band's fourth record.
They additionally won Best Group, beating 5 Seconds of Summer, DMA'S, Lime Cordiale, and The Teskey Brothers, while Parker, who was intended to visit Australia with the band one week from now, won Engineer of the Year and Producer of the Year.