2014 Latin Grammy Awards: Marc Anthony, Pitbull, Chris Brown & More Take the Stage—Plus, the Winners List!

Find out which Latin artist walked away with a top honor tonight!

By Bruna Nessif Nov 21, 2014 4:43 AMTags
Marc AnthonyEthan Miller/Getty Images

Talk about a quinces to remember!

Tonight marked the 15th annual Latin Grammy Awards show hosted by Mexican actors Eugenio Derbez and Jaqueline Bracamontes at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

A number of familiar faces walked the green carpet ahead of the show, including newlyweds Marc Anthony and Shannon De Lima (who made their official debut as a married couple), Pitbull, Ricky Martin and more!

However, the start of the show was delayed due to a 16-minute long speech by President Barack Obama, who addressed the nation on forthcoming changes with handling undocumented immigrants.

Once his speech ended, regularly scheduled programming continued and Puerto Rican duo (and multiple award winners) Calle 13 took the stage to kickoff the show with a performance of their song "El Aguante." They also took a moment to share a heartfelt message to the world regarding the 43 students killed in Mexico.

"We can't let this continue to happen in our times, que viva Mexico!" Resident said before being greeted with a standing ovation.

Along with honoring some of Latin music's greatest artists, the audience was entertained with a variety of performances, including Pitbull, Chris Brown, Wisin, Pablo Alboran, Jesse & Joy, Yandel, Farruko, Espinoza Paz, La Arrolladora Banda el Limon, Carlos Santana and a mega medley by Juanes.

Anthony performed more than once, and even took on a duet with Magic!, singing a Spanish rendition of their hit song "Rude."

At the end of the telecast, the Latin Grammys showed a montage video to pay tribute to the musicians who passed away in 2014, including Diomedes Diaz, Paco de Lucia, Cheo Feliciano, Juan Formell, Nelson Ned and Gustavo Cerati.

Now, the winners:

Record of the year: "Universos Paralelos" — Jorge Drexler, featuring Ana Tijoux
Album of the year: "Canción Andaluza" — Paco de Lucía
Song of the year: "Bailando" — Descemer Bueno, Gente De Zona and Enrique Iglesias
New artist: Mariana Vega
Contemporary pop vocal album:
"Elypse" — Camila
Traditional pop vocal album: "Fonseca Sinfónico" — Fonseca
Urban performance: "Bailando" — Enrique Iglesias, featuring Descemer Bueno and Gente De Zona
Urban music album: "MultiViral" — Calle 13
Urban song: "Bailando" — Descemer Bueno, Gente De Zona and Enrique Iglesias
Rock album: "Agua Maldita" — Molotov
Pop/Rock album:
"Loco De Amor" — Juanes
Rock song: "Cuando No Estás" — Andrés Calamaro
Alternative music album: "Romantisísmico" — Babasónicos
Alternative song: "El Aguante" — Calle 13
Salsa album: "3.0" — Marc Anthony
Cumbia/Vallenato album: "Celedón Sin Fronteras 1" — Jorge Celedón and various artists
Contemporary tropical album: "Más + Corazón Profundo" — Carlos Vives
Traditional tropical album:
"Grandes Exitos De Las Sonoras, Con La Más Grande, La Sonora Santanera" — La Sonora
Tropical song:
"Cuando Nos Volvamos A Encontrar" — Andrés Castro and Carlos Vives
Singer-songwriter album: "Bailar En La cueva" — Jorge Drexler
Ranchero album: "Lástima Que Sean Ajenas" — Pepe Aguilar
Banda album: "Haciendo Historia" — Banda El Recodo De Don Cruz Lizarrag
Tejano album: "Forever Mazz" — Jimmy González and Grupo Mazz
Norteño album: "Amor Amor" — Conjunto Primavera
Regional song: "De Mil Amores" — Marco Antonio Solís, songwriter (Marco Antonio Solís)
Instrumental album: "Final Night At Birdland" — Arturo O'Farrill and The Chico O'Farrill Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra
Folk album:
"Raíz" — Lila Downs, Niña Pastori y Soledad
Tango album: "Tangos" — Rubén Blades
Flamenco album: "Canción Andaluza" — Paco de Lucía
Latin jazz album: Tie: "The Vigil" — Chick Corea, "Song For Maura" — Paquito D'Rivera & Trio Corrente
Christian album (Spanish language): "La Carta Perfecta - En Vivo" — Danilo Montero
Christian album (Portuguese language): "Graça" — Aline Barros
Brazilian contemporary pop album: "Multishow Ao Vivo – Ivete Sangalo 20 Anos" — Ivete Sangalo
Brazilian rock album:
"Gigante Gentil" — Erasmo Carlos
Samba/pagode album: "Coração A Batucar" — Maria Rita
MPB (Musica Popular Brasileira) Album:
"Verdade, Uma Ilusão" — Marisa Monte
Sertaneja music album: "Questão De Tempo" — Sérgio Reis
Brazilian roots album: "Amigo Da Arte" — Alceu Valença
Brazilian song:
"A Bossa Nova É Foda" — Caetano Veloso, songwriter (Caetano Veloso)
Latin children's album: "Coloreando: Traditional Songs For Children In Spanish" — Marta Gómez & Friends
Classical album: "Verdi" — Plácido Domingo; Christopher Alder, album producer
Classical contemporary composition:
"Concierto Para Violín y Orquesta De Cuerdas" — Claudia Montero, composer (Claudia Montero)
Recording package: "Wed 21" — Alejandro Ros, art director (Juana Molina)
Engineered album:
"De Repente" — Juber Anbín, Johnnatan García, Rodner Padilla, Eduardo Pulgar, Vladimir Quintero Mora, Jean Sánchez & Alexander Vanlawren, engineers; Germán Landaeta & Darío Peñaloza, mixers; Germán Landaeta, mastering engineer (C4 Trío y Rafael ""Pollo"" Brito)
Producer of the year: Sergio George
Short form music video: "Flamingo" — La Vida Bohème | Leonardo Gonzalez, Pablo Iranzo & Carl Zitelman, video directors; Debbie Crosscup & César Elster, video producers
Long form music video:
"El Objeto Antes Llamado Disco - La Película" — Café Tacvba | Gregory Allen, video director; Café Tacvba, video producers