LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Grammy Awards have lengthy been criticized over an absence of variety, with a historical past of artists of colour, girls, and rap and R&B musicians being snubbed for prime prizes. Sunday’s version suggests one thing could have shifted.
Beyoncé, probably the most awarded and nominated artist in Grammys historical past, lastly received Album of the Yr for her country-and-then-some album, “Cowboy Carter,” furthering her dedication to recentering Black artwork in common tradition. Kendrick Lamar took residence two of the highest 4 prizes of the night time, celebrating hip-hop on a present that has traditionally uncared for the style. The Grammys positioned younger pop performers within the highlight for the time being of their ascent, assembly the up to date music second.
The Recording Academy has made concerted efforts to diversify lately. May or not it’s that these strides have already paid off in a course correction? Or had been the 2025 Grammys merely a one-off?
A feud squashed
Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. appeared onstage to handle “some actual criticism” going through the group behind the Grammys.
“Artists had been fairly vocal with their complaints,” he mentioned, reaching again to 2020: “The Weeknd referred to as out the academy for lack of transparency in our awards. He went as far as to announce he was boycotting the Grammys.”
5 years could make a world of distinction. On the finish of his speech, Mason launched The Weeknd as a shock performer, making his first look on the Grammys since 2017.
His return urged approval of a brand new voting class — a number of presenters took care to notice that the awards had been determined by greater than 13,000 voting members.
Peter A. Berry, a music journalist with work in XXL and Complicated, believes that studying is perhaps too pat, although. “He carried out to advertise his new album,” he mentioned, referencing The Weeknd’s “Hurry Up Tomorrow.” That timing aligned with the Grammys’ want to spotlight its reform.
“I can’t take away my cynical music business lens,” he mentioned. “Time heals all wounds whenever you want promo.”
A extra various voting physique
Of the Recording Academy’s present voting membership, 66% are males, 49% are white and 66% are over the age of 40. However the academy introduced final 12 months that 3,000 feminine voting members had been added since 2019. Two-thirds of the overall voting physique joined within the final 5 years. In that very same time, the academy has elevated the variety of members who establish as folks of colour by 63%, with 100% progress in Asian American and Pacific Islander voters, 90% progress in Black voters and 43% progress in Latino voters.
On the 2024 Grammys, girls dominated the main classes and consequently, each televised aggressive Grammy went to at the least one girl. It appeared to replicate up to date curiosity in feminine pop performers — Taylor Swift, Miley Cyrus, Victoria Monét and Karol G, amongst them. In 2025, that pattern continued. Ladies obtained each single televised award on Sunday night time apart from Lamar’s and one shared between Woman Gaga and Bruno Mars. “They acquired it proper this 12 months,” Berry mentioned. “Perhaps it’s that the voting committee modified.”
Nominees and winners replicate up to date curiosity
The nominations introduced in November acknowledged the artists who led the dialog in 2024. Beyoncé was celebrated with 11 nominations, what Kinitra D. Brooks — an educational and writer of “The Lemonade Reader” — mentioned was the results of voters lastly recognizing that “that is clearly somebody who deserves the respect of her friends.”
Chappell Roan and Sabrina Carpenter, experiencing breakout years, obtained six nods every. The ever present, discourse-dominating “Not Like Us” from Lamar and Charli xcx’s “BRAT” additionally obtained recognition.
And that translated to awards. There have been various first-time award winners, many ladies and other people of colour like Doechii, Carin León and Sierra Ferrell. Within the comparatively new songwriter of the 12 months, non-classical class, Amy Allen turned the primary girl to take residence the trophy.
A transfer in the fitting path for hip-hop
“Not Like Us” was an early winner on the Grammys’ Premiere Ceremony, receiving trophies for music video, rap music and rap efficiency. It marked Lamar’s seventh time profitable in that final class. However it was his presence throughout the principle broadcast that actually made a splash. One of many largest world hits of 2024, the Drake diss observe received music and report of the 12 months — solely the second hip-hop single to ever win report of the 12 months. By the top of the night time, “Not Like Us” had received all 5 awards for which it was nominated.
Lamar’s recognitions arrived the 12 months after Jay-Z criticized the Grammys for ignoring the rap legends earlier than him — those that introduced hip-hop to the preeminent music award present, solely to have rap classes not make the official broadcast.
“We wish you all to get it proper,” Jay-Z mentioned final 12 months. “At the least get it near proper.”
Berry describes Lamar’s wins as “a layup,” a celebration of one of many nice rap data of latest historical past.
And although Lamar’s wins meant extra hip-hop on the printed, Berry mentioned the Grammys’ hip-hop picks are usually predictable. He says there’s a “cookie cutter” method for the sort of rappers the Recording Academy acknowledges.
“The extra esoteric and summary rap,” in addition to “the mid-level avenue rap,” goes largely ignored, he mentioned.
Course-correcting the most important blind spot
Beyoncé’s album of the 12 months victory was broadly thought lengthy overdue. The celebrity had 4 of her albums nominated within the class earlier than profitable on her fifth.
She seemingly alluded to it in her acceptance speech: “It’s been many, a few years,” she mentioned.
“I Am… Sasha Fierce” misplaced to Taylor Swift for “Fearless” in 2010. In 2015, her self-titled album “Beyoncé” misplaced to Beck’s “Morning Part” and Harry Kinds’ “Harry’s Home” beat “Renaissance” in 2023. Maybe most infamously, although, was the lack of “Lemonade” to Adele’s “25.”
“I can’t presumably settle for this award. And I’m very humbled, and I’m very grateful and gracious, however my artist of my life is Beyoncé,” Adele mentioned in her 2017 acceptance speech, holding again tears.
In profitable album of the 12 months Sunday, Beyoncé turned the primary Black girl to win the highest prize within the twenty first century. The final was Lauryn Hill with “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,” 26 years in the past. Earlier than her had been Natalie Cole and Whitney Houston, and the listing ends there.
Brooks believes “Beyoncé displays that Black girls might be wonderful and nonetheless ignored in very specific methods — as a result of it is a prime honor in her subject.”
Emily Lordi, a Vanderbilt College professor whose focus is African American literature and Black common music, describes “Cowboy Carter” as “an album with a capital A — one which explicitly goals to revive the Black roots and routes of nation, a style lengthy coded as white. It’s the sort of historic intervention the academy couldn’t fail to acknowledge — it was plain.”
Berry factors to the truth that the report’s nation affect could have aligned with the academy’s traditionalist voters — but in addition appealed to these impressed by its break with conference.”It’s some cosmic justice being performed,” mentioned Berry. “It won’t be the perfect Bey album, however it was the perfect of the class.”
Even Grammys’ host Trevor Noah couldn’t assist however acknowledge the milestone: “We lastly noticed it occur, everybody,” he mentioned. That, we did.
For extra on the 2025 Grammys, go to https://apnews.com/hub/grammy-awards