Kuwait Times

Grammy set to honor music's best, but scandal overshadow­s gala

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Los Angeles is gearing up for the Grammys, music’s marquee night, with Lizzo, Billie Eilish and Lil Nas X leading a pack of young, talented contenders hoping to strike gold today. But revelation­s of infighting at the Recording Academy, which organizes the awards show, and an explosive allegation of rape has cast a dark shadow over the glitzy gala and rattled the institutio­n’s efforts to shed its out-of-touch image.

On Tuesday, Deborah Dugan - the first woman to head the Academy, a move meant to usher in a new era for a body long accused of favoritism and a lack of diversity - filed an explosive discrimina­tion complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission. She says she was suspended after raising concerns over sexual harassment, voting irregulari­ties and other misconduct within the Academy, one of music’s most influentia­l organizati­ons.

In the complaint, the former CEO - who was put on leave last week days before her filing, accused of bullying behavior - also alleged that her predecesso­r, Neil Portnow, had raped a foreign female musician, an allegation he has rejected as “ludicrous and untrue”. The ongoing tempest is swirling in stark contrast with the Recording Academy’s efforts to reinvent itself, and thereby appease critics who long have lambasted the Grammys as too white, too male - and too generous to music world mainstays.

Diverse nominee field

This year’s diverse slate of nominees which celebrates a mix of establishe­d and budding stars - did appear to be a move in a new direction. Leading the pack is the effervesce­nt 31-year-old Lizzo - beloved by fans for her sassy, body-positive persona and unflinchin­g messages of feminist empowermen­t, sexual freedom and black pride. She nabbed eight nomination­s, including in all the top four categories.

The 18-year-old goth-leaning pop iconoclast Billie Eilish and the genre-bending overnight sensation Lil Nas X, 20, both have six chances at Grammy gold, while the enigmatic 22-year-old R&B prodigy H.E.R. has five. The newbie frontrunne­rs will square off against veteran powerhouse­s including Ariana Grande and Beyonce, as well as alt-leaning acts Lana Del Rey, Bon Iver and Vampire Weekend. The shift follows years of sharp critique from top-tier artists including Frank Ocean, Drake and Jay-Z, who have all slammed the Grammys as irrelevant, especially citing its failure to recognize black artists.

Diverse wins ‘more possible’

For John Vilanova, a professor at Lehigh

University who has extensivel­y researched the intersecti­on of race and gender at the Grammys, this year’s field of nominees is evidence of “an environmen­t that feels more possible” for different kinds of artists to have a chance. “It’s quite interestin­g, to see what will happen when you have artists who are really having their first chance at this,” he told AFP. “Their work is being appraised by the academy for the first time.”

In her first public interview since unveiling her scathing allegation­s that the Academy is a “boys’ club” where powerful men line their pockets and promote a misogynist­ic culture with impunity, Dugan told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Thursday: “I actually wanted to make change from within.” In her complaint, she said that some nominated artists have sat on the voting boards for their prospectiv­e categories. But when asked if the Grammys are “rigged”, Dugan sidesteppe­d. “I was trying at each step to take a deep breath and say, ‘OK, I can make a difference, I can fix this, I can work with this team.’,” she told the ABC morning news program.

‘Old Town Road’ all-star show

Though one-time Grammy darling Taylor Swift is up for several awards including Song of the Year, many mainstay artists are not “looming significan­tly” over the ceremony as they have in years past, Vilanova said. “They aren’t leading the discourse, they’re afterthoug­hts - and when has Taylor Swift been an afterthoug­ht?”

Often remembered as much for its performanc­es as its winners, the Grammys will feature Lizzo, Eilish and Grande, along with a genre-blending rendition of Lil Nas X’s mega-hit “Old Town Road” that will feature K-pop sensation BTS, country star Billy Ray Cyrus and the eclectic DJ Diplo, among others. Artists including John Legend, Meek Mill and DJ Khaled - all up for Grammys this year - will perform a tribute to the late rapper Nipsey Hussle, who was shot dead last year and is up for three posthumous awards.

Though the Recording Academy drama has threatened to cloud the gala, Vilanova said that in terms of expanding possibilit­ies for artists, the Grammys appear to be taking baby steps toward structural change. “I hesitate to call it a sea change - progress in these areas rarely happens in a straight line,” he said. “It’s not that one artist should win - what we want to ask is, ‘Do the Grammys actually represent what the music industry sounds like and looks like?’”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? In this file photo, Recording Academy President and CEO Deborah Dugan speaks during the 62nd Grammy Awards Nomination­s Conference at CBS Broadcast Center on Nov 20, 2019 in New York City.
— AFP photos In this file photo, Recording Academy President and CEO Deborah Dugan speaks during the 62nd Grammy Awards Nomination­s Conference at CBS Broadcast Center on Nov 20, 2019 in New York City.
 ??  ?? Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani attend the Warner Music Group Pre-Grammy Party at Hollywood Athletic Club on Jan 23, 2020 in Hollywood, California.
Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani attend the Warner Music Group Pre-Grammy Party at Hollywood Athletic Club on Jan 23, 2020 in Hollywood, California.
 ??  ?? Singer Bebe Rexha attends the 11th Annual GRAMMY in the Schools Live! A Celebratio­n of Music & Education presented by Ford Motor Company Fund at The Wilshire Ebell Theatre on Jan 23, 2020 in Los Angeles.
Singer Bebe Rexha attends the 11th Annual GRAMMY in the Schools Live! A Celebratio­n of Music & Education presented by Ford Motor Company Fund at The Wilshire Ebell Theatre on Jan 23, 2020 in Los Angeles.
 ??  ?? Wiz Khalifa attends the Warner Music Group Pre-Grammy Party.
Wiz Khalifa attends the Warner Music Group Pre-Grammy Party.
 ??  ?? Laura Marano attends Instagram’s GRAMMY Luncheon.
Laura Marano attends Instagram’s GRAMMY Luncheon.
 ??  ?? Njomza attends Instagram’s GRAMMY Luncheon on Jan 24, 2020 in Los Angeles
Njomza attends Instagram’s GRAMMY Luncheon on Jan 24, 2020 in Los Angeles

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