The Borneo Post

KENDRICK LAMAR

leads Grammys race

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NEW YORK: The soundtrack of Marvel’s “Black Panther” propelled rap superstar Kendrick Lamar to the front of this year’s Grammy pack with eight nomination­s, closely followed by fellow rapper Drake with seven, organisers said on Friday.

Women performers also made their mark in the top categories after being largely snubbed a year ago, with rapper Cardi B, pop diva Lady Gaga and folk-rock singer Brandi Carlile all nabbing key nomination­s for music’s top awards.

Six of the eight 2019 nominees for Best New Artiste are women.

After last year’s show sparked a major backlash, the Recording Academy created a diversity task force responding to criticism that the show was consistent­ly too male and too white, and ultimately expanded four of the top categories from five nominees to eight.

Hip-hop dominated across the board for a second year running — though last year, rap mogul Jay-Z racked up the most nomination­s but left emptyhande­d, and Lamar was shut out of the general categories.

Thanks to the blockbuste­r film “Black Panther,” Lamar — whose album “DAMN.” made him the first rapper to win a Pulitzer Prize for music — once again has a chance to win the coveted Album of the Year prize after three prior losses.

His song from the Marvel superhero movie’s soundtrack, “All the Stars,” is also in the running for both Record of the Year, which recognises the overall performanc­e of a song, and Song of the Year, which awards songwritin­g.

Canadian rapper Drake meanwhile got love from the

Being a young, black queer woman in America, there was something I had to say and there was a group of people I wanted to celebrate. I’m happy to be representi­ng them. I hope they feel seen, I hope they feel heard. — Janelle Monae, R&B singer

academy across the top categories for his album “Scorpion” and hit “God’s Plan.”

The leading nominees will face stiff competitio­n on Feb 10 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles from fellow rappers Cardi B and Childish Gambino as well as Lady Gaga, who snared nomination­s in both of those top categories for her hit “Shallow”, performed with co-star Bradley Cooper in the film “A Star Is Born.”

In May, the head of the Recording Academy — which includes more than 13,000 music profession­als — said he would step aside when his contract expires next year, amid outrage after he said women artistes should “step up.”

Then in June, the academy announced an expansion from five to eight of the 2019 nominee fields for Album of the Year, Record of the Year, Song of the Year and Best New Artiste.

The move did appear to have a positive effect for female artists, with five of the Album of the Year nomination­s going to women: Cardi B, Carlile, R&B singer Janelle Monae, R&B prodigy H.E.R. and country songstress Kacey Musgraves.

Monae, whose futuristic blend of funk and psychedeli­c soul is a favourite of critics, teared up on hearing she had snagged the top nomination.

“Being a young, black queer woman in America, there was something I had to say and there was a group of people I wanted to celebrate,” she said with glassy eyes on “CBS This Morning,” where she was helping announce the nominees.

“I’m happy to be representi­ng them,” she said. “I hope they feel seen, I hope they feel heard.”

Carlile — a folk-rock singer known for her bluesy, dynamic voice — is the woman with the most nomination­s this year at six, including three across the major categories.

And Cardi B — the New York rapper whose “Bodak Yellow” catapulted her to runaway success — scored five, including two of the most prestigiou­s.

The 26-year-old’s saucy summer hit “I Like It” — which features Puerto Rican Latin trap artiste Bad Bunny and Colombian reggaeton star J Balvin — is among those up for Record of the Year.

But last year’s Grammy snub of bilingual mega-hit “Despacito” in the Record and Song of the Year categories has critics skeptical that a non-English track, no matter how popular, can score a major award.

Among this year’s major snubs, Jay-Z and his pop queen wife Beyonce were left out of the top categories despite acclaim for their joint project “Everything is Love.”

The Carters did get nomination­s for Best Urban Contempora­ry Album, Best R&B Performanc­e and Best Music Video.

Rapper Kanye West — who despite his fame has never won a Grammy in a major category — earned just one nomination for Best Non-Classical Producer, for work on his GOOD Music label’s 2018 releases that included his own album “Ye.”

Perennial favourite Taylor Swift — West’s on-off foe — also appeared to fall out of grace, earning just one nomination for Best Pop Vocal Album for “Reputation.”

And woman of the moment Ariana Grande — whose smash hit “Thank U, Next” was released after this year’s nomination deadline — was also passed over for the top awards, receiving just two nomination­s in the pop categories.

The late rapper Mac Miller, Grande’s ex-boyfriend who died of a drug overdose in September, is up for Best Rap Album for “Swimming.”

The Grammy nomination­s come two days later than originally scheduled — they were pushed back from Wednesday for the state funeral of former US president George H.W. Bush. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Dolly Parton (second right), cast members Danielle MacDonald (fifth right), Jennifer Aniston (third right and at right), Bex Taylor-Klaus, Odeya Rush, Georgie Flores, director Anne Fletcher (above right), screenwrit­er Kristin Hahn, author Julie Murphy and others pose at a premiere for the movie ‘Dumplin’’ in Los Angeles, California, US, on Thursday. — Reuters photos
Dolly Parton (second right), cast members Danielle MacDonald (fifth right), Jennifer Aniston (third right and at right), Bex Taylor-Klaus, Odeya Rush, Georgie Flores, director Anne Fletcher (above right), screenwrit­er Kristin Hahn, author Julie Murphy and others pose at a premiere for the movie ‘Dumplin’’ in Los Angeles, California, US, on Thursday. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? Grammy Award nomination­s in Album of the Year category includes artistes in this combinatio­n photo (left to right): Cardi B, Brandi Carlile, Drake, H.E.R., Post Malone, Janelle Monae, Kacey Musgraves and Lamar. — Reuters file photos
Grammy Award nomination­s in Album of the Year category includes artistes in this combinatio­n photo (left to right): Cardi B, Brandi Carlile, Drake, H.E.R., Post Malone, Janelle Monae, Kacey Musgraves and Lamar. — Reuters file photos

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