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imageLONDON: Astronaut Tim Peake presented Adele with a Brit Award from space on Wednesday, as the singer swept the board at the annual British music awards rendered sober this year by the death of David Bowie.

"We're all huge fans up here," Peake said in a recorded message from the International Space Station, adding that the superstar singer had "taken the world by storm".

He presented Adele with a global success award for her record-breaking latest album "25", which also won album of the year, while "Hello" won best single and she was also named best female solo artist.

Adele took to the stage in tears, saying: "My kid is going to think I'm so cool."

She added: "Not bad for a girl from Tottenham that don't like flying, getting global success. And Tim Peake, I love you, I hope you're okay and not too hungry. Bye."

The Londoner had earlier used an acceptance speech to publicly support Kesha, the US pop star who accused her producer of allegedly abusing her for years.

In another emotional moment, Gary Oldman and Annie Lennox paid heartfelt tribute to Bowie, the British rock legend who died unexpectedly from cancer last month.

"David, you were mortal but your potential was superhuman and your remarkable music is living on. We love you and we thank you," Oldman said.

Rumours of an all-star tribute act proved wide of the mark, with Bowie's old band instead taking to the stage to perform "Life on Mars" with Lorde, an artist he had championed.

- Dedicated to refugees -

Coldplay opened the night and took home their fourth Brit award for best group for their seventh and possibly last LP, "A Head Full of Dreams".

Lead singer Chris Martin dedicated the award to "all the young men and women musicians in refugee camps around the world. They could be us and we could be them, so we send them our love and thank you so much for giving us our job".

Meanwhile Justin Bieber, who performed with best British solo artist James Bay, was named best international solo artist.

Rihanna, who delayed the start of her world tour and missed the Grammys last week due to illness, shook up London's 02 Arena with a rendition of her new song "Work" with a special appearance by Drake.

- 'Making British music boring' -

The Brit Awards unashamedly celebrate commercial success, but in an echo of the storm surrounding the Oscars, organisers have this year come under fire for the scarcity of black or ethnic minority nominees.

"You know when you've got that little bit of hope and that little bit of faith and then they didn't," he told BBC Radio 1.

Laura Mvula, a soul singer shortlisted for the critic's choice award at the 2013 Brits, told the BBC she would not be attending this year because of "the diversity issue".

Organisers said the Brits tended to honour artists "who have achieved the very highest levels of chart success", but acknowledged that it might be time to take a "fresh look" at how the nominees are chosen.

They announced plans for a new advisory committee to help them more effectively acknowledge diverse talent.

Alexis Petridis, the Guardian newspaper's rock and pop critic, has accused the Brits of "making British pop music look more boring than it actually is".

He said the absence of grime artists in particular gave the impression that British music is "an endless sea of rounded-edge singer-songwriters, derivative pop-house and middling, putatively 'alt' rock".

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2016

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