Current:Home > StocksAnother year, another Grammys where Black excellence is sidelined. Why do we still engage? -TradeCircle
Another year, another Grammys where Black excellence is sidelined. Why do we still engage?
View
Date:2025-04-15 17:58:23
I’ve tuned into the Grammy Awards every year for as long as I can remember. As a fan of music and popular culture, I loved seeing all my favorite artists in one place. But as I became more cognizant of the politics behind these awards, I became increasingly disillusioned by them.
What happened Sunday night is a pattern the Grammys continuously uphold. Artists of color are notoriously shut out of the top categories: album of the year, song of the year and record of the year.
Taylor Swift took home album of the year for her 10th studio album, “Midnights.” She was nominated alongside SZA’s “SOS,” Lana Del Rey’s “Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd,” Olivia Rodrigo’s “GUTS” and more.
It’s argued that Swift’s record was one of the weakest in the category and one of the weaker albums in her own category (it’s me, I’m the one arguing).
Nevertheless, Swift’s win makes sense for the types of artists and music canon awarded in these main categories. A Black woman has not won album of the year since Lauryn Hill’s “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill” in 1999.
MAGA says Taylor Swift is a Biden plant.But attacking her could cost Trump the election.
If they refuse to break barriers and award excellence in the mainstream, what hope does that give to the rest of the industry, the smaller artists who are often the true innovators? The ones who do win seem antithetical to what the Recording Academy postures itself to be.
From Beyoncé to Aretha Franklin, Black icons are sidelined
At last year's Grammy Awards show, Beyoncé's groundbreaking album “Renaissance,” a love letter to Black, queer culture, lost album of the year to “Harry’s House” by Harry Styles, an inoffensive, corporate pop album.
In fact, despite being the most-awarded artist in Grammy history, Beyoncé has never won album of the year. This reality is a common one for many Black artists who are pigeonholed to genre-specific categories and left out the main categories their white peers so freely exist in.
Aretha Franklin, who has 18 Grammys, was never even nominated in any main categories.
Tracy Chapman's Grammy's performance:Tracy Chapman, Luke Combs drove me to tears with 'Fast Car' Grammys duet. It's a good thing.
Jay-Z shed light on this issue, specifically in regards to his wife, Beyoncé, in his acceptance speech for the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award. “She has more Grammys than anyone and never won album of the year, so even by your own metrics that doesn’t work,” he said.
So why do we still care?
Every year we seem stuck in this fruitless tango. Nominations come out, there are some snubs but most take it for what it is and make wide-eyed predictions about who will win (mainly whom they want to win), the ceremony commences and it’s long and boring and full of upsets head-scratching wins.
The Recording Academy does what it always does, the think pieces roll out and then we profess the Grammys’ irrelevance just to rinse and repeat the following year.
If we know the Grammys have a history of fraudulence, why do we still engage every year? It’s not like the ceremony is particularly enjoyable. Most of the interesting awards and many of the historically Black genre awards are given out during the pre-show.
I think Jay-Z summed it up quite well: “We love y'all. We want y'all to get it right. At least get it close to right.”
We love the idea of the Grammys. Music is such a permeating force in our culture. It finds its way into the crevices of our being, creating memories and eliciting emotions otherwise unearthed.
It’s completely reasonable that we’d love to see those responsible awarded for their creative prowess. It’s a shame the entity tasked with doing so swears allegiance to conformity and refuses to honor those most deserving.
Kofi Mframa is a music and culture writer and opinion intern at the Louisville Courier-Journal.
veryGood! (7141)
Related
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Stock market today: Asian benchmarks mostly slide as investors focus on earnings
- Kaley Cuoco Details How Daughter Matilda Is Already Reaching New Heights
- 'Zero evidence': Logan Paul responds to claims of Prime drinks containing PFAS
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Fifth arrest made in connection to deaths of 2 Kansas women
- Glen Powell Reveals Why He Leaned Into Sydney Sweeney Dating Rumors
- Russia extends Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich's pretrial detention yet again
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 'Abhorrent': Laid-off worker sues Foxtrot and Dom's Kitchen after all locations shutter
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Judge orders anonymous jury for trial of self-exiled Chinese businessman, citing his past acts
- Connecticut Senate passes wide-ranging bill to regulate AI. But its fate remains uncertain
- New California rule aims to limit health care cost increases to 3% annually
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- US growth likely slowed last quarter but still pointed to a solid economy
- Colleges nationwide turn to police to quell pro-Palestine protests as commencement ceremonies near
- Reggie Bush will get back 2005 Heisman Trophy that was forfeited by former USC star
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Glen Powell Reveals Why He Leaned Into Sydney Sweeney Dating Rumors
NFL draft order for all 257 picks: Who picks when for all 7 rounds of this year's draft
Last-place San Jose Sharks fire head coach David Quinn
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
US applications for jobless claims fall to lowest level in 9 weeks
Groups urge Alabama to reverse course, join summer meal program for low-income kids
New Orleans man pleads guilty in 2016 shooting death of Jefferson Parish deputy