The Day

Grammy noms: 9 for Beyonce, 8 each for Drake, Rihanna, Kanye

- By MESFIN FEKADU

The Grammy Awards are sipping all of Beyonce's lemonade.

The pop star is the leader of the 2017 Grammys with nine nomination­s, including bids for album of the year with "Lemonade," and song and record of the year with "Formation." The singer, who already has 20 Grammys, is also the first artist to earn nomination­s in the pop, rock, R&B and rap categories in the same year.

Behind Beyonce are Drake, Rihanna and Kanye West, who scored eight nomination­s each.

Like Beyonce, Adele is also nominated for album, record and song of the year. For album of the year, "Lemonade" and "25" — which has sold 10 million copies in a year — will compete against Drake's multihit "Views," Justin Bieber's redemption album "Purpose" and surprise nominee "A Sailor's Guide to Earth," the third album from respected and rebellious country singer Sturgill Simpson.

Beyonce's "Formation" and Adele's "Hello" are up against Rihanna and Drake's "Work," twenty one pilots' "Stressed Out" and Lukas Graham's "7 Years" for record of the year. "7 Years" is also up for song of the year — a songwriter's award — battling Bieber's "Love Yourself," co-written with Ed Sheeran, Mike Posner's "I Took a Pill In Ibiza," as well as Beyonce and Adele's songs.

Beyonce's nine nomination­s include best rock performanc­e ("Don't Hurt Yourself" with Jack White), pop solo performanc­e ("Hold Up"), rap/sung performanc­e ("Freedom" with Kendrick Lamar) and urban contempora­ry album ("Lemonade"). With 62 nomination­s over the years, Beyonce is the most-nominated women in Grammy history.

"Artists are feeling emboldened and courageous and just wanting to step out of the predictabl­e boundaries of what they have done. Of course, (Beyonce) is the poster child for that," Recording Academy CEO and President Neil Portnow said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Adele, who has five nomination­s, is up for best pop vocal album ("25") and pop solo performanc­e ("Hello.") The Grammys will be presented in Los Angeles on Feb. 12, 2017.

David Bowie, who died from cancer in January, earned four nomination­s for his final album "Blackstar," including best rock performanc­e, rock song, alternativ­e music album and engineered album, non-classical.

"I think this is beyond sort of the sympathy vote, because sometimes you'll see those kinds of things happen just 'cause people feel sorry about it. But listen to (his) album — it's quite extraordin­ary," Portnow said of Bowie.

This year the Recording Academy allowed streaming-only recordings — released on paid-subscripti­on platforms like Spotify, Apple Music and Tidal but not for sale on iTunes — to be eligible for nomination­s, giving Chance the Rapper a fair chance. The breakout performer scored seven nomination­s including best new artist, pitting him against country singers Maren Morris and Kelsea Ballerini; singer-rapper Anderson Paak; and pop-EDM duo the Chainsmoke­rs, whose recent hits include "Closer" and "Don't Let Me Down."

Chance the Rapper earned three nomination­s for best rap song: His hit, "No Problem," is nominated, and he has writing credit on the Kanye West songs "Famous" and "Ultralight Beam." West will compete with himself in three categories: best rap song, rap performanc­e and rap/sung performanc­e.

Chance's "Coloring Book" and West's "The Life of Pablo" are nominated for best rap album along with Drake's "Views," De La Soul's "And the Anonymous Nobody," DJ Khaled's "Major Key" and Schoolboy Q's "Blank Face LP."

Sturgill, who had been nominated for best Americana album at the 2015 Grammys, also sees his nine-track album nominated for best country album. Sturgill was in a bit of controvers­y this year when he posted on Facebook that the Academy of Country Music Awards should not have created an award named after Merle Haggard when he felt they never showed true love to the country outlaw, who died this year. He closed his long post saying: "(Expletive) this town. I'm moving."

Sturgill's album is up against Loretta Lynn's "Full Circle," Keith Urban's "Ripcord," Morris' "Hero" and Brandy Clark's "Big Day In a Small Town."

Lori McKenna, who won a Grammy this year for co-writing Little Big Town's "Girl Crush," is nominated for best country song for penning Tim McGraw's "Humble and Kind." She also scored nomination­s for best Americana album, American Roots performanc­e and American Roots song for her own work.

Acts tying McKenna and Bowie for four nomination­s include Bieber, Morris, Kirk Franklin, engineer Tom Coyne, and producer-songwriter­s Max Martin, Greg Kurstin, Benny Blanco and Mike Dean. Tyler Joseph, the lead vocalist of twenty one pilots and the duo's main songwriter, scored five nomination­s for "Stressed Out" (record of the year, pop duo/ group performanc­e) and "Heathens" (best rock song, rock performanc­e and song written for visual media); twenty one pilots, which includes drummer Josh Dun, earned three nods.

Some well-known acts scored their first Grammy nomination­s Tuesday, including Solange, Blink-182 and Demi Lovato, who will compete against Adele, Bieber, Sia and Ariana Grande for best pop vocal album.

Amy Schumer earned two nomination­s, including best spoken word album and comedy album. Deceased nominees include Joey Feek of the duo Joey + Rory (best gospel roots album for "Hymns").

About 13,000 Recording Academy members voted in the 84 Grammy categories from 22,000 submission­s. Songs and albums released from Oct. 1, 2015 through Sept. 30 were eligible for nomination.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK, FILE/AP PHOTO ?? Beyonce, shown during a Get Out the Vote concert, leads the 2017 Grammy nomination­s with nine.
ANDREW HARNIK, FILE/AP PHOTO Beyonce, shown during a Get Out the Vote concert, leads the 2017 Grammy nomination­s with nine.

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