Grammys 2021 predictions: Beyoncé and Taylor Swift - Los Angeles Times |
| Grammys 2021 predictions: Beyoncé and Taylor Swift - Los Angeles Times Posted: 10 Mar 2021 07:51 AM PST Almost exactly a year after the live music business shut down due to COVID-19 — and six weeks after the show was originally scheduled to happen before being postponed — the 63rd Grammy Awards will finally take place Sunday night in Los Angeles. The telecast itself will be obviously shaped by the necessities of the pandemic: Ben Winston, who's overseeing the Grammys for the first time after Ken Ehrlich's four decades at the helm, has promised a supremely intimate experience geared to viewers at home, as opposed to the live audience that won't exist. (Performances are expected from Taylor Swift, Dua Lipa, Bad Bunny, BTS and last year's big winner, Billie Eilish, among many others.) But Sunday's winners and losers — Beyoncé leads nominations with nine, followed by Swift, Lipa and Roddy Ricch, with six apiece — will also reflect the Recording Academy's efforts to move past the turmoil of 2020, when the group's previous CEO, Deborah Dugan, was ousted following explosive allegations regarding discrimination and vote rigging. To discuss how it all might shake out, and to handicap some of the major races, Times pop music critic Mikael Wood convened — where else? — on Zoom with Times music reporter Suzy Exposito and Charles Holmes, staff writer at the Ringer and co-host of "The Ringer Music Show" on Spotify. Let's start with an artist who won't be on Sunday's show. Does the conspicuous shutout of the Weeknd, whose synth-pop smash "Blinding Lights" just became the first single to spend 52 weeks in the top 10 of Billboard's Hot 100, damage the credibility of the Grammys? Holmes: I'm not gonna sit here and say the Weeknd's "After Hours" album is high art. But I also don't think the Grammy Awards are in the business of rewarding quality. Judging by his tweets, the Weeknd is deeply invested in the Grammys; he's said the show is "corrupt," and he appears to believe that's bad for music. Yet other young artists — especially artists of color, including Drake and Frank Ocean — have said plainly that the Grammys don't matter to them. Exposito: You know the last Latin album to win album of the year? Santana's "Supernatural" in 2000. Beyoncé is probably the best illustration of this: She's the most nominated woman in Grammys history, but the vast majority of her nominations have come in the genre categories. And she's only won a major award once — song of the year in 2010 for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)." Holmes: If you're Beyoncé and you're sitting in the crowd, you're giving a bump to Grammys viewership. But if these people aren't winning the general categories, at a certain point, they're gonna say, "I'm not telling my fans to watch your thing if I'm only getting a participation trophy." Indeed, Beyoncé isn't performing on this year's show, though she is up for record of the year and song of the year — a performer's prize and a songwriter's prize, respectively — with "Black Parade," which she released on Juneteenth during last year's Black Lives Matter protests. What do you guys make of this song? I love its wit and swagger. But it also feels like minor Beyoncé. Exposito: It's so tied to the BLM discourse that you have to wonder: If it wins, which I think it might, will it be on the merits or because the Grammys are scrambling to show they care? Holmes: If this is the record that does get Beyoncé her big wins, after she's been robbed for so many years, more power to her. But why did she have to work twice as hard to get to the point where now we're going to reward her? The last Black woman to take album of the year was Lauryn Hill in 1999. For record of the year, Beyoncé's most serious competition seems to be herself — she features on Megan Thee Stallion's "Savage" — and Dua Lipa, whose disco throwback "Don't Start Now" might win over folks who voted for Daft Punk's "Get Lucky" in 2014. Exposito: That song is her version of John Cage's "4'33" — just negative space. Let's talk about the rap categories. Best rap album is filled with work by veterans such as Nas and Jay Electronica — very on-brand for the Grammys. Yet best rap performance includes younger, more vital stars like Lil Baby, DaBaby and the late Pop Smoke. The Grammys still privilege the album as a format. It's where they confer the real institutional prestige. The academy has reorganized the Latin awards this year to be less vague and more targeted. Does that represent progress? Big Spanish-language hits should be regarded as part of the pop mainstream. ![]() Taylor Swift is favored to win the Grammy for album of the year, for "Folklore." (Beth Garrabrant) Taylor Swift feels like a lock to me for album of the year with the rootsy "Folklore." It pushes the Grammys' musical buttons, and it offers the academy a chance for a make-good following the lack of love for her last couple of albums. Exposito: I do have a soft spot for the cottage-core ballads. What's your vibe on Megan Thee Stallion's chances? Beyond record of the year, I'd say best new artist amounts to a battle between her and Phoebe Bridgers. Maybe the losers are better company than the winners. Holmes: Look what Chance the Rapper is going through right now. Look where Macklemore & Ryan Lewis are. You tell me. As always, best new artist also includes some wild cards, none wilder than 21-year-old Noah Cyrus, who's almost certainly better known for being Miley's younger sister than for the handful of dodgy trap-folk EPs she's put out. ALBUM OF THE YEAR Will win: "Folklore" (Exposito, Holmes, Wood) RECORD OF THE YEAR Will win: "Black Parade" (Holmes); "Circles" (Exposito); "Don't Start Now" (Wood) SONG OF THE YEAR Will win: "Black Parade" (Wood); "Cardigan" (Holmes); "Don't Start Now" (Exposito) BEST NEW ARTIST Will win: Phoebe Bridgers (Exposito, Holmes); Megan Thee Stallion (Wood) BEST POP VOCAL ALBUM Will win: "Folklore" (Holmes); "Future Nostalgia" (Exposito, Wood) BEST ROCK PERFORMANCE Will win: "Shameika" (Exposito); "The Steps" (Holmes, Wood) BEST RAP PERFORMANCE Will win: "Savage" (Exposito, Holmes, Wood) |
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