Kamis, 21 November 2019

12 Takeaways From the 2020 Grammy Nominations - Rolling Stone

5. Rodgers & Hammerstein are cool again.
Nobody was really worried about the reputation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein catalog from the Golden Age of Broadway musicals. Then Ariana Grande’s team reached out looking for permission to release a new song based around the melody of “My Favorite Things,” the classic composition from the 1959 musical The Sound of Music. Now “7 Rings” is nominated for Record of the Year and Best Pop Solo Performance. On top of that, the current dark, brilliant remake of Oklahoma! now on Broadway — which features a seven-piece band performing the enduring classics in an Americana roots-arrangement — is nominated for Best Musical Theater Album, making the corny seem cool 60 years later.

6. Billy Ray Cyrus is country music’s Forrest Gump, always in the right place at the right time.
Let’s all take a second to marvel at the ways Billy Ray Cyrus has been intersecting with popular culture for nearly 30 years. His 1992 juggernaut “Achy Breaky Heart” was a goofy song, sure, but its release coincided perfectly with the rise of line dancing as well as country music as an institutional heavyweight. His early acting efforts (remember Doc?) also introduced the world to the talents of his daughter Miley, whose artistic evolution continues to fascinate. In 2019, he’s right back at the center of the conversation thanks to his role in Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road,” which has been the musical story of 2019 and just earned the singer his first Grammy nominations in 25 years.

7. Want an R&B nomination? Sing a duet.
The key to a Best R&B Performance nomination this year was strength in numbers: Four of the five tracks up for an award in the category featured two vocalists. Duets have always been useful for cross-pollinating fanbases; this may be more true than ever in the streaming era, when a curiosity listen comes at zero extra cost. The only R&B singer in this category who didn’t need a partner in crime was Lucky Daye. He garnered four total nominations on Wednesday, marking him as an academy favorite.

8. Michelle Obama is facing off against John Waters and the Beastie Boys.
What do Orson Welles, Joan Rivers, and Bill Clinton have in common? They’ve all won Grammys in the Best Spoken Word Album category. This year will be an especially nail-biting competition when former First Lady and America’s Role Model Michelle Obama faces off against the Prince of Puke, John Waters, and the Beastie Boys, among others. Obama has an edge — her husband has won twice in this category already — but the Beastie Boys did put out Rolling Stone‘s Audiobook of the Year in 2018 and Waters will forever proudly accept the title of “The People’s Pervert,” so it’s anyone’s trophy to win.

9. The rock categories continue to miss the mark.
The Grammys’ Rock Album category rewards chart-topping acts over critical successes, which means that more critically lauded acts tend to get marginalized. Maybe it’s due to the ever-growing muddiness of the “Alternative” genre that “indie rock” bands like Big Thief are nominated for Best Alternative Album instead of Rock — alongside artists who fall on the more “indie” side of the scale, Thom Yorke and Bon Iver included. The Rock Album category itself is usually largely male, with the exception this year of the Cranberries, and arena act-centric. True innovators in rock today — including Sharon Van Etten, Charly Bliss, Priests, and many more — are missing.

10. The Americana nominees are surprisingly diverse.
Since its inception in 2010, the Best Americana Album category has become something of a refuge for Sixties-era veterans like Levon Helm and Mavis Staples. But this year’s Americana nominees represent a fresh crop of millennial artists of color like J.S. Ondara, Rhiannon Giddens, and Our Native Daughters (which includes Giddens) — not to mention Best New Artist nominee Yola — who are currently helping steer the genre away from its white Nashville roots. Not a single artist of color under the age of 70 has ever won an Americana Grammy. This could be the year that finally changes.

11. Lil Nas X’s nominations are a victory for queer artists.
After Lil Nas X came out on June 30th, the final day of LGBTQ Pride month celebrations, the 20-year-old became the biggest openly gay pop star in the world. Now he’s nominated for six Grammys, including Record of the Year, Album of the Year, and Best New Artist. Those nominations tie him with Frank Ocean’s six nominations in 2012 for Channel Orange, another out artist who was nominated in those same categories. The fact that Lil Nas has done it by mixing country and hip-hop, genres that have historically snubbed queer artists, has been groundbreaking — although he’s not nominated in either of those two categories.

12. Elton should be proud of his protégé.
British actor Taron Egerton has been singing Elton John’s songs to promote Rocketman, the big-budget biopic in which he stars as Reginald Kenneth Dwight as he’s catapulted to superstardom, since earlier this year. Unlike in Bohemian Rhapsody, where Rami Malek lip-synced to recordings by Freddie Mercury, Egerton does all of his own singing and now has been nominated for it in the Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media (a.k.a. the movie soundtrack) category. The irony may be that Elton himself didn’t get a nomination, but it also means his protégé has the right stuff. The fact that Egerton is up against Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper for A Star Is Born, however, may mean it’s all a moot point.



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November 20, 2019 at 11:56PM

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