Awards
Page: 37

When Captain Sheila Kelliher Berkoh announced Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter as the winner of album of the year at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards (Feb. 2), the rapturous standing ovation that swept across Crypto.com Arena seemed to say one thing: Finally.
After five previous bids over the past decade and a half, Beyoncé finally took home album of the year for the second history-making entry in her still-unfurling trilogy that commenced with 2022’s Grammy-winning Renaissance. As Queen Bey embraced her eldest daughter, Blue Ivy Carter (already a Grammy winner in her own right), and began to make her way to the stage, the room rejoiced. Lady Gaga and Billie Eilish wept, Cynthia Erivo leapt up and down, Taylor Swift shared a toast with Jay-Z, Olivia Rodrigo cheered and GloRilla screamed till she damn near couldn’t anymore. At long last, the First Lady of Music – as dubbed by one Clive Davis – had finally won the industry’s most coveted prize.
With her victory, Beyoncé not only extended her lead as the most-awarded artist in Grammy history (35 wins), but she also joined Natalie Cole (Unforgettable With Love, 1992), Whitney Houston (The Bodyguard, 1994) and Lauryn Hill (The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, 1999) as just the fourth Black woman to ever win album of the year. It’s that nugget of history, coupled with her litany of egregious General Field snubs that made this moment such a sweet one to witness.
Trending on Billboard
But let’s be careful not to let “overdue” narratives completely obfuscate the artistic merit of Cowboy Carter. Leading up to last night’s ceremony, many publications – including Billboard – predicted that Cowboy Carter would take home top honors. Across social media and some of those pieces, narrative started to build that a Cowboy Carter victory would be like Leonardo DiCaprio winning for The Revenant or Martin Scorsese winning for The Departed – or like Beck winning for Morning Phase in 2015, the year of Bey’s first major album of the year loss. After being passed over for what many consider to be their best efforts, acclaimed artists who consistently produce the best work in their respective industries finally earn the highest honors in their field. In the same way that DiCaprio is an actor’s actor and Scorsese is a director’s director, Beyoncé is an artist’s artist. That much was clear when the 2023 Grammys turned into a Bey pseudo-meet-and-greet, and the room’s ecstatic reaction to her victory last night was another reminder. As far as many are concerned, Cowboy Carter’s win is equivalent to a lifetime achievement award; a mea culpa of sorts for snubs of years past.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with that framing, but it does belie the fact that Cowboy Carter would have deserved to win whether it was Bey’s first album of the year nod or her tenth. Less than two years after flipping the dance-pop world on its head with Renaissance, a record that illuminated the Black queer roots of dance music and culture, Beyoncé strutted into yet another new genre and made it completely her own, while venerating some of its most respected (and overlooked) pioneers.
She opened the album with “Ameriican Requiem,” a Buffalo Springfield-nodding tour de force that served as a musical funeral for not just the most limiting visions of America, but also the overwhelmingly white country music establishment that unfairly made themselves the gatekeepers of who can lay claim to country music, aesthetics and identity. Over the 26 subsequent tracks, she assumed and illustrated different Western motifs and characters (the sheriff, the damsel in distress, the outlaw, etc.), ending with “Amen,” an anthem of hope for a new, limitless vision of America that interpolates the album opener.
Cowboy Carter reaped a whopping 11 nominations across several different genres, a point she emphasized with the brilliant three-track run of “Jolene,” “Daughter” and “Spaghettii.” With her reimagining of Dolly Parton’s classic, Beyoncé turned the country icon’s desperation into a fierce understanding of self-worth that simultaneously aligned her existing musical and lyrical brand with Parton’s track, while also serving as a callback to the “Becky” character that haunted 2016’s Lemonade, which infamously lost album of the year to Adele’s chart-conquering 25. “Jolene” gives way to “Daughter,” a positively stunning take on the country murder ballad that finds Beyoncé ripping through an operatic rendition of “Caro Mi Ben” in the original Italian before recruiting Linda Martell, the first Black woman to play the Grand Ole Opry, and Shaboozey, the man who would come to be the voice behind the longest-running solo Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 single in history (“A Bar Song”), for “Spaghettii.” Nominated for best melodic rap performance last night, “Spaghettii” mines the cross-cultural history of spaghetti westerns to create a folk-inflected trap heater assisted by a Brazilian funk sample (O Mandrake’s “Aquecimento das Danadas”). And that’s just the first half of the LP!
There’s also “Alliigator Tears,” on which Bey is seemingly singing directly to the Recording Academy. “You say move a mountain/ And I’ll throw on my boots/ You say stop the river from runnin’/ I’ll build a dam or two/ You say change religions/ Now, I spend Sundays with you/ Somethin’ ’bout those tears of yours/ How does it feel to be adored?” she posits in the chorus. Of course, there’s also the rising contemporary Black country talent she highlighted across the album (Tanner Adell, Brittney Spencer, Willie Jones, Reyna Roberts and Tiera Kennedy), and let’s not forget her Jersey club flip of Patsy Cline’s seminal “I Fall to Pieces” either. We don’t even have to get into the historic chart achievements of the era or the cultural impact it had across fashion and business – Cowboy Carter is worthy enough based solely on its 27 gorgeous songs.
Not a single one of the other nominees for album of the year boasts the archival ambition, depth of research, courage, experimentation, soul and sheer scope of Cowboy Carter. The album is closer to a master’s thesis than a standard pop album, but it’s also relentlessly fun. Whether she’s going full Western camp on “Tyrant,” crafting a friendship anthem for the ages alongside Miley Cyrus on “II Most Wanted” or blazing through a crash course in rock ‘n’ roll history on “Ya Ya,” Cowboy Carter is a blast. The record received some flak for its length and people considering it a “chore” to sit through because of how heady it can get at certain points; Cowboy Carter, in some circles, became something to be respected, but not enjoyed. In reality, Beyoncé crafted the album with so much verve that there really isn’t a way for Cowboy Carter to not be the ultimate hoedown. Is it Beyoncé’s best album? Depending on the day, maybe. Is it frustrating that the Recording Academy couldn’t reward her for making paradigm-shifting music in her home genre of R&B? Unequivocally. But none of that makes Cowboy Carter underserving of its victory in the 2025 album of the year race.
There’s a reason the album collected two other wins last night, just like how The Departed and The Revenant won additional Oscars outside of Scorsese and DiCaprio. Their victories may have been delayed, but they still triumphed for excellent and deserving work. Pity wins those were not. Yes, this win is a vindication of her past losses, a tribute to her towering career, and a nod to the Black women before her who were denied time and time again, but above all, it’s a win for Cowboy Carter specifically – and that’s the most important takeaway from last night.

At Sunday night’s ceremony, the top prizes were won by Beyoncé and Kendrick Lamar.
Music’s biggest night wouldn’t be complete without, well, music — something the 2025 Grammys had in abundance with Sabrina Carpenter, Chappell Roan, Doechii and more stars delivering buzzy live performances in between the presentation of awards Sunday (Feb. 2).
The show kicked off with Dawes, Brad Paisley, John Legend, Sheryl Crow, Brittany Howard and St. Vincent paying tribute to Los Angeles — where the ceremony streamed live from the city’s Crypto.com Arena — with an all-star performance of Randy Newman’s “I Love L.A.” honoring victims and first responders affected by the disastrous wildfires in Southern California last month. The offering set the tone for the rest of the night, which featured numerous odes to the city and found host Trevor Noah continuously reminding the audience to donate via MusiCares to relief efforts; by the end of the night, viewers had contributed $7 million, the comedian revealed on air.
Trending on Billboard
More artists such as Billie Eilish and Lady Gaga then honored the City of Angels through their performances, with the former singing “Birds of a Feather” on a set made to look like Eaton Canyon in Altadena, and the latter recruiting her “Die With a Smile” collaborator Bruno Mars for an emotionally charged take on The Mamas and the Papas’ “California Dreamin.’”
There were also tributes to the artists we lost in the past year — led by Chris Martin, who sang “All My Love” on piano as the names of Liam Payne, Toby Keith and more late stars flashed on screen — and Quincy Jones, who died at 91 in November. In honor of the game-changing producer, Will Smith guided the audience through a string of performances from Cynthia Erivo, Lainey Wilson and Stevie Wonder with Herbie Hancock and Jacob Collier on piano, closing with Janelle Monáe channeling Michael Jackson on “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough.”
Plus, viewers were treated to performances from all eight best new artist nominees, with Carpenter hamming it up for “Espresso” and “Please Please Please,” Roan — who later won the category — serving rodeo princess on “Pink Pony Club,” and Benson Boone, Doechii, Teddy Swims, Shaboozey and Raye all singing their biggest hits of 2024 back to back.
Elsewhere in the night, The Weeknd finally ended his beef with the Recording Academy and made his return to the Grammy stage, Shakira got Taylor Swift and more guests up and dancing, and Charli XCX closed the show with a Brat medley of “Von Dutch” and “Guess.”
With so much musical excellence packed into one night, it might be hard to choose, but Billboard still wants to know which artist delivered your favorite performance at this year’s Grammys. Cast your vote below.
During the 2025 Grammys red carpet Sunday (Feb. 2), one reporter got a little caught up in the femininomenon of Chappell Roan while speaking to Babyface.
In a viral clip of the awkward exchange, the “When Can I See You” singer — looking dapper in a jewel-encrusted suit jacket and black shades — is only a few words into his answer to a question while speaking to The Associated Press when the 26-year-old pop star walks by behind him. At that point, one of the AP’s reporters calls out to get Roan’s attention while Babyface is still speaking, prompting the R&B icon to stop in the middle of what he’s saying and ask, “You guys wanna do that?”
“Go do that,” Babyface adds, relinquishing his microphone as the “Hot to Go!” singer — appearing not to have heard the interaction — walks over.
Trending on Billboard
Shortly afterward, AP posted an apology on X. “We are deeply sorry for cutting our interview with Babyface short on our YouTube livestream of the Grammys red carpet,” the news agency wrote in its statement. “We have apologized to him through his representative and to our viewers on the livestream.”
Billboard has reached out to Babyface’s rep for comment.
As evidenced by the commotion on the carpet, Roan was one of the buzziest guests at the 2025 ceremony. The star walked in with six nominations total, including for song, record and album of the year for “Good Luck, Babe!” and The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess, respectively. Though she didn’t take home any of those Big 3 awards — Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” won both song categories while Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter scored AOTY — the Missouri native did win best new artist.
And during her speech, she boldly challenged record labels to take better care of their artists, especially signees. “I told myself if I ever won a Grammy and I got to stand up here in front of the most powerful people in music, I would demand that labels and the industry profiting millions of dollars off of artists would offer a livable wage and healthcare, especially for developing artists,” Roan said while accepting best new artist. “Labels, we got you — but do you got us?”
Elsewhere in the night, the star performed her Billboard Hot 100 top 40 hit “Pink Pony Club,” taking the stage atop a giant pink horse prop while surrounded by dancers in clown makeup.
But before the ceremony even started, AP’s Krysta Fauria also issued a personal apology to Babyface before the site’s red-carpet coverage ended. “I wanted to say that I’m really sorry about interrupting Babyface earlier,” she said in a clip from the broadcast. “I’m a big Babyface fan — as are we all — and so I just wanted to say that I really apologize.”
It’s common practice for artists to thank their families when winning major awards. But, as rock star St. Vincent proved at the 2025 Grammys on Sunday (Feb. 2), it’s rare to see artists reveal that they’re married with kids during a massive event.
During the evening’s pre-telecast awards, Annie Clark (St. Vincent’s offstage name) took home the best rock song trophy for her 2024 single “Broken Man.” During her acceptance speech, the singer surprised fans and audience members by offering a special shout-out to “my beautiful wife Leah [and] our beautiful daughter.” In a later acceptance speech for best alternative music album for her 2024 LP All Born Screaming, Clark thanked her family for a second time.
Clark is known for remaining tight-lipped about her personal life, a fact that she acknowledged in a backstage interview after winning her award. When a reporter from the Associated Press said that they were “totally unaware” of Clark’s marital status, the singer jumped in to add that “most people were,” revealing that she and her spouse have made a concerted effort to keep their relationship out of the public eye.
Trending on Billboard
“She’s young, we’ve kept it under wraps,” she said, before quickly clarifying her point with a laugh. “The child is young, just to be clear, the child is young, not the wife!” The singer added that she and her family had plans to celebrate her victory with her sisters, but that Clark intended “to be in bed by 10” that night.
Elsewhere in her backstage interviews, Clark reflected on the LGBTQ+ representation at the annual show and across the industry, remarking that queer people existing in the industry and the world at large is not news. “There have always been queer people in the history of the world, and especially in music,” she said. “There’s a bunch of queer people being celebrated this year. And that’s great, of course it’s great — empathy and humanity, let’s go.”
For Billboard‘s 2024 Pride cover story, the singer opened up about the history of queer people in the music business, while pointing out the importance of LGBTQ+ artists remaining on the cutting edge of culture. “There have been plenty of queer people in music. Even if the culture was saying no, there were always queer people in the arts. Please. We have built this,” she said at the time. “If you’re safe for the TV screen, you also invite an aspect of grift [from the outside world]. Which … I raise an eyebrow at.”
The All Born Screaming singer took home three trophies at Sunday night’s ceremony — best rock song, best alternative music album and best alternative music performance for “Flea.” Clark was nominated in the best rock performance category, but ultimately lost out to the Beatles’ AI-assisted track “Now and Then.”
Taylor Swift may not have won any new awards at the 2025 Grammys Sunday night (Feb. 2), but she still got to show off something sparkly — thanks to Janelle Monáe. During the show’s sprawling Quincy Jones tribute, which the “We Are Young” singer closed with a phenomenal performance of Michael Jackson’s “Don’t Stop Till […]

Amy Allen made history at the 67th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday (Feb. 2), becoming the first woman to win for songwriter of the year, non-classical. The category is still fairly new: This was just the third year it was presented. Tobias Jesso Jr. was the inaugural winner in 2023, for writing songs by such artists […]
Sometimes, it just all comes together. Maybe not in real life — particularly not in a year whose first month has already seen two major plane crashes on the East Coast, large portions of the West Coast going up in flames, and the entire country being subjected to dehumanizing new policies and legislation meant to undo generations’ worth of societal progress. But in music and culture, occasionally you are lucky enough to get moments where it feels like everything is just about where it should be, like you’re witnessing both history in real time, and possibly also the start of a better future. Sometimes it can even happen on a stage as historically contentious as that of the Grammys.
The 2025 Grammys were probably always going to be a little bit special, just given the incredibly high caliber of artists present as the biggest nominees, performers and even presenters — an everybody-in-the-pool year for Music’s Biggest Night that had the Recording Academy working with one of its biggest head starts in ages. But the combination of potentially narrative-derailing award pratfalls and (much more importantly) the real-life tragedy transpiring in its backyard had these Grammys under even more pressure than usual to Get It Right, as much as any award show ever can. And from maximizing the sky-high performance potential of the artists on the docket, to hitting most of the appropriate big and small notes in addressing the heavier concerns understandably weighing down the buoyant festivities, to picking a slate of winners that felt much more triumphant and cathartic than confusing and disappointing, the Grammys got it right this year. And the impact of that ended up being surprisingly profound.
Trending on Billboard
For a ceremony that many observers both locally and nationally thought she be delayed if not canceled outright in the wake of the fires that devastated so much of California, this year’s Grammys were wise to acknowledge the catastrophic loss and sense of community perseverance throughout the evening. From the beginning Dawes-led performance of Randy Newman’s “I Love L.A.” to the CA firefighters who handed out the final award of the evening — and countless fundraising reminders and commercials aired to support local businesses aired in between — the Recording Academy and host Trevor Noah never let the fires totally recede to the background of the festivities, but also never came off too ham-fisted in their intimations towards true seriousness in an event still mostly devoted to music industry froth. Combined with the high percentage of legendary locals in attendance — including some of the night’s big winners — it made the evening and its message of support feel genuine and purposeful, not just a glittering distraction.
But oh, there was glitter, and glitz and glamour and all the spectacle that pop offers at its best and sparkliest. Sabrina Carpenter offered her continually improving updated take on Madonna at her most Marilyn Monroe-obsessed — but with a healthy dose of Groucho Marx also thrown in — on a stunning and occasionally side-splitting mashing of “Espresso” and “Please Please Please.” Chappell Roan and a whole bunch of cowboy clowns brought Crypto.com Arena to Wild, Wild West Hollywood with a pitch-perfect performance of “Pink Pony Club,” confirming the song one more time as a generational anthem. And while some recent Grammys have frontloaded their lineups to a degree that became increasingly unforgivable as the hours dragged on, the 2025 awards smartly held Charli XCX’s Grammy debut for the night’s final performance, as she went full dance-floor decadence with her predictably incendiary, underwear-forward “Von Dutch” and “Guess” medley — a rare are they really allowed to do this? Grammy moment that was well worth sticking deep into the 11:00 ET hour for.
The current pop vanguard definitely led the way at the 2025 awards, but the veteran class also held its own on the Grammy stage. Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga wisely eschewed another victory-lap performance of current Billboard Hot 100-topping duet “Die With a Smile” to instead deliver a one-night-only acoustic duet on The Mamas and the Papas’ “California Dreamin’,” with a beautifully understated arrangement and vocal interplay that sweetly complemented their singular vocal abilities and developing chemistry. Conversely, you kinda wished The Weeknd had more of a no-doubter smash to play for his surprise return to the Grammys stage — though “Cry for Me” and “Timeless” from the just-released Hurry Up Tomorrow have their charms, no one’s confusing them for “Blinding Lights” and “Save Your Tears,” especially during such a moment — but it was still quite gratifying to see Abel making nice with the Grammys, and looking like King of the World again as he begins what many expect to be his potential final career chapter as The Weeknd. And while the all-star tribute to the late legend Quincy Jones stretched far longer than is usually advisable for an all-star Grammy tribute, the wildly varied nature of the many Grammy longtimers involved (from Herbie Hancock to Lainey Wilson to Janelle Monáe) actually ended up painting a pretty full picture of Jones’ genre-and-generation-spanning impact.
The most heartening part of the evening, however, belonged to the still-rising stars. A best new artist nominee medley — not in the old-school, everyone-at-once, Franz Ferdinand-colliding-with-Black-Eyed-Peas Grammy sense, but more of a carefully plotted, quick-moving showcase — brilliantly demonstrated the dazzling talents of this year’s class, including the vocal fireworks of Raye and Teddy Swims, the athleticism and showmanship of Benson Boone and a particularly scorching Doechii, and the lower-key likability of Shaboozey. (Carpenter and Roan were understandably given their entire own spotlight moments, while psych-rock power trio Khruangbin — who delivered perhaps the most resolutely chill performance in Grammys history — was held to 60 seconds of bumper music, likely for momentum reasons.) It was a near-embarrassment of riches for one category, and while not every year can be this strong a BNA class, you hope that the Grammys will continue with this performance model in future years; it was a great way to introduce five big new talents at once without shortchanging any of them.
With so many major performance moments, the awards could’ve felt like an afterthought some years — but not in 2025, following one of the most packed years in recent pop music history, with seemingly all the biggest artists going against one another in all the biggest categories. And the spread of winners was basically a satisfying one for pop fans: Roan and Carpenter picked up one televised award each (for best new artist and best pop vocal album, respectively), acknowledging their game-changing contributions to pop’s massive year without anointing either one the unquestioned queen of the moment. Charli picked up a couple dance Grammys but was shut out of the big four; as her electric not-safe-for-parents final performance further established, she’s better off sticking a little left-of-center as far as the mainstream is concerned anyway. Fans of Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish might take umbrage at their respective 0-fers, but as two of the most decorated artists in recent Grammy history — really all Grammy history at this point — it’s hard to imagine two pop stars who’d be more quintessentially Fine following such a shutout.
In most Grammy years this past decade, this would be the point where we’d interrupt discussions of the winners to go “Ah, yes, but where’s the hip-hop?” Not this year: both song of the year and record of the year went to Kendrick Lamar for “Not Like Us,” just the second rap song to ever win in either category (following Childish Gambino’s double-winner “This Is America” in 2019). It was an overdue acknowledgment of an all-time artist who’d somehow never won in the Big Four categories before, and who certainly deserved it for his biggest and arguably best single to date — though an arena full of industry cognoscenti rapping along to lyrics accusing the defining rapper of the 2010s being a pedophile will never not be surreal. In any event, while rap was still in relatively short supply on the evening — outside of Doechii’s star turn (and best rap album win for Alligator Bites Never Heal), the only other rapper to perform was Playboi Carti, as a guest of The Weeknd — it’s fun to go one Grammys without having to ding the Academy for once again going the entirety of Music’s Biggest Night without properly recognizing music’s biggest genre.
And speaking of unfortunate Grammy narratives it’s nice to not have to brace once more this year, here’s one we basically never have to worry about again: Beyonce has finally won album of the year. With Cowboy Carter taking home the night’s top prize, the one remaining hole in the resumé of pop’s preeminent albums artist (and the Grammys’ all-time biggest winner) has officially been filled. Had any other nominated album — many of them also deserving winners in their own right — taken home the trophy, there still would’ve been an unpleasant aftertaste of Yet Again Not Beyoncé that would’ve lingered far beyond the ceremony. Whether or not you agree that Cowboy Carter was the best album of the year, or the best candidate for the first Bey album to actually win AOTY, you had to feel at least a little bit good about this historical snub — the story of which has loomed over the Grammys for a solid decade now — finally being made right after so many missed opportunities.
By the way, a quick note about Cowboy Carter: Beyoncé has absolutely nothing to apologize for by winning with this album. Some future accountings of these Grammys may paint the win as an undeserving one, coming past Bey’s commercial and artistic prime with an album not up to her peak standards, à la so many other questionable winners from early-21st century Grammys history. So let us say quite plainly from the present: bulls–t. This was a Billboard 200-topping album with a Hot 100-topping lead single, which posted the best first week of 2024 outside of anyone but the fellow pop legend who presented Beyoncé best country album on Sunday night. Moreover, it was a brilliant project that was unanimously acclaimed upon release, one that both excavated genre history and pushed it forward in real time, with a handful of the year’s finest pop, country and/or Americana songs and some of the most thoughtful and inspired structuring and pacing of any LP in recent memory. It was our editorial staff’s No. 2 album of last year. If it’s not your particular glass of whiskey then fair enough, but don’t you dare paint Cowboy Carter as Beyoncé’s own Morning Phase — Bey may be in a similar place in her Grammy arc to where Beck was 10 years ago (which likely helped her win here), but when you’re comparing the two in terms of commercial potency, critical adoration and cultural vitality, we promise that 2015 Beck doesn’t want to take it to the floor with Cowboy Carter.
Anyway, closing the loop on long-unresolved Grammy narratives is nice and all, but that’s not really what made these Grammys so resonant. The biggest reason for that was the feeling that these Grammys were kinda what every pop fan watching probably needed right now. Which is a nauseatingly hackneyed and clichéd — not to mention stupefyingly reductive — type of statement to make about any kind of art or entertainment, of course. But it maybe still sorta fits here. These Grammys were celebratory and comforting and exultant in a surprisingly uncomplicated and non-divisive way; even if you didn’t agree with all or most of the winners it’s hard to imagine leaving this year’s telecast not feeling at least a little bit better about the music world — maybe even the world in general — than you did before.
That went beyond the performers and the winners. While the Noah-led broadcast unsurprisingly steered clear of making any grand political or partisan statements, many of the artists involved took the opportunity to speak up at this year’s awards. Chappell Roan used her best new artist acceptance speech to demand labels provide health care and liveable wages for developing artists, while earlier on the red carpet, she spoke in support of the trans community. Roan pop progenitor Lady Gaga further preached that message on the telecast, using her own “Die With a Smile” win (for best duo/group performance) to proclaim “Trans people are not invisible.” And Alicia Keys took time while accepting the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award to speak in defiance of the current administration’s continued scapegoating of DEI as a cultural ill: “This is not the time to shut down the diversity of voices… DEI is not a threat, it’s a gift,” she preached. “This room is unstoppable.”
The artist community took some lumps following the results of the November election, as the endorsement of so many A-listers ended up ultimately not making nearly enough of a difference in the race’s outcome. It was easy to take those results as reason to further bemoan the Hollywood bubble, and to label some of those artists (if not the entire industry) as out of touch with the real world — and maybe there’s something to that. But the flip side of that is a night like Sunday, where the magic on display from so many of these incredible artists and the joy they all at least seemed to really take in celebrating one another can be legitimately inspiring, and galvanizing, and soothing. Keys’ words felt particularly powerful because the night of diverse performances and winners did feel like a gift. And on Sunday night, the artist community actually felt something like a proper community, one capable of uniting and building and offering support and stability to those who need it — at a time when a whole lot of people, both locally and nationally, really really f–king need it.
Does that really make the room unstoppable, though? Probably not: The calamities outside the Crypto.com Arena were certainly still present following the near-four-hour broadcast, and while some of them are finally becoming contained, to others there’s no obvious end in sight. If the power of music, and the diverse community of artists who create it, was truly unstoppable, it probably would have demonstrated that a little more clearly back in November. But at the very least, it was awesome to have one Grammy night of stellar performances, of deserving winners, of such little inherent drama or divisiveness that it felt like the room was all together in the fight, more focused on battling what was going outside that room than on sparring with one another within it. It felt like a reminder of something good and important. It felt like music’s biggest night.
Here’s who hit the stage and highlighted Music’s Biggest Night.
Many of the awards at the 67th annual Grammys went exactly as predicted. Of the six General Field categories I handicapped on Jan. 6 (the Monday after final voting closed), five went as I foresaw. But there were still plenty of snubs and surprises across the (gulp) 94 categories that were presented on Sunday (Feb. […]