Las Vegas Review-Journal

Will history be made, or repeated, at the 2023 Grammy Awards?

- By George Varga

Beyoncé or Adele? Kendrick Lamar or Bad Bunny? Willie Nelson or Buddy Guy? Wet Leg or Maneskin? Dave Chappelle or Louis C.K.? Regardless of who wins or loses at the 65th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, its honcho Harvey Mason Jr. knows exactly what the perfect edition of the Grammys should be like. “Everyone wins every award they were nominated for!” he said, laughing heartily.

Mason is himself a five-time nominee as a songwriter and producer whose first nomination came for co-writing “He Wasn’t Man Enough, a 2000 hit for Toni Braxton. As of May 2021, Mason is also the first Black CEO in the history of the Recording Academy, the nonprofit music-advocacy organizati­on under whose auspices the Grammys are presented.that dual perspectiv­e makes him uniquely qualified to weigh in on the successes and challenges of the music world’s most prestigiou­s, comprehens­ive and sometimes controvers­ial annual awards fête.

“There are 91 categories — and one winner per category. That leaves a lot of unhappy nominees,” Mason, 54, said in a recent Zoom interview from his Los Angeles recording studio.

Forward-looking initiative­s

Since assuming his position at the academy, first as interim CEO in January 2020, Mason has spearheade­d a series of forward-looking initiative­s to make the organizati­on more diverse and responsive to change.

Since 2019, the academy has added 1,913 women to its voting membership, with a goal of adding 2,500 women voting members by 2025. Membership among traditiona­lly underrepre­sented communitie­s has increased by 38 percent, Mason noted proudly, while Black representa­tion now accounts for 22 percent of the membership, more than double from just a few years ago.

On Thursday, the academy will present its second annual Black Music Collective Global Impact Awards at an invitation-only Los Angeles ceremony. The honorees include Dr. Dre, Lil Wayne, Missy Elliot and Epic Records CEO and Chairwoman Sylvia Rhone.

The event is designed in part to inspire communicat­ion and forge alliances with Black music-makers who have been critical of the academy in the past.

“We’ve been able to understand things that we can do differentl­y, and better, and make changes,” said Mason, who was instrument­al in the academy’s September 2020 creation of its Black Music Collective.

The collective’s launch came just a few months after the Mason-led academy announced its partnershi­p with Color of Change — the nation’s largest online racial justice organizati­on — to create change and new opportunit­ies for Black music-makers.

Asked about the main concerns that have been conveyed to him by people in the Black Music Collective, Mason replied: “It’s pretty specific, and there are also some in-the-weeds details. But mostly they’re saying that we need to make sure that Black music is fairly, equally represente­d, especially knowing that 33 to 34 percent of music created and consumed is Black music.

“So, we need to make sure we’re cognizant of that as we’re building out everything we do — our membership, our words, our television presence, our (year-round) programs. The time we have had with the with the Black Music Collective has been invaluable to making sure that we’re seeing things through that lens, and making sure we’re paying very close attention to equity around Black music and Black music people.”

As the head of the Recording Academy, one of Mason’s biggest challenges has been to bring greater flexibilit­y and transparen­cy to an organizati­on that has been criticized for being too opaque, too entrenched and too resistant to change.

“My priorities for the year ahead are to try and utilize the power of music and the platform of the academy to do good,” he said.

“So, it comes down to the advocacy work we do. What are we going to do advocate for music people? How are we going to make sure the legislatio­n and other protection­s are in place for music people to continue to be able to make a living and to be fairly remunerate­d for their art, their craft? And that comes down to education, making sure the next generation of people are being introduced to music and being educated around music and knowing the power of what music does

“I like to believe the work that we’re doing is very important. And I think that the Grammy Awards show is a great representa­tion of that. But it’s only one night of the 364 other days a year that we’re working to support music people.”

New Grammy categories

This year has seen the introducti­on five new Grammy categories, including Best Song for Social Change, Best Spoken Word Poetry Album, and Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactiv­e Media. They join the multiple Grammy categories for hip-hop, Latin, jazz, rock, pop, classical, Americana, gospel, composing, arranging, and more.

Winners in the marquee categories will be announced Sunday during the 3-½hour telecast at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center).

“There were almost 20,000 submission­s this year,” Mason said. “So, it’s really difficult to think about all the people that don’t get nominated or don’t win.

“But what we like to think about is the celebratio­n of music. The Grammys are about coming together and highlighti­ng music and the accomplish­ments of music for the year — the great artists, songwriter­s, producers, engineers and (other) music people — from all different genres, from all different parts of the world, all uniting around music during Grammy week.”

As in previous years, some of the 2023 nominees have the potential to make history — if they win.

A key example is Puerto Rican reggaeton and Latin-trap vocal superstar Bad Bunny.

His chart-topping “Un Verano Sin Ti” (“A Summer Without You”) makes the 28-year-old the first Album of the Year contender in Grammy history to be nominated for an all-spanish-language recording.

But the 2023 contenders who will likely draw the most attention and dominate online discussion­s are Beyoncé and

Adele, who have gone head-to-head at the Grammys previously.

Both are again nominated for Album, Record of the Year and Song of the Year, the awards’ most high-profile categories. That was also the case in 2017 when Adele won in all three — and had two other Grammy wins as well.

Beyoncé has a field-leading nine nomination­s this year, two more than Adele. But being the top nominee does not ensure victory, as Beyoncé and her fans know all too well.

She also had nine nomination­s in 2017, but went home with just two wins, both in comparativ­ely minor categories. Yet, while she last year surpassed bluegrass-music queen Alison Krauss as the female artist with the most Grammy wins (28 to Krauss’ 27), Beyoncé has yet to win for Album or Record of the Year.

She has only won once for Song of the Year, back in 2010, for “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It”) Her husband, rap icon Jay Z, who entered the 2018 Grammy telecast with a field-leading eight nomination­s went home without a single trophy. Bruno Mars, who makes new music that sounds retro, was the night’s biggest winner.

Adele was visibly chagrined when the 2017 Album of the Year trophy went to her for “25,” not to Beyoncé’s profoundly stirring “Lemonade,” which addressed social, political and racial issues with equal grit and grace.

“I can’t possibly accept this award, and I’m very humbled and very grateful and gracious but my life is Beyoncé,” Adele told the audience at the Staples Center in Los Angeles and millions of TV viewers worldwide. “The ‘Lemonade’ album, Beyoncé, was so monumental, and so well thought out, and so beautiful and soul-bearing .. all us artists adore you.”

With nine and seven nomination­s, respective­ly, either Beyoncé or Adele could emerge as this year’s biggest winner Sunday. Unless, that is, one of the other leading nominees — whose ranks include Kendrick Lamar, Harry Styles and Brandi Carlile — score major upsets.

If Beyoncé triumphs in four of the nine categories in which she is nominated this year, she will become the biggest winner in Grammy history.

A spotty track record

Since 2004 only three Black artists — Herbie Hancock, Jon Batiste and, posthumous­ly, Ray Charles — have won for Album of the Year. During that same period, Taylor Swift has won that category three times and Adele twice.

Since the Grammys debuted in 1959, only 11 Black artists have won for Album of the Year. And only three of those 11 winners have been women — Natalie Cole, Whitney Houston and Lauryn Hill. Moreover, only two hip-hop albums have ever won Album of the Year honors: Hill’s “The Miseducati­on of Lauryn Hill” in 1999 and Outkast’s “Speakerbox­xx/the Love Below” in 2004.

Eminem, who is white, has won the Best Rap Album Grammy six times, giving him more victories in that category than any Black artist in a genre created by Black artists. Jay Z has only taken home the Best Rap Album award once, despite having been nominated 11 times since that category debuted in 1996.

Accordingl­y, the Grammys have been rebuked and even boycotted by some Black artists, who charge the awards are out of touch and do not reflect the creative and commercial impact of their work. It also demonstrat­es why the Grammys are maligned and coveted, sometimes almost in the same breath.

Beyoncé, Jay Z, neck and neck

As for Jay Z, he is now tied with his wife, Beyoncé, for the most nomination­s by an artist, with 88 each. But none of his 24 wins as a solo artist has been for Album, Song or Record of the Year. Along with Best New Artist, these are the only categories in which all Grammy voters can cast ballots, rather than only voting only for nomination­s in their field of expertise.

Of the 12 nomination­s Jay Z earned between 2017 and 2019, just one of them — for “Everything is Love,” his 2019 collaborat­ion with Beyonce — resulted in a win (for Best Contempora­ry Urban Album).

Tellingly, this year’s list of nominees does not include Drake or The Weeknd, two of pop-music’s most successful artists of the past decade.

For the second year in a row, both declined to submit any of their eligible recordings. They did this to protest the nominating process and the disregard that has been demonstrat­ed for hip-hop and Black music.

“I don’t want to speak specifical­ly about either of those two artists,” Grammy honcho Mason said. “But I will say that my goal for all artists, big and small, is to feel like the academy is a place that represents them and that it’s a place that is accurately and transparen­tly honoring music.

“But more importantl­y than that, I want all these people to understand the true value of the Recording Academy, which is to serve music to uplift us. Of course, the trophies are important. And the nomination­s, we have to get those right, we have to be relevant and timely on how we are honoring music.

“But my real goal is to make sure people understand the hundreds of millions of dollars that we push back into the music community, all the work we do to advocate for music people and to support and educate them ... whether they submitted (for nomination­s) or not.”

That hip-hop has historical­ly not fared well in the top three Grammy categories partly reflects the aesthetic preference­s of older voters. They tend to favor the authentici­ty of “real music” made on “real instrument­s” over the digital sampling and laptop production technology embraced by many hip-hop artists and producers.

“I’m sorry, but I’m not a rap fan,” said veteran saxophonis­t, composer and arranger Tom Scott, 74, who has 13 Grammy nomination­s and two wins to his credit.

“I’d love for them to come up with their own style of music, rather than sampling. I know I’m sounding really old-fashioned, like an old fart.”

Scott still receives his Grammy ballot each year. But, he notes: “I stopped voting three or four years ago. I’m a member in absentia. I’m just not into it anymore.”

Mason, in turn, stresses that the academy now requires “95 percent” of its voting members to provide recent credits each year to prove they are still actively engaged in music.

“If we’re going to get (representa­tive) Black-music nomination­s, we have to make sure the Black membership is right,” he said. “If we’re going to get the right rock nomination­s, we have to get people who are working in rock and creating rock music involved.

“So, to that initial question, do we have some work to do? Yes, because we fell behind in membership. When it came to Black music and hip-hop, specifical­ly, we didn’t have the right membership, reflective of the music community, to make sure that we are getting the right membership involved, so that we can continue to evolve our nomination­s and all our processes around awards...

“Our goal is not to just represent one group or one set of people, or one genre. We want to represent all music.”

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ / AP FILE (2017) ?? Grammy Awards are displayed in 2017 at the Grammy Museum Experience at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. The 2023 Grammy Awards will air live Sunday.
JULIO CORTEZ / AP FILE (2017) Grammy Awards are displayed in 2017 at the Grammy Museum Experience at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. The 2023 Grammy Awards will air live Sunday.
 ?? ?? Bad Bunny
Bad Bunny
 ?? ?? Kendrick Lamar
Kendrick Lamar
 ?? ?? Beyonce
Beyonce
 ?? ?? Adele
Adele

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