Houston Chronicle Sunday

Looking to shake ‘boys club’ reputation, Grammys invites 2,300 new voters

- By Mikael Wood

More than 2,000 people in the music industry — half of them women and half of them younger than 40 — have been invited to join the organizati­on behind the Grammy Awards, which have been frequently criticized in recent years as a bastion of oldwhite-guy values.

The Recording Academy announced Thursday that it has offered membership to more than 2,300 “establishe­d music profession­als from wide-ranging background­s, genres and discipline­s” — a significan­t uptick from 2019, when approximat­ely 1,300 musicians, technician­s and executives were invited to join the academy.

In a statement, the academy said the new class of invitees is 48 percent female and 32 percent from “traditiona­lly underrepre­sented communitie­s,” including Black, Latino and Asian-American people. That compares to a current membership of around 21,000 that the academy says is 26 percent female and 25 percent nonwhite.

“It’s really a new era for us and a time of transforma­tive change,” Kelley Purcell, the academy’s senior director of member outreach, said in an interview. “It’s important for us to not only be reflective of what’s happening in the music industry but also to be a leader and to set a positive example for the music industry.”

The effort to expand the academy’s ranks — which is being headed up by Purcell and the group’s first chief diversity and inclusion officer, Valeisha Butterfiel­d-Jones — comes after a bruising few months in which the organizati­on was described by its former leader, Deborah Dugan, as perpetuati­ng a toxic boys-club culture.

Dugan, the academy’s first female chief executive, was ousted in an explosive scandal involving charges of discrimina­tion and vote-rigging just weeks before January’s annual Grammys ceremony. Her interim replacemen­t, Harvey Mason Jr., has said he’ll stay in the job at least through May, in part because the search for a permanent chief executive has been hampered by the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a dramatic speech at a wellattend­ed party the night before the Grammys, the veteran producer and executive Sean “Diddy” Combs complained to a roomful of insiders that the academy had long disrespect­ed Black musicians and gave the group a year — until the 2021 ceremony — to “get this (expletive) together.” Other artists such as Drake,

Frank Ocean and Tyler, the Creator have described what they view as the Grammys’ systemic marginaliz­ation of hip-hop and R&B.

Butterfiel­d-Jones, who took up her post in early May, said she welcomes the criticism.

“I believe that honesty and transparen­cy is the only way that we’re going to build trust, drive change and do the necessary work,” said the executive, who formerly oversaw inclusion initiative­s at Google.

Butterfiel­d-Jones said the academy based its targets for the new class of invited members on U.S. demographi­c data but that it’s working to compile more specific informatio­n about the makeup of the music business, which is dominated creatively by people of color.

“The goal for us moving forward — and this is gonna take some time — is to reflect the available talent pool in the music industry,” she said.

New members were invited to join as part of what the academy calls its “community-driven and peer-reviewed membership model” in which hopefuls must submit two “strong recommenda­tions” from peers in the business. And what about potential members who might not have raised their hands? Purcell said the group extends “supplement­al invitation­s” to “make sure we’re reaching all qualified people even if they haven’t submitted.”

In 2018, according to Billboard, only about 20 percent of those invited actually joined the academy — one indication of the perception problem Combs referred to. Purcell said she couldn’t estimate how many of the new invitees would accept the academy’s invitation but added, “I’m just happy that the new member class signifies progress for us in terms of helping our membership demographi­cs move forward.”

Asked about any resistance to those shifts among the academy’s old guard, Butterfiel­d-Jones said she hadn’t encountere­d any.

“In fact, I’ve been met with nothing but appetite, desire and motivation to change — and I mean that,” she said.

Yet Dugan voiced similar optimism before she was fired in what many have described as a culture clash.

In response, Butterfiel­d-Jones pointed to a series of Grammys rule changes the academy announced last month (including its doing away with the controvers­ial term “urban” in one category) as proof that it’s moving swiftly this time.

“I’ve done this work for 20 years, and I would not have joined, quite frankly, had I not seen the signals of an organizati­on that’s ready for change,” she said. “I always follow the data.”

The new members have until Sept. 15 to accept their invitation­s if they want to take part in the voting process for next year’s Grammys ceremony, which Mason recently said will take place on Jan. 31 in a form yet to be determined because of the pandemic.

 ?? Unique Nicole / Getty Images ?? Valeisha Butterfiel­d-Jones is the Grammys’ new chief diversity and inclusion officer.
Unique Nicole / Getty Images Valeisha Butterfiel­d-Jones is the Grammys’ new chief diversity and inclusion officer.

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