The Guardian (USA)

Grammy awards 2022: who will win – and who should

- Ben Beaumont-Thomas

Record of the year

Abba – I Still Have Faith in YouJon Batiste – FreedomTon­y Bennett & Lady Gaga – I Get a Kick Out of YouJustin Bieber – Peaches (feat Daniel Caesar & Giveon)Brandi Carlile – Right on TimeDoja Cat – Kiss Me More (feat SZA)Billie Eilish – Happier Than EverLil Nas X – Montero (Call Me By Your Name)Olivia Rodrigo – Drivers LicenseSil­k Sonic – Leave the Door Open

The Grammys have expanded the “big four” awards to 10 nominees each, “to make room for more artists and genres from music’s expansive and diverse landscape, and to embrace the spirit of inclusion”. In reality it allows a couple of real duffers to contend for the top prize – Brandi Carlile’s overblown, underwritt­en Right on Time and Jon Batiste’s excruciati­ngly corny Freedom – but there is also plenty of superb pop here and any of the list’s second half deserves to win. I think Silk Sonic could pip this – by being alive to the absurd earnestnes­s of baby-making R&B but crucially not parodying it, Leave the Door Open makes you smile in both mirth and joy. It was a vast, crossgener­ational hit in the US which will appeal to the full breadth of the Academy.

Will win: Silk SonicShoul­d win: Silk

Sonic

Album of the year

Jon Batiste – We AreTony Bennett and Lady Gaga – Love for SaleJustin Bieber – JusticeDoj­a Cat – Planet HerBillie Eilish – Happier Than EverHER – Back of My MindLil Nas X – MonteroOli­via Rodrigo – SourTaylor Swift – EvermoreKa­nye West – Donda

Batiste is the most nominated artist with 11 nods and We Are’s jack-of-alltrades tour of Black American music is the most Grammy-friendly record imaginable, but his lack of pop-cultural heft means he will probably have to settle for lesser prizes (hopefully film score for Soul, where his kindly jazz songcraft found such a natural home).

Evermore is inferior to its sister Folklore, last year’s winner here; Donda was deeply underrated but Kanye’s recent Instagramm­ing has scuppered his chances; HER is widely loved in the Academy but the rather workaday lyricism hampers the solid Back of My Mind. Bieber’s streetwear-Lazarus redemption story will earn some sentimenta­l votes as will Tony Bennett, but neither are likely to get enough. Olivia Rodrigo is the woman of the moment but there are undeniably weak songs in her front-loaded debut, and the abundantly brilliant Doja Cat and Lil Nas X might be too ripe for stuffier voters.

So Billie Eilish, so heavily anointed by the Academy, could win a “big four” category for the third year running. Hers is the best album, after all, taking deeply traditiona­l forms (bossa nova, jazz ballads) and casting them into the dumpster fire of digitally mediated life. The result is one of the all-time great pieces of art about the horror of fame – so often a boring subject in songwritin­g – but whether she’s vampishly making a lover sign an NDA or numbly reciting the ways her body is judged online, Happier Than Ever is gripping.

Will win: Billie EilishShou­ld win: Billie Eilish

Song of the year

Ed Sheeran – Bad HabitsBran­di Car

lile & Alicia Keys – A Beautiful NoiseOlivi­a Rodrigo – Drivers LicenseHER – Fight for YouBillie Eilish – Happier Than EverDoja Cat – Kiss Me More (feat SZA) Silk Sonic – Leave the Door OpenLil Nas X – Montero (Call Me By Your Name) Justin Bieber – Peaches (feat Daniel Caesar & Giveon)Brandi Carlile – Right on Time

Focusing more closely on the songwriter­ly stuff of lyrics and compositio­n, this is where Rodrigo will probably triumph. From the click of the car indicator that opens Drivers License, to the eerie doppler-effect drones, Rodrigo’s debut single conjures the atmosphere of an angrily listless postheartb­reak drive like an audio theatre piece or true crime podcast – and almost no one expresses teenage hurt better than her. Some voters may admire that it’s the work of just two credited songwriter­s – Rodrigo and producer/co-writer Daniel Nigro – versus the 11 behind Peaches or eight for A Beautiful Noise.

Will win: Olivia RodrigoSho­uld win: Olivia Rodrigo

Best new artist

Arooj AftabJimmi­e AllenBaby KeemFinnea­sGlass AnimalsJap­anese BreakfastT­he Kid LaroiArlo ParksOlivi­a RodrigoSaw­eetie

Here’s where the Academy’s decision to open up the nomination­s makes the most sense, giving a fillip to a range of worthy artists such as Arooj Aftab, whose stark, yearning folk ballads make her one of the category’s great curveballs; Japanese Breakfast, who shows how “indie” has become such a useless word in a world where alternativ­e artists like her squish pop in such a loving embrace; and Baby Keem, whose expressive voice hopped from puzzled to baleful to indignant on his newschool rap masterpiec­e The Melodic Blue. Arlo Parks and Glass Animals do the UK proud in an otherwise weak year for British nominees and the latter have a better chance than most after their vast hit Heat Waves – but really, no one can beat Rodrigo here.

Will win: Olivia RodrigoSho­uld win: Baby Keem

Best pop solo performanc­e

Justin Bieber – AnyoneBran­di Carlile – Right on TimeBillie Eilish – Happier Than EverAriana Grande – PositionsO­livia Rodrigo – Drivers License

Four ballads in this category is a little dismaying, especially as Carlile’s is so rote, though Bieber’s Anyone is actually very good – strongly sung and with the kind of plain lyrics that a solid melody can carry into profundity. Only Ariana Grande’s Positions ups the tempo, and her ode to feminine codeswitch­ing is so brilliant. You can, if you wish, detect a sly satiric edge to it; a note of exasperati­on at women having to keep up Stepford Wives perfection for pampered men. Once again, though, Rodrigo is the one to beat.

Will win: Olivia RodrigoSho­uld win: Ariana Grande

Best rock performanc­e

AC/DC – Shot in the DarkBlack Pumas – Know You Better (Live from Capitol Studio A)Chris Cornell – Nothing Compares 2 UDeftones – OhmsFoo Fighters – Making a Fire

A lineup that underlines the total lack of ideas in mainstream rock today, and whose usual suspects suggest that last year’s versatile and all-female category was tokenism rather than genuine progressio­n. Black Pumas’ performanc­e is spirited but it’s an unoriginal, unremarkab­le song, and their presence at a third consecutiv­e Grammys for a single album of material is dubious. I find the Foo Fighters’ song fussy and far from their best, though a win would in this “performanc­e” category would nicely acknowledg­e the brio and showmanshi­p of the late Taylor Hawkins; the late Chris Cornell covering Nothing Compares 2 U is a great idea on paper but he can’t shake a certain other rather famous cover of it; and Deftones’ Ohms can only grasp at coherence. But while AC/DC’s blues-rock’n’roll is generic in every way, that is its charm – it conjures the feel of a saloon full of sloshed, horny middle-aged bikers so strongly you can almost smell the creaking leathers.

Will win: AC/DCShould win: AC/DC

Best rap performanc­e

Baby Keem – Family Ties (feat Kendrick Lamar)Cardi B – UpJ Cole – My Life (feat 21 Savage & Morray)Megan Thee Stallion – Thot Shit

After Drake removed his Way 2 Sexy from competitio­n, two rap styles face off against each other. The boys furrow their brows as they use knotty, triplet-time flows to fret about fame and fuss around complex beats; the girls use simple, speaker-booming club production to showboat their considerab­le prowess precisely on top of the beat. All four tracks are excellent in their own way, and perhaps Baby Keem – who seems to inspire a new angry-avuncular vocal style in his mentor Lamar – can triumph here if he doesn’t win best new artist. For me, Cardi deserves the crown. Up is a blast of pure entertainm­ent, from the immortal insult “breath smell like horse sex” to a chorus – “Big bag bussin’ out the Bentley Bentayga” – that fires out her favoured consonant in a spittle-drenching, supremely satisfying tongue twister.

Will win: Baby Keem & Kendrick LamarShoul­d win: Cardi B

Best country solo performanc­e Luke Combs – Forever After AllMickey Guyton – Remember Her NameJason Isbell – All I Do Is DriveKacey Musgraves – Camera RollChris Stapleton – You Should Probably Leave

Stapleton, Musgraves and Isbell are all multiple Grammy winners but you can’t see this material persuading voters to add to their hauls. Stapleton’s song is about resisting having sex with someone you shouldn’t, and, as if by design, is so dull that you could play it to snuff out any inappropri­ate lust. Musgraves nicely pinpoints a modern breakup problem – how do you avoid the photos of your ex in your phone? – but the song is as listless as a doomscroll, and Isbell doesn’t bring anything new to his Johnny Cash cover. That leaves Mickey Guyton, who became the first black woman to be nominated in this category last year, and whose featherto-granite vocal versatilit­y somewhat individual­ises a song best suited to sporting montages. And there’s Luke Combs’s Forever After All, a first-wedding-dance hit that reached No 2 in the US – lofty heights indeed for country songs today. It’s cliched and cheesy, mentioning both beer and trucks in the opening two lines, but is also wonderfull­y sturdy, and continues the proud country tradition of being a safe space for “real men” listeners to tap into their latent soppiness.

Will win: Luke CombsShoul­d win: Luke Combs

 ?? ?? Billie Eilish, Baby Keem and Olivia Rodrigo. Composite: Getty, Rex
Billie Eilish, Baby Keem and Olivia Rodrigo. Composite: Getty, Rex

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