El Dorado News-Times

Music mainstays, newcomers speak out on Grammy inclusion

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK — Drama over fairness and inclusion at the Grammy Awards carried over to music's big night Sunday as newcomers and mainstays in the industry supported Sean "Diddy" Combs and his powerful speech putting the Recording Academy on a clock to fix the nomination process when it comes to rap and R&B in major categories.

Days ago, the academy's just-ousted CEO Deborah Dugan claimed that the awards are rigged and filled with conflicts of interest. At the Clive Davis gala Saturday night, Combs — who was honored — spoke for 50 fiery minutes, saying in part:

"So I say this with love to the Grammys, because you really need to know this, every year y'all be killing us man. Man, I'm talking about the pain. I'm speaking for all these artists here, the producers, the executives. The amount of time it takes to make these records, to pour your heart into it, and you just want an even playing field."

Combs urged in his speech that substantiv­e change should come within 365 days.

Legend Smokey Robinson had words of support for Combs, his friend, but he said he wasn't surprised about the Grammy criticism: "Diddy could actually be a politician. I thought this speech was powerful. It touched on a lot of things people were afraid to say."

Of Dugan calling out manipulati­on of the nomination process, he said, "It's not like it's news. We've known it all along. It's just coming to the forefront. All that is hidden will come to light."

Tyler, The Creator said backstage after his "Igor" won best rap album that he's "half and half" on the controvers­y over whether Grammy voting is fair.

"On one side, I'm very grateful that what I made could just be acknowledg­ed in a world like this," he told reporters. "But also, it sucks that whenever we, and I mean guys that look like me, do anything that's genre-bending, they always put it in a 'rap' or 'urban' category. I don't like that 'urban' word. It's just a politicall­y correct way to say the N-word. When I hear that, I'm just like why can't we just be in pop?"

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