Jamaica Gleaner

... New acts dominate award picks

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NEW YORK (AP):

THE GRAMMYS are screaming “Cuz I Love You” to Lizzo: The breakthrou­gh singer-rapper scored a whopping eight nomination­s, including bids for the top four awards, making her the show’s top-nominated act.

Lizzo picked up nomination­s for album of the year with her major-label debut, Cuz I Love You; song and record of the year with her anthemic No. 1 hit, Truth Hurts; and best new artiste.

Like Lizzo, other new artistes dominated with Grammy nomination­s on Wednesday: Billie Eilish and Lil Nas X earned six nomination­s apiece.

Eilish also scored nomination­s in the top four categories, making the 17-year-old the youngest artiste in the history of the Grammys to achieve the feat. Koffee at 19 is the youngest to be nominated in the Reggae category. Lil Nas X, 20, is up for three of the top four awards, including album and record of the year for Old Town Road, featuring Billy Ray Cyrus.

Lizzo’s Cuz I Love You, Eilish’s

When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? and Lil Nas X’s 7 – an eight-song EP – will compete for album of the year along with Ariana Grande’s Thank U, Next, Bon Iver’s I, I, Vampire Weekend’s Father of the Bride, H.E.R.’s I Used to Know Her and Lana Del Rey’s

Norman (Expletive) Rockwell!

Nominees for record of the year include songs that hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart this year, including Old Town Road, Truth Hurts, Eilish’s Bad Guy, Grande’s 7 Rings and Post Malone and Swae Lee’s Sunflower. H.E.R.’s Hard Place, Bon Iver’s Hey, Ma and Khalid’s Talk,

which peaked at No. 3 on the Hot 100, round out the eight nominees.

While Taylor Swift was shut out of album of the year with Lover, the album’s title track earned a nomination for song of the year, a songwriter’s award. It will compete with

Truth Hurts, Bad Guy, Hard Place,

Lady Gaga’s Always Remember Us This Way from A Star Is Born, Lewis Capaldi’s Someone You Loved,

Lana Del Rey’s Norman (Expletive) Rockwell and Tanya Tucker’s Bring My Flowers Now, co-written by Brandi Carlile.

Swift earned three nomination­s, while Beyoncé – who was shut out of the top three categories – scored four. While her groundbrea­king Homecoming

documentar­y earned a nomination for best music film, its album version didn’t pick up any nomination­s. Instead her The Lion King: The Gift project – which features songs inspired by The Lion King,

for which she voiced the character Nala – is up for best pop vocal album, competing with projects from Ed Sheeran, Swift, Eilish and Grande. Beyoncé’s Spirit, from The Lion King which is being pushed for Oscar considerat­ion, is up for best pop solo performanc­e along with Swift’s You Need to Calm Down, Truth Hurts, Bad Guy and 7 Rings.

Overall, female acts outperform­ed their male counterpar­ts in the top four categories: Five of the eight album-of-the-year contenders are women, while seven of the eight song-of-the-year nominees are by women. Female musicians also rule in the best new artiste category, though record of the year is evenly split.

FIVE NOMINATION­S FOR GRANDE

Grande, who won her first Grammy earlier this year, scored five nomination­s, as did H.E.R. and Finneas, Eilish’s older brother who co-wrote, co-produced and engineered her debut album. Finneas’ nomination­s include producer of the year (non-classical) and best engineered album (non-classical).

Several acts picked up four nomination­s, including J. Cole, Gary Clark Jr., Lucky Daye, Thom Yorke, Bob Ludwig and Tanya Tucker, who in August released her first album of new songs in 17 years.

British country-soul performer Yola also scored four bids, including best new artiste, pitting her against Lizzo, Lil Nas X, Eilish, pop singer Maggie Rogers, New Orleans group Tank and the Bangas, the Austin-based duo Black Pumas and Spanish singer Rosalía, who won album of the year at last week’s Latin Grammys.

Lizzo’s road to the Grammys has been a long one: The 31-yearold, who performed with Prince on his Plectrumel­ectrum album, grinded as an independen­t and touring artiste for years before signing a major-label deal, releasing her first album in 2013. But this year marked her major breakthrou­gh: Her song Truth Hurts topped the charts for seven weeks; she’s wowed audiences with her live performanc­es – including her twerking while playing the flute. She’s also graced several magazine covers, earning praise for promoting body positivity and denouncing fat shaming.

 ?? AP ?? This September 18 file photo shows Lizzo performing at The Met in Philadelph­ia. Lizzo earned eight Grammy Award nomination­s yesterday, making her the show’s top-nominated act.
AP This September 18 file photo shows Lizzo performing at The Met in Philadelph­ia. Lizzo earned eight Grammy Award nomination­s yesterday, making her the show’s top-nominated act.

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