Grammy Awards: struggling to stay relevant, can the show please anyone?

The Grammys have been plagued by a slew of issues such as race and gender – and, oh yes, the music

Cardi B performing at the Grammys in 2018. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters
Cardi B performing at the Grammys in 2018. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

The Grammy Awards are supposed to be music's biggest party. But in recent years the show has also become a piñata for critics, activists and even major artists over a slew of issues such as race and gender – and, oh yes, music. The 61st annual show, to be hosted by singer Alicia Keys on Sunday night and broadcast live from Los Angles in the US , should be no different.

After a bruising time last year, when the show came under fire after just one woman won a solo award on the air – and the chief executive of the Recording Academy, Neil Portnow, commented that women in music should "step up" to advance their careers – the Grammys made a series of changes in their membership and nominations process that were meant to address their underlying problems.

But in many ways the Grammys still walk a tightrope. And as the show tries to stay culturally relevant, while also balancing the demands of race and gender representation, it may be impossible to please everybody at once. “That moment kind of shed a light on an issue that needed attention, and that is a lack of diversity in the industry,” Portnow said this week. “And if the light that was shed becomes a catalyst for change, then you can feel that it had a reason and a value.”

One of the clearest changes will be that eight, instead of five, acts will now compete in the four major categories: album, record and song of the year, and best new artist. That change satisfied many critics by adding more women to the mix, but it also has made the contests harder to handicap.

READ MORE

For album of the year, Drake and Kendrick Lamar, two deities of contemporary hip-hop, are up against Post Malone, who has topped the charts with a mellow style between rapping and singing; the boisterous rap of Cardi B; the adventurous R&B of Janelle Monáe and H.E.R.; and two singer-songwriters in the country and folk spheres, Kacey Musgraves and Brandi Carlile.

If Carlile prevails, she would be the award’s first openly gay winner. But as an artist with minimal sales, would her victory make the Grammys seem out of touch with the masses? Will a rapper win, or will they cancel one another out on the ballot?

Kendrick Lamar: up for best album but the rapper will not be performing at the the Grammys. Photograph: Caitlin O’Hara/The New York Times
Kendrick Lamar: up for best album but the rapper will not be performing at the the Grammys. Photograph: Caitlin O’Hara/The New York Times

There is also a chance that the award could go to Drake or Lamar only to have the winner not show up. That has become a growing risk for the Grammys as the show has alienated more and more hip-hop and R&B stars – such as Drake, Kanye West, Jay-Z and Frank Ocean – by failing to give them the most prestigious prizes.

"The fact of the matter is, we continue to have a problem in the hip-hop world," said Ken Ehrlich, longtime producer of the show. "When they don't take home the big prize, the regard of the academy, and what the Grammys represent, continues to be less meaningful to the hip-hop community, which is sad."

Ehrlich said that this year he offered performance slots on the show to Drake, Lamar and Childish Gambino – whose song This Is America is up for four awards, including record and song of the year – but they all declined. Representatives of those three artists declined to comment on whether they would attend the show.

More bad news for the Grammys arrived Thursday afternoon, when Ariana Grande confirmed reports that she had pulled out after clashing with producers – apparently Ehrlich himself – over which song to perform. "I've kept my mouth shut but now you're lying about me," Grande wrote on Twitter, responding to an interview in which Erhlich said that she "felt it was too late for her to pull something together." "I can pull together a performance over night and you know that, Ken," she wrote. "It was when my creativity & self expression was stifled by you, that I decided not to attend. I hope the show is exactly what you want it to be and more."

Janelle Monae: one of  four femlae artists in the running for album of the year at the Grammy Awards. Photograph:  Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Janelle Monae: one of four femlae artists in the running for album of the year at the Grammy Awards. Photograph: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP

Last year was another flashpoint in the troubled history of the Grammys and hip-hop, as Jay-Z, the most nominated artist, with eight nods – including album, record and song of the year – went home empty-handed, and Lamar, while winning all five awards in the rap field, lost out on album of the year, to Bruno Mars. Three months later, Lamar won the Pulitzer Prize for music.

But while race has been a growing problem for years, the Grammys' most urgent issue is over gender. Last year, a report by the University of Southern California, released days before the show, found dismal numbers about the representation of women in the music industry and at the Grammys. Lorde, the only woman nominated for album of the year in 2018, was not offered a solo performance slot.

After the show, Portnow’s “step up” comment drew an immediate outcry, with some women music executives calling for his resignation. (Portnow said at the time that his words had been taken out of context, and later announced that he would leave his position at the expiration of his contract in July.)

In response, the Recording Academy appointed a task force, led by Tina Tchen, a former chief of staff to Michelle Obama, to "identify the various barriers and unconscious biases faced by underrepresented communities" at the academy and in the wider industry.

Working with the task force, the academy has tried to make its voting pool more diverse, inviting 900 new people, from a variety of backgrounds, to be members; of those, 22 per cent accepted in time to vote this year, according to Laura Segura Mueller, the academy's vice president of membership and industry relations.

Last week, the task force challenged the music industry to hire more women producers and engineers, two jobs that are overwhelmingly male.

President of The Recording Academy Neil Portnow, executive producer Ken Ehrlich, singer and host Alicia Keys, Grammys talent producer Chantel Saucedo, and  Jack Sussman of broadcaster CBS at the preview for the  61st annual Grammy Awards   in Los Angeles. Photograph:  Kevin Winter/Getty Images
President of The Recording Academy Neil Portnow, executive producer Ken Ehrlich, singer and host Alicia Keys, Grammys talent producer Chantel Saucedo, and Jack Sussman of broadcaster CBS at the preview for the 61st annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. Photograph: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Even with these steps, this year's nominations show just how much work is left to achieve real gender parity. On the eight songs up for record of the year, a total of 48 producers and engineers were credited, and only two were female. One of them is Lady Gaga, as a producer of Shallow, her song with Bradley Cooper from A Star Is Born, which is a strong contender for both record and song of the year. Lady Gaga is scheduled to perform, but that night Cooper will be at the Baftas, the British film awards. (Taylor Swift, who is up for just one award, pop vocal album, is also in London, filming an adaptation of Cats, and is not expected to attend the show.)

Portnow said he viewed last year’s criticism as an opportunity to address important issues, and for the academy to take a leadership role in the industry. Not everyone will be happy, he said, but that’s OK. “The underlying factors of what makes people happy or unhappy changes from year to year,” he said. “It might be something musical, or it might be something sociological, which is what we’re seeing more of in today’s climate. But that’s appropriate, because that’s the time in history we are living in.” – New York Times