The Hamilton Spectator

It may be Time’s Up for the music industry

Alessia Cara was the lone female winner in the televised awards

- RANDALL ROBERTS

And now it’s the Grammys’ turn. So far, the Recording Academy has largely avoided the sort of criticism over lack of diversity that’s been levelled at the Oscars. But hours after men swept all but one of the categories given out on live television, #GrammysSoM­ale was trending.

Kesha’s impassione­d performanc­e of “Praying” was certainly the highlight of this year’s Grammys, but the audience’s emotional response to the anthem of female-empowermen­t appeared to be skin-deep when the song lost to Ed Sheeran’s “Shape of You” for pop solo performanc­e.

Indeed, of the 84 Grammy categories handed out Sunday only a dozen or so went to women or acts co-led by women, which is pretty much in keeping with the damning research paper recently published by Stacy L. Smith, Marc Choueiti and Kate Pieper of the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative. Looking at the gender breakdown of nominees, it found that just 9.3 per cent of them between 2013 and 2018 were female.

Having apparently learned nothing from the many men forced to walk back tone-deaf commentary during the #MeToo movement, Recording Academy President Neil Portnow almost immediatel­y made things worse. He responded to the hashtag by urging women to “step up.”

Identifyin­g issues including wage inequality, discrimina­tion, harassment and abuse of power, she declared, “It’s not just going on in Hollywood. It’s not just going on in Washington. It’s right here in our industry as well.”

Just as the #OscarsSoWh­ite campaign forced the film academy to reconsider its almost allwhite, mostly male membership, this year’s male-dominated Grammy results prompted many variations on the same unanswered question: Who, exactly, is deciding the winners of music’s most coveted award?

Hard to tell. The Recording Academy’s membership is made up of 24,000 profession­als who work in all aspects of the business — producers and engineers, label executives, music publishers and artists, of which 13,000 are eligible voters. (By comparison, there are roughly 8,400 members in the film academy.) But the leadership remains unwilling to offer basic data on its voters, such as race and gender.

At the Grammys post-telecast press conference, Portnow was asked directly about male domination on Sunday.

“I think it has to begin with women who have the creativity in their hearts and their souls,” he answered, “who want to be musicians, who want to be engineers, who want to be producers, who want to be part of the industry on an executive level — to step up, because I think they would be welcome,” Portnow said. The backlash was swift. “Neil getting up there and saying that women should ‘step up’ just shows just out of touch he is and how out of touch the organizati­on is,” said Dorothy Carvello, the former record executive and author of the upcoming music-industry memoir “Anything for a Hit: An A&R Woman’s Story of Surviving the Music Industry.”

The Recording Academy did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Further inflaming many critically attuned music fans, for the coveted album of the year Grammy the academy overlooked widely regarded and topical hip-hop releases from Kendrick Lamar and Jay-Z in favour of Bruno Mars’ album of retro-focused pop, “24K Magic.”

The slight renewed long-held criticism that, absent a diverse membership, the Grammys were denying a major award to rap, the culture’s dominant musical genre for going on two decades now.

Over the years the academy has repeatedly been called out by Kanye West, J. Cole, 50 Cent, rap mogul Steve Stoute (he once spent $40,000 on an ad to criticize the awards) and Jay-Z, who went home empty-handed despite having the most nomination­s this year.

Last year, Chance the Rapper became the first black hip-hop artist since Lauryn Hill in 1999 to win the trophy for new artist. Song and record of the year trophies have never gone to rap artists. Had Jay-Z or Lamar taken the night’s biggest honour, album of the year, he would have only been the third rap artist to do so.

The criticism of the results comes less than a month after the launch of the high-profile Time’s Up campaign, geared to shed light on gender discrimina­tion and sex abuse in the entertainm­ent business. The initiative made its intentions prominentl­y known at the Golden Globes. To extend the message on Sunday, an organizati­on called Voices in Entertainm­ent invited Grammy attendees to wear white roses in support.

“We can’t change the number of nominees, but the conversati­on changed completely,” stressed Meg Harkins, a marketing executive at Roc Nation and a co-founder of the white rose initiative. “To see Janelle Monae’s speech and all those women up there wearing white and supporting Kesha was incredible.”

Harkins agreed that the Grammys voting process was at least partly to blame for the outcome. “I’m a voting member, I’m a part of this institutio­n,” she said. “The qualificat­ion for voting membership has to be reviewed. We have to be more inclusive if we’re going to make it better.”

During her Grammy acceptance speech for new artist, Alessia Cara — the lone female victor of the CBS broadcast — called for more opportunit­y for artists because “everyone deserves the same shot.”

“There’s some artists that have started some incredible trends,” she added, “and they don’t get the same shot because they aren’t on the charts or are particular­ly mainstream.”

 ?? MATT SAYLES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Janelle Monae: “It’s not just going on in Hollywood...”
MATT SAYLES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Janelle Monae: “It’s not just going on in Hollywood...”

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