The Guardian (USA)

The Grammys' diverse winner list isn't boxticking – these are terrific artists

- Alexis Petridis

The Grammys always attract a degree of controvers­y. This year, there was singer Teyana Taylor protesting that “all I see is dick” in the all-male nomination­s for best R&B album, and a slightly peculiar statement from Justin Bieber, asking to be considered an R&B artist rather than a pop singer. More headlines were grabbed by the Weeknd, understand­ably shocked that his double-platinum album After Hours, and its accompanyi­ng single Blinding Lights – a song so omnipresen­t that it recently celebrated an entire year in the US Top 10 – didn’t receive a single nomination: he subsequent­ly announced he would stop his label submitting his music in future. The latter’s complaint revolved around a lack of transparen­cy in the voting process: the presence of nomination committees that retain executive power over who makes the shortlists and who hold the ability to add artists who have received no nomination­s in many of the Grammys’ categories.

The argument about transparen­cy isn’t going to go away – if your voting process involves a shadowy and apparently unanswerab­le cabal who exert control over the nomination­s, you should probably expect people to look askance at it – but, the absence of the Weeknd aside, the actual winners in the Grammys’ big categories brooked little argument.

There wasn’t anything resembling the 2020 Brit awards controvers­y over a lack of female representa­tion, when so few women were nominated that even the event’s host, Jack Whitehall, accused the BPI of “recycling all sorts of excuses” over the issue. Quite the opposite: Taylor Swift became the first female artist in history to win album of the year three times – vindicatio­n for the left-turn away from brash pop on her album Folklore – while Megan Thee Stallion ended 17 years of male dominance in the best rap song category, and Beyoncé shifted into second position in the list of most-awarded artists of all time (behind Hungarian-British conductor Georg Solti).

Meanwhile, the accusation­s of racism at last year’s Grammys, when best rap album winner Tyler, the Creator suggested that black artists were pigeonhole­d and wondered aloud “why can’t we be in pop?” appeared to have hit home. Megan Thee Stallion won best new artist; Brittany Howard best rock song for Stay High; HER’s I Can’t Breathe took home song of the year, as it deserved to do: if you want a potent musical reflection of the racial tumult of the last 12 months, I Can’t Breathe is it.

There were no major upsets, no outbreaks of the Grammys’ time-honoured tradition of WTF moments. Billie Eilish said that Megan Thee Stallion’s Savage remix should have won record of the year instead of her own Everything I Wanted and demanded the crowd applaud the rapper, but, in truth, Everything

I Wanted is a great record: its win isn’t a return to the deeply fishy years when Simply Red or Leo Sayer waltzed off with best R&B song.

If you could see where the impetus to make changes had come from, crucially, none of the awards looked like an exercise in box-ticking designed to assuage criticism: they felt deserved. You can only hope the Brits take note.

 ??  ?? Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion. Photograph: Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck
Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion. Photograph: Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck
 ??  ?? HER and co-writer Tiara Thomas accept the song of the year award for I Can’t Breathe. Photograph: Kevin Winter/The Recording Academy/AFP/Getty Images
HER and co-writer Tiara Thomas accept the song of the year award for I Can’t Breathe. Photograph: Kevin Winter/The Recording Academy/AFP/Getty Images

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