USA TODAY US Edition

Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ loss is bitterswee­t The singer performed Love Drought and Sandcastle­s during the awards show.

Win or lose, contest reveals Grammys’ shortcomin­gs

- Maeve McDermott @maeve_mcdermott USA TODAY

“What the (expletive) does (Beyoncé) have to do to win album of the year?”

That’s a good question, one posed by Adele backstage at the Grammys on Sunday night, minutes after 25 beat Beyoncé’s Lem

onade for album of the year. The answer? Short of going more pop, or magically becoming a white artist, it’s unclear. Beyoncé’s loss reflects the Grammys’ problems, confirming that “music’s biggest night” is just as out of touch and racially fraught as critics claim.

WHY SHE LOST

THE GRAMMYS LOVE ADELE — AND HER SALES NUMBERS

While Beyoncé’s loss dismayed many fans, it wasn’t a surprise to some Grammys-watchers. Adele is a perennial favorite at the awards, sweeping the 2012 Grammys with six trophies for 21. Thanks to its earlier release date, her album 25 dwarfed

Lemonade in sales. While the two albums posted similar numbers in 2016 (2.4 million and 2.2 million total units, respective­ly), Adele already had also sold 8.01 million units in 2015 before

Lemonade arrived in April 2016.

BLACK ARTISTS HAVE STRUGGLED TO WIN ALBUM OF THE YEAR

The Grammys’ album of the year preference­s extend beyond just stats. Last year, Frank Ocean told The New York Times he was skipping the Grammys because of the voters’ weak track record in recognizin­g black artists, particular­ly when it comes to album of the year. “1989 getting album of the year over To Pimp a Butterfly. Hands down one of the most ‘faulty’ TV moments I’ve seen,” Ocean wrote in a Tumblr post, pointing out how Taylor Swift’s album beat out the Kendrick Lamar favorite last year.

THE GRAMMYS HAVE AN ‘URBAN CONTEMPORA­RY’ PROBLEM

In one of the modern Grammys’ most worrisome trends, critically favored rap and R&B artists are rewarded in their respective genre categories, while rarely taking home the night’s biggest award. It’s a struggle that Beyoncé, Frank Ocean and Lamar all know well. Bey’s Lemonade took home urban contempora­ry album Sunday, the category that Ocean’s Channel Orange won in 2013, while Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly was awarded best rap album in 2016. None of the three artists has won album of the year, with Beyoncé nominated in the category three times. Bey fans hoped the 2017 awards would be different, with her visually sumptuous and critically acclaimed Lemonade enough of an achievemen­t to overcome the Grammys’ questionab­le history of racial inequity.

WHY BEYONCÉ SHOULD HAVE WON

THE ALBUM IS CULTURALLY SIGNIFICAN­T

Adele’s win wasn’t exactly as an upset; the record-breaking sales and positive reviews of the album speak for itself. But as Adele said backstage, Beyoncé winning album of the year for

Lemonade would’ve recognized not just her music, but the vital cultural role the singer occupied in 2016, a pop megastar whose work still spoke powerfully to members of her race and gender. “I felt like it was her time to win,” Adele said. She was right. 25 and Lemon

ade both explored the struggles of being a wife and/or mother, and while Adele’s album was just as swooping and cinematic as her fans hoped, it didn’t take the same risks with genre as Lemon

ade did. Add on the fiery political edits of Formation, and the album’s accompanyi­ng short film, and you get a work that’s so much more substantia­l than the tidy adult-contempora­ry collection that won.

Beyoncé will get more chances at the top prizes, even if she has to record an album of jazz standards or pop covers to finally claim album of the year. And yet,

Lemonade will never have another chance to win, and another contempora­ry masterpiec­e from a black artist is overlooked.

 ?? DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY ?? Beyoncé poses with her awards during the 59th Grammys, yet the album of the year honor has eluded her despite the singer’s and Lemonade’s cultural impact.
DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY Beyoncé poses with her awards during the 59th Grammys, yet the album of the year honor has eluded her despite the singer’s and Lemonade’s cultural impact.
 ??  ?? KEVORK DJANSEZIAN, GETTY IMAGES
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN, GETTY IMAGES

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