The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Billie Eilish swept awards while artists remembered Kobe Bryant

Atlanta’s Lil Nas X won two Grammys in his breakout year.

- By Melissa Ruggieri mruggieri@ajc.com

“It’s been a hell of a week,” Alicia Keys said during the 62nd annual Grammy Awards.

Indeed, between the internal weeklong drama of the Recording Academy with accusation­s and public shamings and the sudden, shocking death of basketball hero Kobe Bryant a few hours before the Sunday ceremony at the Staples Center, Keys’ comment gave permission to exhale.

Though the show opened with an expectedly sassy performanc­e from three-time winner Lizzo (best pop solo performanc­e, best traditiona­l R&B performanc­e and best urban contempora­ry album) the tenor of the night was quickly addressed by Keys, who returned as host for the second year and displayed admirable calmness and empathy.

“We’re literally standing here heartbroke­n in the house that Kobe Bryant built. Right now, Kobe and all those lost today are in our spirit, in our hearts, in our prayers, in this building,” Keys said, “We never imagined in a million years we’d have to start the show like this.”

Keys and Boyz II Men then quietly sang a few a cappella lines from the Boyz’ 1991 hit ballad, “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday.”

The vibe during the ceremony gradually brightened, and by the time 18-year-old Billie Eilish, the key winner this year with five Grammys, returned to the stage to accept the final award of the night for record of the year with a pithy, “Thank you, bye,” it almost felt like a celebratio­n.

Eilish’s haul included a sweep of the four major categories for album of the year (“When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We

Go?”) and record and song of the year (“Bad Guy”), as well as best new artist. She is the first artist since Christophe­r Cross in 1981 to achieve that feat.

Backstage, Eilish and her producer brother Finneas O’Connell were still feeling joyful.

“We made this album in a bedroom and it was mastered in someone’s living room, so literally anything is possible,” Eilish said.

Added O’Connell, “To me, the music I listened to growing up was the most important to me forever, so any time a person that age comes up to us and says we’re their favorite anything, I know how much that means to them.”

The legacy of basketball icon Bryant was alluded to during some of the night’s most incendiary performanc­es, including an epic showdown between Aerosmith and Run-D.M.C., who revisited their groundbrea­king 1986 collaborat­ion of “Walk This Way” (Bry

ant’s jersey was held aloft at the back of the stage).

Another heralded youngster, Atlanta’s Lil Nas X who won two Grammys in his breakout year (best pop duo/ group performanc­e with Billy Ray Cyrus and best music video), managed to stretch his wisp of a record-breaking song, “Old Town Road,” into one of the most entertaini­ng spectacles of the show.

Starting while sitting on a couch and strumming a guitar (with a Bryant jersey draped on a chair), Lil Nas X walked through a series of doors on a revolving set that paired him with a slew of collaborat­ors – BTS (the first K-pop band to perform on the Grammys), Diplo and primary sidekick Cyrus among them. But the appearance of (Big) Nas during the song was a much-appreciate­d hoot.

Artist tributes also populated the 3 ½-hour telecast, including Usher, in leather pants and a glittery jacket, smoothly executing a Prince medley of “Little Red Corvette,” “When Doves Cry” and “Kiss,” with Prince’s longtime musical partner Sheila E behind him on the drums and FKA Twigs performing a pole dance.

Backstage, Sheila E said FKA Twigs’ decision not to sing was her own and that Usher chose his own Prince songs for the segment.

“If someone is going to do a tribute, you ask them what they want to sing because it has to be personal,” she said, “It’s important for him to dance and to sing and (to be featured) as an entertaine­r. He does all of the above.”

Rapper Nipsey Hussle, who was shot to death in March, also received musical love during a medley of “Letter to Nipsey” and “Higher” featuring Meek Mill, John Legend, Roddy Ricch, Kirk Franklin and D J Khaled, the latter doing his usual yell-a-thon.

Hussle’s legacy was further preserved with two Grammys — best rap/sung performanc­e for “Higher” with Legend and Khaled, and best rap performanc­e (“Racks in the Middle”).

Among the performanc­es, Eilish and Demi Lovato opted to focus on vocals rather than flash, with the former unveiling the haunting piano ballad “When the Party’s Over” (with O’Connell, newly minted as a Grammy-winning producer, playing the instrument) and Lovato, in her first performanc­e since her July 2018 drug relapse, belting a deeply emotional “Anyone.”

Other noteworthy production­s came from Ariana Grande, shut out at the awards (as was Taylor Swift), but nimble and perky onstage for a glossy medley that featured “7 Rings” and “Thank U, Next,” as well as H.E.R., who impressed again with her musical prowess on piano and guitar for “Sometimes.”

Lil Nas X wasn’t the only Atlanta artist making his debut in the winner’s circle. Rapper 21 Savage, nominated for a pair of Grammys last year with Post Malone (while battling immigratio­n legal tangles), earned his first gramophone for best rap song, “A Lot,” which he celebrates with fellow songwriter­s J. Cole, Dacoury Natche (D J Dahi) and Anthony White.

Andre 3000 shared the best R&B performanc­e award with Anderson .Paak for “Come Home.” The reclusive Atlanta music man wasn’t present, but Paak praised his contributi­on.

“(Andre) was one of the artists that showed me that hip-hop doesn’t have to be so one-dimensiona­l. You can wear what you want to wear, you can smile, you can use influences like jazz and rock and funk and still be one of the baddest (expletive) with a rhyme,” he said. “Everyone knows how hard it is to get Andre to do anything. This is such an honor.”

Other multiple winners include Gary Clark Jr., who snagged three Grammys in rock and blues categories, and country veteran Tanya Tucker, who scored her first Grammys after 14 previous nomination­s, for best country song (“Bring My Flowers Now,” written with Brandi Carlile) and best country album (“While I’m Livin’”).

“No matter how young or old you are,” Tucker said, visibly moved, “never stop following your dreams.”

 ?? RECORDING ACADEMY/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES FOR THE ?? Billie Eilish (left) and Finneas O’Connell accept the Song of the Year award for “Bad Guy” onstage during the 62nd annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center Sunday.
RECORDING ACADEMY/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES FOR THE Billie Eilish (left) and Finneas O’Connell accept the Song of the Year award for “Bad Guy” onstage during the 62nd annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center Sunday.
 ?? MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS PHOTOS ?? Lil Nas X backstage at the 62nd Grammy Awards at the Staples Center in Los Angeles Sunday.
MYUNG J. CHUN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS PHOTOS Lil Nas X backstage at the 62nd Grammy Awards at the Staples Center in Los Angeles Sunday.
 ??  ?? Lizzo hams it up backstage at the 62nd Grammy Awards after winning for best pop solo performanc­e, best traditiona­l R&B performanc­e and best urban contempora­ry album.
Lizzo hams it up backstage at the 62nd Grammy Awards after winning for best pop solo performanc­e, best traditiona­l R&B performanc­e and best urban contempora­ry album.
 ?? IMAGES FOR THE RECORDING ACADEMY/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY ?? Steven Tyler (center) of Aerosmith performs on stage with Joseph Simmons and Darryl McDaniels of Run-D.M.C. during the 62nd annual Grammy Awards.
IMAGES FOR THE RECORDING ACADEMY/TNS KEVIN WINTER/GETTY Steven Tyler (center) of Aerosmith performs on stage with Joseph Simmons and Darryl McDaniels of Run-D.M.C. during the 62nd annual Grammy Awards.

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