Times-Herald (Vallejo)

The Grammys ended in controvers­y, again

- By Nardos Haile The Associated Press

A night in music brimming with shocking upsets, historic wins, tributes for artists like the late rapper Takeoff and hiphop's 50th anniversar­y, the 65th Grammys were back in full swing Sunday. Once again, Beyoncé was in the running for the top honor.

Once again, the show ended with someone else winning album of the year.

This year was widely seen as a chance for the Grammys to honor the superstar with a marquee award, especially on a night where she could have (and did) become its most decorated artist.

Instead, Harry Styles won, and a line from his acceptance speech stung those who thought Beyoncé should have won.

Here's what happened, how it's been perceived and who picks the Grammys' top honors.

What's controvers­ial about Styles' win?

Styles won for his third album, “Harry's House,” and even he seemed surprised when his name was called.

The British pop star was competing against other giants in the industry: ABBA; Adele; Bad Bunny; Brandi Carlile; Coldplay; Lizzo; Kendrick Lamar; and Beyoncé.

While accepting the award, he said, “This is really, really kind. I'm so, so grateful... I'm just so — This doesn't happen to people like me very often. And this is so, so nice. Thank you very, very much.”

The line, “this doesn't happen to people like me very often,” drew criticism in the hours after his win.

Styles was born and raised in Northern England and rose to fame in 2010 when he auditioned for the Simon Cowell-led talent competitio­n show “The X Factor.” He placed third with the boyband One Direction. His solo career has earned him several Grammys and Billboard-charting albums and singles.

Styles hasn't said what he meant by his words. Some have interprete­d it as him trying to express how far he'd come from his youth.

Others, however, see the remark as an example of white privilege.

Why are people mad at Styles' words?

Many of Beyoncé's fans are fiercely protective of the singer. They're called the Beyhive, after all.

Despite Beyoncé's 32 Grammy wins — most of any artist in history — many are troubled by the fact she has yet to win album of year and that she's lost to white musicians every time she has been nominated.

Washington Post pop music critic Chris Richards, in a story headlined “Beyoncé just made Grammy history. Why does it feel like she still lost?” wrote that her historic achievemen­t feels hollow.

“Why does that feel like not enough,” Richards asked. “Because for the past 20 years and counting, the Recording Academy has routinely failed to recognize Black artists at their creative peaks — and to her credit, Beyoncé keeps updating that peak with each new album.”

Similar criticism was raised in other stories and by online commenters, some of whom noted a Black woman hadn't won album of the year since Lauryn Hill in the late 1990s.

Ashley Smalls, a Black feminism and pop culture doctoral student at Penn State University criticized Styles' speech in a tweet: “`this doesn't happen to people like me very often' when a Black woman hasn't won that award since 1999 is crazy lol.”

What is Beyoncé's Grammys history?

The artist is tied with her husband, Jay-Z, for most nomination­s all-time with 88 but she has only won 32 times. Most significan­tly, Beyoncé has lost album of the year four times, to Taylor Swift, Beck, Adele and now Styles.

Beyoncé has been nominated in each of the most prestigiou­s categories across her decadeslon­g career but she has won in these categories just once for “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It).”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Harry Styles, left, embraces Kid Harpoon, center, while Tyler Johnson accepts the award for album of the year for “Harry's House” at the 65th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2023, in Los Angeles.
CHRIS PIZZELLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Harry Styles, left, embraces Kid Harpoon, center, while Tyler Johnson accepts the award for album of the year for “Harry's House” at the 65th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2023, in Los Angeles.

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