The Grammys have long been a dependable engine of outrage. Every year, it seemed, one humiliation or another would seize the ceremony, such as when Macklemore defeated Drake, Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar, and Jay-Z for Best Rap Album, in 2014, or when, the year before, the band Fun. beat out Frank Ocean for Best New Artist. All the way back in 2002, the “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack somehow won Album of the Year instead of OutKast’s “Stankonia”—a decision that aged poorly even before presenter Janet Jackson had finished reading it off the card. Throughout the Grammys’ nearly seventy-year history, the Recording Academy has disproportionately favored the very white, the very male, and the very old, consistently rewarding legacy acts and industry darlings rather than the year’s most accomplished, essential music. In 2018, Neil Portnow, who was then the president of the Academy, suggested that women performers needed to “step up” if they wanted to win more awards. The comment confirmed what everyone already knew: the Grammys voting body was an out-of-touch boys club whose biases reflected an institution on the brink of irrelevance. (What else could explain Beck beating Beyoncé, in 2015, for best album?) When Portnow left his post, in 2019, his replacement, Deborah Dugan, accused the Academy of vote-fixing and mismanaging finances, which the Academy denied; she was put on leave and then eventually let go. In the aftermath of these scandals, the Grammys have been on something of an apology tour, signalling to audiences and artists alike that they’ve heard the criticisms and they know. They know!
Heading into Sunday night’s event, in Los Angeles, the Grammys were surprisingly short on salacious story lines. If one of the more compelling reasons to tune in to the show is to see just how wrong the Academy is going to get it, then this year’s ceremony promised to be a bit of a snoozer. The “big four” categories had few snubs; its nominees included preëminent stars such as Bad Bunny, Billie Eilish, Chappell Roan, Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, and Sabrina Carpenter. There were also three rap albums contending for Album of the Year—Clipse’s “Let God Sort Em Out,” Kendrick Lamar’s “GNX,” and Tyler, the Creator’s “Chromakopia”—the most nods the genre has ever received in the category. Adele, Beyoncé, and Taylor Swift, meanwhile, would not be around to generate buzz over rivalries and record-breaking, and no major stars were sitting out the ceremony in protest, as Drake, Ocean, and the Weeknd have in the past. Would Sunday’s telecast actually be an accurate reflection of the year in commercial, major-label music? After decades of alleged corruption and catastrophic choices, was the Academy finally going to get it right?
Thankfully for the Grammys, Bad Bunny brought enough narrative intrigue with him to carry the ceremony. Aside from being the first Spanish-language artist to be nominated at once for Album, Song, and Record of the Year, the Puerto Rican superstar is scheduled to perform at the Super Bowl halftime show, on Sunday. It’s the first time that the main act will be performed entirely in Spanish, something the political right has deemed disgraceful. Kristi Noem, the Secretary of Homeland Security, said that agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement would “be all over” the Super Bowl, and D.H.S. adviser Corey Lewandowski scolded the N.F.L. for selecting “somebody who just seems to hate America so much.” (President Trump claimed not to know who Bad Bunny was, although he said the prospect of a Bad Bunny halftime show was “absolutely ridiculous.”) Bad Bunny has openly criticized the Trump Administration’s immigration policies, calling out the President himself and the malevolent militarization of ICE. Once again, the Grammys were at the heart of a politically charged moment in which its awards meant more than mere recognition—its choices would function as a cultural bellwether, a comment on where the industry stands on one of the most pressing human-rights issues of our time.
As the festivities began, it became clear that Bad Bunny would indeed serve as the night’s center of gravity. The show’s competent yet miraculously unfunny host, Trevor Noah, cozied up to Bad Bunny at his table and begged him to perform—a ploy, perhaps, to remind the audience that the real performance was soon to come, at the Super Bowl. Early in the evening, when Bad Bunny’s album “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” was awarded Best Música Urbana Album, his acceptance speech opened with a rousing call to action: “ICE out,” he declared. (Artists from Carole King to Bieber wore pins that said the same.) In a night heavy on political statements but short on overt political performativity, his message was sharp and clear: “We’re not savage. We’re not animals. We’re not aliens. We are humans, and we are Americans.” Earlier, Billie Eilish—who, preposterously, won Song of the Year for “Wildflower,” a track from last year’s Grammy-nominated album “Hit Me Hard and Soft” that had been repackaged as a single, allowing it to be included in this year’s awards—affirmed, during her acceptance speech, that “no one is illegal on stolen land.” But it was Bad Bunny’s protestations that reverberated the loudest. “The hate gets more powerful with more hate,” he said. “The only thing that is more powerful than hate is love. So, please, we need to be different.”
The Grammys messaging was, by turns, as chaotic and predictable as ever. The performances were grandiose and frequently great, as highlighted by Sabrina Carpenter’s rendition of her hit “Manchild,” which saw her cosplaying as a pilot while cruising around the tarmac-like stage on luggage carts and conveyor belts. Carpenter has become one of pop music’s great performers; she’s a tremendous live vocalist with a wildly charismatic presence—someone who can command a room with a wink, a grin, a subtle flip of the hair. She left the evening, however, empty-handed, which was less an injustice than a fait accompli—she lost Best Pop Vocal Album to the Grammy titan Lady Gaga and Best Pop Solo Performance to Lola Young, an Amy Winehouse-redolent singer whose traditionalist approach to songcraft is catnip to Academy voters. Similarly, Bieber’s performance of “Yukon,” a standout from his album “Swag,” offered a much needed refresh for a night steeped in aggressive, glittery showmanship. He stood onstage alone, in nothing but boxer shorts, his singing accompanied by only an electric guitar, a loop pedal, and a syncopated kick drum. It was one of the night’s few moments when time seemed to stop, and the one thing that seemed to matter was the music. Naturally, Bieber, too, left the event without winning an award.
In the Academy’s ongoing quest to reform their relationship with Black art, they staged a genuinely moving in memoriam to D’Angelo and Roberta Flack, with guest appearances by Anthony Hamilton, Bilal, Chaka Khan, John Legend, and Raphael Saadiq, among others. The tribute was anchored by Lauryn Hill, who was performing at the Grammys for the first time in almost thirty years. Hill was intimately connected to both D’Angelo and Flack: she duetted with D’Angelo on “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,” her Grammy-winning Album of the Year, and famously interpolated Flack’s hit “Killing Me Softly with His Song” as a member of the Fugees. These grand ensemble segments have become a staple at the Grammys, a space to acknowledge legends lost and to repent for past wrongs. (The hip-hop medley of the 2023 Grammys was a forced, if not stirring, apology for the failure to have meaningfully included the genre throughout the ceremony’s history.) Less deftly, the show awarded Pharrell Williams with the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award, a prize seemingly designed to recognize Black artists who had been historically excluded. It’s not that Williams doesn’t deserve the honor—he’s one of the most influential artists of the past century. The problem is the ham-fisted way in which the Grammys contrives to acknowledge its previous mistakes. One can only wonder which contemporary artists will receive such an award twenty years from now.
On the one hand, rap’s integration into this year’s major categories marks a significant step in the right direction for the Grammys. Hip-hop and R. & B. have long been recognized only in the awards for their respective genres, despite dominating mainstream culture and music for more than thirty years. Even a chart-topping, widely celebrated artist such as Frank Ocean came to view his place within the Academy as a perverse form of tokenism. “That institution certainly has nostalgic importance,” he told the Times, in 2016, explaining why he withheld the landmark album “Blonde” from consideration. “It just doesn’t seem to be representing very well for people who come from where I come from, and hold down what I hold down.” In 2019, when Drake accepted the award for Best Rap Song, he told the crowd, “You don’t need this,” gesturing to the Grammy he was holding. (Drake’s speech was cut short; he has not attended the show since.) To atone for its sins, the Academy seems set on incorporating hip-hop more firmly into its DNA, elevating the year’s premier rap achievements to prime time. Though it’s powerful for elder statesmen like Clipse, Lamar, and even Tyler, the Creator, whose début album came out fifteen years ago, to experience recognition in the “big four” categories, there remains a striking disconnect between what is relevant in contemporary hip-hop and what receives institutional praise. For the average Academy member, who likely votes for Lamar by default or checks the box next to an artist with a household name, such as Pharrell, who produced Clipse’s album, what is most alive and innovative in the genre will take years to make its way to the Academy’s boardroom. By then, of course, it’ll be far too late to pay proper respects, but may I interest you in a lifetime-achievement award?
This year’s live telecast of the Grammys was not without its blunders. From the moment the seventy-nine-year-old Cher walked onstage to both accept a lifetime-achievement award and to announce the winner of Record of the Year, the broadcast entered into a sort of incorrigible fugue state. First, Noah joined Cher onstage to present her with the commemorative Grammy, which he then offered to hold. It was unclear whether she was meant to give an acceptance speech, but, oh, did she ever. Sincere and strange in equal measure, she detailed the ups and downs of her career, and encouraged artists to follow their dreams, before concluding, “I guess I’m supposed to walk off now.” As she retreated backstage, Noah rushed into the crowd to ask her to return: she’d forgotten about Record of the Year. After the nominees appeared onscreen and Cher had been handed the red envelope from which to read the winner, she stared into the teleprompter for several seconds, apparently waiting for a name to appear before her. “They told me it was going to be on the prompter,” she said finally, looking down at the envelope as the crowd laughed. “Oh!” she exclaimed. “The Grammy goes to Luther Vandross!” In fact, Kendrick Lamar and SZA won for their duet “Luther”; Lamar gave a good-natured smile before getting up from his seat. With the win, he became the most awarded rap artist in Grammy history.
But the show could rightfully end with only one person—Bad Bunny. When “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” was announced as Album of the Year, he covered his face with his hand, and then remained in his seat for nearly half a minute, the crowd applauding and chanting along to his song “DtMF.” Say what you will about the Grammys’ relevance, their usefulness, their tortured and terrible history, their ability to comprehend transgressive and experimental art, their snubs and screwups and insufficient apologies—this was a breathtaking moment, one that perhaps necessitated all the inane pageantry that preceded it. “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” is the first album sung entirely in Spanish to win the Album of the Year award, and the scale of the honor clearly took Bad Bunny a moment to metabolize. “Puerto Rico,” he announced when he arrived onstage, beaming with emotion. He dedicated the award to “all the people who had to leave their homeland, their country, to follow their dreams.” It wasn’t an empty dedication—“DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” is an album that spans generations and genres, synthesizing the totality of Puerto Rican music into a totemic modern masterpiece. It’s music to dance to, to find hope within, to fall in love with. Can you believe it? The Grammys got it right. ♦









