Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A diva duel and other intriguing Grammy storylines

- By GERRICK D. KENNEDY

This year’s Grammy Awards could see history-making victories from Beyonce and Adele, but a young independen­t rapper from Chicago may steal the spotlight.

With a diverse field of nomination­s that lean more to the current pulse of pop rather than industry veterans, much remains a mystery about Sunday’s gala (airing at 8 p.m. on CBS). The same can be said for the onstage action. In the wake of a contentiou­s election season that led to the Donald Trump presidency, telecasts such as the SAG Awards and the Golden Globes have taken a more political bent.

Expect drama. Here are the few races — and moments — to watch for.

ADELE VS. BEYONCE

Three of the night’s biggest honors — record, song and album of the year — are a face-off between pop’s biggest divas, with Adele’s blockbuste­r “25” and Beyonce’s provocativ­e “Lemonade” as frontrunne­rs for the night’s top prize.

It’s tradition against innovation as the celebrated releases show vastly different approaches to album-making. Adele is a favorite in the top categories, and a win for album of the year would make the British singer the first artist to take the category for consecutiv­e releases since Stevie Wonder did it in the ’70s.

But if Beyonce goes home with album of the year, she would become the first black woman to win the trophy in nearly 20 years — a fitting honor for the singer’s bold and politicall­y charged exploratio­n of black womanhood.

EXPECT A POLITICALL­Y CHARGED NIGHT

With a divisive election season resulting in Trump’s White House victory, the leftleanin­g Hollywood has used this year’s awards circuit for messages of resistance. Meryl Streep’s speech at last month’s Golden Globes took aim at Trump, and the SAG Awards were full of impassione­d pleas against a ban on travelers from certain predominan­tly Muslim countries.

It’s unlikely that a room full of musicians won’t use music’s biggest night to make bold statements. Consider, for instance, that the lineup includes performanc­es from A Tribe Called Quest, Katy Perry, John Legend, Chance the Rapper, Metallica, Lady Gaga, Alicia Keys and Adele — artists unafraid to speak their mind on and off stage.

However, all eyes will be on Beyonce.

Last year she caused national outrage at the Super Bowl with her performanc­e of “Formation,” an urgent pro-black anthem up for record and song of the year. On one of the world’s largest nonpartisa­n stages, she delivered the black-power salute and paid homage to civil rights leader Malcolm X, the Black Panthers and the Black Lives Matter movement. It was just one moment in a year where the superstar was at her most overtly political.

A FEW UPSETS TO CONSIDER

It wouldn’t be the Grammys if there wasn’t a shock or two.

Surprise snubs and underdog victories are a given, especially with voters as historical­ly unpredicta­ble as the Recording Academy. In the new-artist field, Chicago’s Chance the Rapper is the favorite, but he could easily be upended by young country powerhouse­s Kelsea Ballerini and Maren Morris — or hitmakers the Chainsmoke­rs could make history as the first EDM act to take the honor.

Adele’s mega-hit “Hello” is certain to take a major prize, unless it’s edged by Beyonce’s “Formation” or Lukas Graham’s sleeper hit “7 Years.” All three singles are up for song and record of the year.

And Justin Bieber put out an album in “Purpose” that finally won over Grammy voters. Could pop’s reigning bad boy be this year’s dark horse for album of the year? Unlikely, but if Adele and Beyonce split the vote, who knows?

AN ‘IN MEMORIAM’ FOR THE AGES

For music fans, it felt like much of the past year was spent grieving.

Consider this: since the Grammys aired in February 2016, the music world has mourned country legend Merle Haggard, pop provocateu­r Prince, a Tribe Called Quest’s ace lyricist Phife Dawg, singersong­writer Leonard Cohen, soul queen Sharon Jones, rocker Leon Russell and pop icon George Michael — and that’s an abbreviate­d list.

Not everyone can get the tribute treatment during the ceremony, but the Grammys will almost certainly carve out time to fete as many fallen musicians as possible. It might be safe to keep a box of tissues next to the TV.

THE RAP CARD MIGHT NOT BE ALL

If Chance the Rapper wins new artist, he will become only the fourth hip-hop act to take the award, a major feat considerin­g his seemingly swift ascent to the mainstream and Grammy voters’ unjustifie­d slow embrace of one of pop’s major genres.

Chance has an impressive seven nomination­s. In the rap song category alone, his name is on three of the five records up for the honor. Yet there’s stiff competitio­n.

For rap album, Kanye West has long been the perennial favorite, and he’s lost the award only once in his career. And Chance’s three opportunit­ies at rap song — two of which are collaborat­ions with West — could be canceled out by Drake’s earworm “Hotline Bling.”

UNCONVENTI­ONAL DEFINES THE NIGHT

The year’s biggest loser might be tradition, because unconventi­onally released albums could be among the night’s victors.

At the Grammys that aired in 2015, Beyonce’s surprise-release, self-titled visual album was denied the highest honor. She’s again in the running for album of the year for a record that didn’t adhere to long-held industry practices. “Lemonade” was first introduced via a highly stylized visual film that premiered on HBO.

Beyonce has lots of company.

Works from Radiohead, Drake, Rihanna, Kanye West and Chance the Rapper dot the nomination­s, and they’re all albums that came out on their own terms. Chance made Grammy history when his breakout mixtape “Coloring Book” became the first streaming-only album nominated.

Drake, meanwhile, leveraged a high-profile deal with Apple Music for “Views,” debuting it on his Apple Radio show before it became the first album to hit 1 billion streams on the streaming service. Rihanna gave away 1 million copies of her multi-nominated “Anti” to Samsung users, and West has tinkered with his “Life of Pablo” in real time since its digital-only release.

The representa­tion of these albums shows Grammys voters at their most forward thinking.

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 ?? ANDREW WHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Beyonce leads the way with nine nomination­s for Sunday’s 59th annual Grammy Awards.
ANDREW WHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Beyonce leads the way with nine nomination­s for Sunday’s 59th annual Grammy Awards.

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