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Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Dua Lipa top 2021 Grammy nomination­s

- By Mikael Wood

LOS ANGELES — A Beyoncé song inspired by Black Lives Matter and a Taylor Swift album created in quarantine are among the recordings that will compete for the top-line prizes at the 63rd annual Grammy Awards, nomination­s for which were announced on Tuesday morning by the Recording Academy.

“Black Parade,” Beyoncé’s sweeping yet fine- grained salute to Blackness released on Juneteenth, is up for record of the year and song of the year, while Swift’s quietly introspect­ive “Folklore” earned a nod for album of the year. “Cardigan,” a single from “Folklore” about a lover’s renewing touch, will go up against “Black Parade” — along with tunes by acts such as Roddy Ricch, Post Malone and Billie Eilish — for song of the year, which recognizes songwriter­s, as opposed to the record award, which goes to performers and producers.

The academy’s latest anointment of Beyoncé (who scored nine nomination­s in total, more than any other artist) and Swift (who got six) signals something of an industry consensus on music’s biggest stars — even in a year as disruptive as 2020. For close-reading pop fans, the women’s head-to-head matchup at next year’s ceremony — set to take place in an undetermin­ed manner on Jan. 31 in downtown Los Angeles — might also conjure memories of the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, when Kanye West famously interrupte­d an acceptance speech by Swift to proclaim that Beyoncé had been robbed.

Yet other nomination­s in the Grammys’ flagship categories show a lack of widespread agreement over pop’s leading male acts and about how hip- hop is regarded by the music industry’s most prestigiou­s organizati­on.

Though widely tipped by insiders to receive multiple high- profile nomination­s, pop-soul auteur the Weeknd was completely shut out with his “After Hours” album, a runaway smash on streaming services, and his moody retro-electro single, “Blinding Lights,” which hasn’t left the top 10 of Billboard’s Hot 100 since February ( and likely won’t until after the singer’s performanc­e during February’s Super Bowl halftime show).

Harry Styles, the former One Direction member turned open-minded rock idol, also came up empty in the major categories despite expectatio­ns that his boomer- approved “Fine Line” LP might finally surmount the Grammys’ historical bias against boy bands. Ditto K- pop’s BTS, which failed to land an anticipate­d record of the year nod with “Dynamite,” its ebullient No. 1 disco hit.

Styles and BTS were nominated for smaller-scale prizes including pop vocal album and pop duo/group performanc­e. But their absence from the coveted all-genre categories leaves a muddled impression of record-business priorities just a year after the academy made a clear argument with the 62nd Grammys about the importance of fresh talent.

At the most recent ceremony, in January, newcomer Eilish swept album, record and song of the year, along with best new artist; other highly nominated debut acts included Lizzo and Lil Nas X, each enjoying their entrée to the big leagues thanks to a blend of social- media know-how and time-tested showbiz razzle-dazzle.

What conclusion­s are to be drawn, though, from this cycle’s unruly album of the year category that ignores some of 2020’s bestseller­s and critical favorites — “After Hours,” certainly, along with rapper Lil Baby’s “My Turn,” country singer Luke Combs’ “What You See Is What You Get” and Fiona Apple’s universall­y acclaimed “Fetch the Bolt Cutters” — yet makes room for littlehear­d LPS by Black Pumas, a psychedeli­c soul duo from Austin, Texas, and a babyfaced, ukulele- strumming Brit named Jacob Collier? ( Other nominated albums include a pair of solid commercial hits in Post Malone’s “Hollywood’s Bleeding” and Dua Lipa’s “Future Nostalgia,” along with Haim’s well- reviewed “Women in Music Pt. III,” Jhené Aiko’s trippy R&B disc, “Chilombo,” and “Everyday Life” by the veteran pop-rock band Coldplay.)

One throughlin­e is the type of old- fashioned musiciansh­ip the academy has always rewarded; detectable too is the Grammys’ reflexive attraction to music that reaches across generation­al lines.

In an interview, Recording Academy Chair and interim President and CEO Harvey Mason Jr. said the all- over- the- map quality is a feature, not a bug, of a system in which the academy’s approximat­ely 11,000 voting members make their selections with “an eye toward quality and excellence and not in evaluating who’s charted where or who has the most streams.”

“We got a little bit of everything, and for us that’s great, because that’s the membership we represent,” said Mason, who took over academy leadership in January after Deborah Dugan, the group’s first female CEO, was ousted in an explosive dispute involving claims of discrimina­tion and voteriggin­g. (Recordings eligible for considerat­ion had to be released between Sept. 1, 2019, and Aug. 31, 2020.)

The nomination­s for record of the year and song of the year more closely reflect the larger conversati­on about pop this year, with nods in the two categories for inescapabl­e singles like Ricch’s squeaky hip-hop hit, “The Box,” Lipa’s dance-pop jam “Don’t Start Now,” Doja Cat’s glittering “Say So,” DaBaby’s throbbing “Rockstar,” Malone’s rap-rock “Circles” and Megan Thee Stallion’s swaggering “Savage” remix featuring Beyoncé.

Yet an unanticipa­ted nod for Black Pumas’ “Colors” for record of the year further demonstrat­es the Grammys’ quirk factor, as do best new artist nomination­s for a pair of relatively obscure rappers, D Smoke and Chika, who will compete against Megan Thee Stallion and Doja Cat along with dance music’s Kaytranada, singersong­writer Phoebe Bridgers, country up-and-comer Ingrid Andress and the latest member of the Cyrus family to get into music: Miley’s 20-year-old sister, Noah.

Artists and technician­s with multiple nomination­s among the Grammys’ 84 categories include Brittany Howard (up for five awards), Eilish (four), Bridgers (four), jazz pianist John Beasley ( four), classical composer Thomas Adès ( three) and mastering engineer Emily Lazar (three). Lipa, named best new artist in 2019, tied Swift’s six nomination­s, as did Compton- born Ricch, who won his first Grammy in January for rap performanc­e.

Strongly criticized in recent years for overlookin­g work by women and people of color, the academy has sought to diversify its membership lately through a variety of initiative­s and executive hires.

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