Kuwait Times

Rappers, women aim big at Grammys after past snubs

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Music’s biggest stars gather in Los Angeles today for the Grammy Awards, and this year observers are hoping the hip-hop and women artists leading the pack will get their due. The industry’s annual gala draws eye rolls every year from critics who say the winners are too white and too male, but for the second consecutiv­e year black hip-hop artists dominated the nomination­s across the board.

Rapper Kendrick Lamar-who won a Pulitzer Prize for his album “DAMN.” but not a Grammy for Album of the Year-earned eight nomination­s, while Canadian rapper Drake snagged seven. Women artists scored nods in all of the top categories after being largely snubbed a year ago, with rapper Cardi B, pop diva Lady Gaga, pop futurist Janelle Monae and folk rocker Brandi Carlile among the frontrunne­rs.

In the Best New Artist category, six of the eight nominees are women. But skepticism lingers that nods will actually translate into wins, after rap mogul Jay-Z left empty-handed last year despite eight nomination­s. That show sparked a major backlash-even retro-funk star Bruno Mars’s surprise sweep in the top categories was divisive, as it was seen as somewhat out of touch with the more groundbrea­king work on offer.

In response, the Recording Academy-which organizes the gala-created a diversity task force and expanded the four top categories from five nominees to eight. “The industry and the Recording Academy do understand that they have a problem on their hands,” Murray Forman, who studies pop music at Boston’s Northeaste­rn University, told AFP.

‘It has to start with us’

As the gala approached, controvers­y was brewing, with a slate of superstars declining to perform at the Staples Centre. Drake, Lamar and Childish Gambino have all reportedly turned down offers to perform, while Ariana Grande withdrew from the show over creative difference with organizers. Even Grammys producer Ken Ehrlich has admitted the “problem” over hip-hop artists who feel undervalue­d by the Academy, which includes more than 13,000 music profession­als. Lamar once again has a chance to win the prestigiou­s Album of the Year award after three prior lossesthis time for mastermind­ing the soundtrack for the blockbuste­r superhero film “Black Panther.” The lead song off the soundtrack-”All the Stars”, which he performed with R&B singer SZA-is in the running for both Record of the Year, which honors best overall song, and Song of the Year, which awards songwritin­g.

Drake, who has sparred with the Recording Academy in past years, nabbed nomination­s across the top categories for his album “Scorpion” and inescapabl­e 2018 hit “God’s Plan.” Women snagged five of the eight Album of the Year nomination­s: Cardi B, Carlile, Monae, R&B prodigy H.E.R. and country star Kacey Musgraves are in the running. Lady Gaga boasts five nomination­s including for both Record and Song of the Year for her heart-pounding hit “Shallow,” which she performed in the film “A Star Is Born” with co-star Bradley Cooper. Carlile-this year’s most-nominated womansaid women must promote each other to bring about change. “We can blame men, and we can blame the industry and we can blame commerce, but it has to start with us,” the 37year-old told Variety.

Radicalize­d categories

Despite rap’s strong number of nomination­s, most experts are not expecting a quick revolution, saying successful black artists have long been restricted to wins in categories like Best Rap Album. “It’s not so much that black people are invisible or not innovating-it’s about those innovation­s being contained to radicalize­d categories,” said Guthrie Ramsey, a musicologi­st at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

After last year’s shutout, Jay-Z dissed the Academy in “APES**T”-his track with wife Beyonce-vying on Sunday for Best Music Video, along with four other boundary-pushing black nominees. But for others, part of rap’s appeal is that it remains non-conformist. “So much of rap music history has been about resistance and countercul­ture-a win also means the approval of mainstream culture,” said Akil Houston, a hip-hop scholar at Ohio University. “In a way, then you lose that outsider edge.”

Representa­tion is everything

Today’s ceremony, hosted by songstress Alicia Keys, will feature performanc­es by Gaga, Cardi B, Carlile and Monae. “Representa­tion is everything,” Carlile said at a pre-Grammy gala honoring country legend Dolly Parton. “If there’s a little girl waiting up late to see me sing on the Grammys, then I’m happy I’m here.” A tribute to the late Aretha Franklin is also planned. The Grammys gala will air today from 5:00 pm.—AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo Childish Gambino performs on stage during the iHeartRadi­o Music Festival at the T-Mobile arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
In this file photo Childish Gambino performs on stage during the iHeartRadi­o Music Festival at the T-Mobile arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
 ??  ?? In this file photo US rapper Cardi B performs on stage during the Z100’s iHeartRadi­o Jingle Ball show at Madison Square Garden in New York City. — AFP photos
In this file photo US rapper Cardi B performs on stage during the Z100’s iHeartRadi­o Jingle Ball show at Madison Square Garden in New York City. — AFP photos

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