Variety

We Need to Talk About ‘Encanto’

Best-selling soundtrack features eight songs by Lin-manuel Miranda

- By Mike Wass

We don’t talk about Bruno, but we should discuss “Encanto’s” chances at the Grammys. While the mega-selling soundtrack, which boasts eight original songs from Lin-manuel Miranda, is likely to be nominated for compilatio­n soundtrack for visual media, it has the bona fides for major category love too. In addition to glowing reviews, “Encanto” spent nine weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 — the second-longest run of the 2020s. More significan­tly, it cut through the cultural clutter, producing a series of resounding hits that are forever ingrained on the psyche of children, their parents and anyone who just happened to be in the general vicinity while the film was playing. “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, while “Surface Pressure” cracked the top 10. The fact that these songs connected so widely while celebratin­g Colombian music by incorporat­ing bambuco, vallenato and cumbia is extraordin­ary. For that alone, “Encanto” deserves to be in the conversati­on for album of the year, but recent history isn’t on its side. Since being given their own category in 2000, soundtrack­s rarely compete for the big prize; that wasn’t the case in an era when previous winners included “Saturday Night Fever” (1979), “The Bodyguard” (1994) and “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” (2002). In the past 20 years, only one soundtrack has been nominated for album of the year: “Black Panther” in 2019. The trend is also reflected in the record of the year category. Soundtrack songs dominated the category in the ’90s, for example, with “Wind Beneath My Wings” (“Beaches”) winning in 1990, “I Will Always Love You” (“The Bodyguard”) claiming victory in 1994 and “My Heart Will Go On” (“Titanic”) taking top honors in 1999. Since then, only “Shallow” (“A Star Is Born”) and “Sunflower” (“Spider-man: Into the Spider-verse”) have even been nominated. If any project can buck this trend, it’s “Encanto.” Mastermind­ed by Miranda, the album was a massive commercial success despite forgoing obvious pop anthems in favor of culturally appropriat­e, plot-furthering anthems that honor traditiona­l sounds and instrument­s. Time will tell how the committee treats “Encanto,” but it deserves, at the very least, to be talked about.

 ?? ?? The official “Encanto” soundtrack has sold nearly 1.5 million album equivalent units, per Luminate.
The official “Encanto” soundtrack has sold nearly 1.5 million album equivalent units, per Luminate.

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