Awards
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The walls that separate genres are coming down, which complicates things for the screening committee that decides where records should compete in the annual Grammy Awards process.
Here are some albums that probably gave the screening committee pause – and where they are competing in the 66th annual Grammy Awards process:
Bruce Springsteen’s Only the Strong Survive, a collection of classic R&B and soul songs, is competing for a nod for best traditional pop vocal album. (There is no traditional R&B album category.) The traditional pop category, long the domain of such crooners as Tony Bennett and Michael Bublé, has embraced more contemporary pop and rock artists in recent years. Winners since 2000 include Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now, Paul McCartney’s Kisses on the Bottom, Elvis Costello & the Imposters’ Look Now and James Taylor’s American Standards.
Springsteen has won album awards in three different categories – best contemporary folk album for The Ghost of Tom Joad (1996), best rock album for The Rising (2002) and best traditional folk album for We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006).
Shania Twain’s Queen of Me, which reached No. 2 on Top Country Albums and No. 10 on the Billboard 200, is vying for a nod for best pop vocal album. The crossover star won best country album for The Woman in Me (1996).
The 1975’s Being Funny in a Foreign Language is vying for a nod for best pop vocal album rather than best rock album or best alternative music album. The band’s only Grammy nod to date was for its song “Give Yourself a Try,” which was nominated for best rock song four years ago.
Hozier’s Unreal Unearth is vying for a nod for best rock album, but Arctic Monkeys’ The Car is competing for a nod for best alternative music album. Lana Del Rey’s Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd, Boygenius’ The Record and Gorillaz’s Cracker Island are also vying for nods in the best alternative music album category.
Kali Uchis’ Red Moon in Venus is competing for a nod for best progressive R&B album, where it faces SZA’s blockbuster SOS, as well as high-profile albums like Daniel Caesar’s Never Enough, Diddy’s The Love Album: Off the Grid and Janelle Monae’s The Age of Pleasure.
Barbie: The Album and Metro Boomin Presents Spider-Man: Across the Spider Verse, both of which reached the top 10 on the Billboard 200, are vying for nods for best compilation soundtrack for visual media.
Noah Kahan’s Stick Season is competing for a nod for best Americana album. The album has been a hit on a broad range of charts. It reached No. 1 on Rock & Alternative Albums and Americana/Folk Albums and No. 3 on the Billboard 200.
First-round voting for the 66th annual Grammy Awards opened on Wednesday (Oct. 11) and closes Oct. 20. Nominees will be announced on Nov. 10 (five days earlier than last year). The final-round voting window extends from Dec. 14 through Jan. 4, 2023 (same as last year). Winners will be announced on Sunday, Feb. 4, 2024, at Crypto.com Arena (formerly known as Staples Center) in Los Angeles.
Early in his emergence as a national country artist, Keith Urban assembled a string of singles that reveled in the moment.
“Days Go By,” “Who Wouldn’t Wanna Be Me,” “Somebody Like You,” “Raining on Sunday” and “You’re My Better Half” — some of them from the appropriately named album Be Here — celebrated living life in the present rather than wallowing in the past or stressing about the future. Mastering that is one of the biggest challenges of day-to-day existence in the device-encumbered 21st century. But it has always been a huge hurdle for creators, particularly when business — with its need to plan future marketing and account for past expenses — distracts from making art in the moment.
Urban and fellow composers Kix Brooks, David Lee Murphy, Casey Beathard and Rafe Van Hoy will face an intersection of past, present and future tonight (Oct. 11) when they’re officially inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. The event at the Music City Center is by definition a celebration that occurs in the moment, but it’s an achievement built on previous accomplishments, and the enshrinement creates a marker that will exist in a permanent future.
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Urban is likely as prepared for that clash of time stamps as is possible, given how often he has encouraged listeners to grab the moment as it arrives. He recognizes the importance of embracing the now as a steppingstone between the established past and the unknown future.
“I like feeling a part of a through line,” he says, “where I’ve come from, how I got to be where I am, but mostly, I’ve always looked forward.”
Finding the glory in a moment is frequently the task at hand in writing hits. Many fans, often when commuting to or from a job they dislike, look to find escape in recordings that help make their present moments better.
Songs that focus on the instant as it passes can certainly accomplish that, though material that draws on the past or imagines a future event can have value in the current moment, too. Figuring out what kind of song to create is frequently a decision best made by reading the room.
“I like those live-in-the-moment kind of things because I try to [live like] that,” Murphy says. “But I look back fondly on things that I’ve done. So I just kind of take them as they come.”
Murphy has indeed created some lasting songs in present tense: His own “Party Crowd,” the Kenny Chesney hit “Living in Fast Forward” and Jason Aldean’s “Big Green Tractor” all focus on events as they unfold. His 1996 hit “The Road You Leave Behind” leans on past childhood lessons to create a worthwhile present, and his Chesney duet, “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright,” applies optimism to future uncertainty.
The other Hall of Fame entrants have similar mixes. Beathard’s “Don’t Blink,” made famous by Chesney, employs a centenarian character whose advice for successful living is to experience each moment while it’s here. The Eric Church co-write “Like a Wrecking Ball” anticipates a rockin’ bedroom in the very near future. And Beathard’s Jeff Bates hit, “The Love Song,” looks back to understand key relationships.
Brooks’ hit list as a writer includes The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s backward-glancing “Modern Day Romance,” Brooks & Dunn’sright-now declaration “Brand New Man” and a celebration of future possibilities, “Only in America.” But he was living in the present when he wrote it.
Brooks remembers that “Only in America” came together after he and songwriters Don Cook and Ronnie Rogers had spent the day four-wheeling. He describes it as “grown men getting corny, just going, ‘God, are we lucky to be born on this part of the planet?’ We complain about our world sometimes, but man, you know, we are blessed to just have been born here. No matter what your background is, the opportunity is there.”
Creating in the present is tricky — yoga and meditation are currently trendy in part because people find it so difficult to tune into what’s happening now. That’s one of the hurdles that makes the songwriting process — and any other creative endeavors — so challenging. Younger songwriters who are just sticking their toes in the water are prone to get distracted by imagining the song’s future as they create it. Veteran writers more often get hung up by their accumulated experience, measuring the current writing session against previous successes and failures.
The now, of course, is all that’s available. Getting rid of the years of clutter from the past is key to making the most of each fleeting moment as it passes.
“A friend of mine said I had beginner’s mind,” notes Urban. “And I think that’s probably what it is, where I truly walk into a studio to make a record, almost thinking, ‘How do I do this? What? How?’ Where I have no real feelings at all that I’ve ever done a record. And it’s not something I have to try to do. It’s just naturally how I feel. It’s a blank canvas, and it feels very fresh and brand new and exhilarating and anxiety-ridden and everything all at once.”
As simple as that sounds, time is a jumble. Even when writing in the present tense, most songs are informed by other time frames. As an example, the biggest hit for the late John Jarrard, who’ll be added to the Hall of Fame as a legacy entry, was arguably George Strait’s “Blue Clear Sky,” which centered on the instant when a single person recognizes their soul mate. But the present has power because it’s informed by past disappointments. And Jarrard quite often mixed time frames. The Collin Raye cut “My Kind of Girl” and Tracy Lawrence’s “Is That a Tear” paired verses grounded in the past with choruses firmly in the current moment, and his John Schneider cut, “What’s a Memory Like You (Doing in a Love Like This),” blends past and present in a troubling haze.
Van Hoy, meanwhile, earned his first hit with George Jones & Tammy Wynette’s“Golden Ring,” a story song that traces a series of present-tense events in the life cycle of a piece of jewelry. His most enduring song — “What’s Forever For,” recorded numerous times before Michael Martin Murphey cut the hit version — is obsessed with the future.
The Hall of Fame inductees have mostly come to terms with that issue. As they celebrate the present moment at the Oct. 11 ceremony, they have enough past experience to recognize the successful futures they created weren’t necessarily shaped by the songs they expected.
“You never know,” Van Hoy says, “which of those are going to connect and hang around.”
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Composer and songwriter Marc Shaiman will receive the outstanding career achievement award at the 14th annual Hollywood Music in Media Awards. The ceremony is set for Wednesday, Nov. 15 at 8:00 p.m. at The Avalon in Hollywood. Past recipients of that career honor include Kenny Loggins, Smokey Robinson, Diane Warren, Earth Wind & Fire, Glen […]
The 2023 BET Hip-Hop Awards — which went down at Atlanta’s Cobb Energy Center — aired on Tuesday (Oct. 10), and it was a night to remember the genre’s roots. Hosted by Fat Joe, the award show celebrated the 50th anniversary of hip-hop by bringing together the genre’s brightest new stars in GloRilla and Sexyy […]
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Kendrick Lamar was the big winner at the 2023 BET Hip Hop Awards, winning in four categories – hip-hop artist of the year, best live performer, lyricist of the year and, with his creative partner Dave Free, video director of the year. The BET Hip Hop Awards, hosted by Fat Joe, were taped last week […]
On Tuesday night (Oct. 10), Swizz Beatz and Timbaland received the Rock The Bells Cultural Influence Award at the 2023 BET Hip Hop Awards in Atlanta. The hip-hop luminaries were on hand to accept the award for their cultural contributions to hip-hop and boundless creativity. “I always dreamed I’d be on stage accepting an award […]
Kendrick Lamar was the big winner at the 2023 BET Hip Hop Awards, winning in four categories – hip hop artist of the year, best live performer, lyricist of the year and, with his creative partner Dave Free, video director of the year.
Lamar made history with all four of these wins. He is the first artist to win hip hop artist of the year three times. He won best live performer for the fourth time, tying Kanye West and Jay-Z for the most wins in the category. He won lyricist of the year for the ninth time, extending his lead for the most wins in the category. Lamar and Free won best video director of the year for the second year in a row, becoming the first directors to win back-to-back awards in that category since Hype Williams won four years running from 2009-12.
The BET Hip Hop Awards were taped last week at the Cobb Energy Center in Atlanta and aired on BET on Tuesday (Oct. 10). There will be an encore airing Tuesday at midnight ET on BET.
Lamar wasn’t the only big winner at the show. Two successful collaborations, Drake & 21 Savage and Lil Durk featuring J. Cole, each won two awards, as did Lil Uzi Vert and Metro Boomin.
Her Loss by Drake & 21 Savage, which topped the Billboard 200 in November 2022, won hip hop album of the year. It’s the third collaboration to win in that category, following Jay-Z & Kanye West’s Watch the Throne (2012) and Beyoncé & Jay-Z’s Everything Is Love (2018). Drake & 21 Savage also won best duo or group.
Lil Uzi Vert’s “Just Wanna Rock,” which reached No. 10 on the Hot 100, won song of the year, beating a pair of songs that were notably bigger crossover hits – “All My Life” by Lil Durk featuring J. Cole and “Rich Flex” by Drake & 21 Savage, both of which reached No. 2. “Just Wanna Rock” also won best hip hop video.
But “All My Life” won two other awards — best collaboration and impact track, which is presented to a “song that moves our culture forward with social commentary, political discourse or other thought-provoking lyrics.” This was J. Cole’s record fourth win for impact track. He previously won for “Crooked Smile” featuring TLC, “Love Yours” and Middle Child.”
Metro Boomin became the first producer to win producer of the year three times. He previously won in 2015 and 2017. Kanye West, DJ Mustard and Hit-Boy have each won twice in the category.
Ice Spice won best breakthrough hip hop artist. GloRilla won in the category last year. This marks the first time that women have won back-to-back awards in this category.
Ice Spice is expected to receive a Grammy nomination for best new artist when the nominations for the 66th annual Grammy Awards are announced on Nov. 10. Four former winners of the BET breakthrough award (it has gone by various names over the years) have received Grammy nods for best new artist – Drake, Nicki Minaj, Iggy Azalea and Chance the Rapper (who went on to win the Grammy).
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Podcasts by or about Doja Cat, Snoop Dogg, Björk, Meghan Trainor, Jill Scott, Questlove, Tobe Nwigwe and the late rapper Mac Dre are among the winners at the second annual Signal Awards. The winners were announced on Tuesday (Oct. 10) and will be celebrated with a reception at The Bowery NYC on Oct. 23.
Origins: Doja Cat won for music – individual episode. Snoop Dogg W + M won for music – limited series. Both were released by Audible, which won the inaugural award for company of the year. With 32 total wins, Audible also received nods for such podcasts as Origins – Tobe Nwigwe, Michelle Obama: The Light Podcast and The Sesame Street Podcast.
“2023 was a huge year for podcasts, as worldwide listenership continued to skyrocket and new trends emerged,” Signal Awards managing director Deondric Royster said in a statement. “The winners of the second annual Signal Awards represent the best of the industry: those who are pushing boundaries, telling important stories, encouraging laughter, and reaffirming the overall power of podcasting and its ability to connect to listeners all over the world.”
During the public voting stage, fans cast more than 130,000 votes for the Signal Listener’s Choice award. Michelle Obama: The Light Podcast, Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, HBO’s The Last of Us Podcast, Mobituaries with Mo Rocca, Small Town Dicks, Barely Famous, And That’s Why We Drink and Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls were among the podcasts receiving the most public votes.
Signal Awards reports receiving nearly 2,000 entries this year. Winners were selected by the Signal Academy. To see the full list of winners, visit www.SignalAwards.com.
Here’s a selective list of winners from the 2023 Signal Awards, with a focus on music and comedy personalities.
Best host (current events) – shows: The Problem with Jon Stewart: The Official Podcast – Apple TV Podcast
Popular culture & variety – shows: Jill Scott Presents: J.ill the Podcast – Jill Scott Presents: J.ill the Podcast
Interview or talk show – shows: Gold Minds with Kevin Hart – Hartbeat (co-winner)
Comedy – shows: Gold Mind with Kevin Hart – Hartbeat
History – shows (listener’s choice): Mobituaries with Mo Rocca – Paramount
Best video podcast – branded shows & advertising (listener’s choice): Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend – Samsung Electronics – SXM Media
Best guest – individual episode: Questlove Supreme – The Oriel Co. (co-winner)
Arts & culture – individual episode: Origins – Tobe Nwigwe – Audible (co-winner)
Best conversation starter – individual episode: Did Mac Dre Really Go to Prison Because of His Lyrics – KQED (co-winner)
Interview or talk show – individual episode: Milk Drunk: The Podcast – Meghan Trainor & Emily Oster: Redefining “Best” Parenting – Bobbie (co-winner)
Music – individual episode: Origins: Doja Cat – Audible
Most innovative audio experience – limited series & specials: Björk: Sonic Symbolism – Archetype
Best original score or music – limited series & specials: Lake Song – Make Believe Association
Best writing – limited series & specials: Can You Dig It? – A Hip Hop Origin Story – PB & J Productions (co-winner)
Music – limited series & specials: Snoop Dogg W+M – Audible