Elbow Win 2008 Mercury Prize
Alt-rockers Elbow have won this year’s Mercury Prize, edging out a tough field of nominees that included Radiohead, Burial and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss.
The Manchester-based quintet and their album “The Seldom Seen Kid” received the prestigious award at a ceremony in London Tuesday.
The $40,000 US prize, given annually to the best album from the U.K. or the Republic of Ireland, is voted on by a panel of music critics and experts.
Frontman Guy Garvey described winning the prize as “quite literally the best thing that’s ever happened to us,” and dedicated the honour to the band’s late friend Bryan Glancy, who inspired the record.
“He was one of the greatest men that ever lived,” Garvey told the audience.
“The Seldom Seen Kids” is Elbow’s fourth album and the second to receive a Mercury nomination. The band, who formed nearly two decades ago, received their first nod in 2001 courtesy of their debut record, “Asleep In The Back.”
This year’s shortlist of 12 nominees, announced back in July, included Radiohead’s “In Rainbows,” Burial’s “Untrue” and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss’s “Raising Sand.”
Klaxons took the prize last year for their debut album, “Myths of the Near Future.”