2023 Grammy Awards - Beyoncé breaks the record for the most wins in Grammys history 32

FoQV8edWIAA4fsh
 
Yo the local Atlanta affiliate CBS 46 CUT TO COMMERCIALS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE TRIBUTE!!!!!! MAN IM PISSED OFF!!!!!
AND THE SOUND WAS FUCKED UP THE WHOLE SHOW, HAD THIS WEIRD REVERB!!
 
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I ain't never seen this many niggas at the Grammys ever....they have more niggas than a Tarzan movie.

At this moment in time their just handing out Grammy's,thanks to inclusion cause they keep handing Beyonce one instead of handing one to all of the legends that deserve one but never got one cause of their bullshit.
The whispers
Frankie Beverly & Maze
Stevie
Chaka
Anita Baker

they might already have a couple but damn it they need a new one just cause.

I'm sick of Khaled,all in the camera's don't no one want to hear from you.....
what do u mean by they? all those artist need better managers
 
OK, I scrolled this whole thread just to make sure this wasn't brought up.

But someone please inform me WHY is this the 50th yr of Hip Hop?

I call bullshevick. Hip Hop came out in 1979, I rememeber was King Tam then Rappers Delight.

So why are they saying it's the 50th?
 
OK, I scrolled this whole thread just to make sure this wasn't brought up.

But someone please inform me WHY is this the 50th yr of Hip Hop?

I call bullshevick. Hip Hop came out in 1979, I rememeber was King Tam then Rappers Delight.

So why are they saying it's the 50th?
I think it's based on a block party Herc threw in 1973 at 1520 Sedgwick. But it can be argued that the culture was established at least a few years before that.
 
why the nigga all up front actin like he in a Mr. Olympia contest and shit???
:lol:
Mel is a true pioneer but he manifest his insecurities in the form of not his body buidling but constantly showing off his muscles. I mean put him next to an avergage body builder and he looks small but when put next to a rapper he stands out. He does it to focus attention on who he is but lets face it, unless you rock with the true old school, you'd never know who he was. With that said, Lyrically, he's not to be fucked with. Mel = GOAT.
 
I think it's based on a block party Herc threw in 1973 at 1520 Sedgwick. But it can be argued that the culture was established at least a few years before that.
KRS said it's when the 4 elements were brought together. Rapping, DJing, graffiti, and breaking. Before that they existed, but as separate worlds. First time it made sense to me.
 
Proof that either the quality of popular music, The Grammies, or both have seriously declined.

Agree.

Read thru the thread and I have no idea who the majority of folks are. And I’m not familiar with their music.

I may have heard their music scrolling thru the radio, but I can’t put a face/name to the music.

Maybe I’m just old.
 
7/8ths of that hip hop tribute was fire. Then Lil baby came out and immediately brought mood of the crowd down with that sad, mumble lullaby music. How you gonna follow up 'We gon make it' with that? :smh:

Then Gorilla (I think) started back up trying to hype up the crowd with her screaming and stomping. Fail. Lol Yatchy probably had the best performance outta the three bc his goofy ass didn't say anything.
 

The 10 best and worst moments from the 2023 Grammy Awards

By Leah GreenblattUpdated February 06, 2023 at 12:45 AM EST




They came, they saw, they wondered where Beyoncé was. The most nominated artist of the night — and now the winningest of all time, if not in the categories where it counts the most — might have been tardy to the party, but she was hardly the only one generating memorable moments at the 65th annual Grammy Awards.
Read on for the highs, lows, and "As It Was" whoas of music's biggest night.
CREDIT: KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES
Whoa: It's Harry's house
Best Pop Vocal Album felt like Adele's prize to lose (she's already taken it twice before, for turning 21 and 25). But Harry Styles went ahead and made an album that definitely feels like an album — or at least the only one on the nominees list with a bona-fide monster single in "As It Was" — and so he took home the first major prize of the night. Was he as dazzled as his camisole? The "Thank you for this DoorDash delivery" energy of his low-key acceptance speech will never tell.

CREDIT: KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES
High: A historic win (dressed up like a red wedding)
Kim Petras wasn't the first openly trans artist to be nominated for a Grammy — Wendy Carlos and Jackie Shane, among others, preceded her — but her Best Pop Vocal Duo or Group Performance win for "Unholy" with Sam Smith still marked a major, joyful moment. While Smith stood by in respectful silence, the German-born singer acknowledged the weight of it, tipping her win to "all the incredible transgender legends before me who kicked these doors open," including her friend the late pop singer and producer Sophie; Madonna ("for fighting for LGBTQ rights"); and her mom (who "believed me that I was a girl").
CREDIT: CBS
High, low, and whoa: An all-star crowd caught on tape
Nelly is living for Stevie Wonder and Smokey Robinson! Miranda Lambert needs a nap. Man, Shania Twain feels like a woman when Harry's on stage in his spangles! Beyoncé is... not in the building yet? The cameras duly went searching for reaction shots in the room, and sometimes found more (or in the case of Lambert's shameless yawn, less) than they were looking for.

CREDIT: FRAZER HARRISON/GETTY IMAGES
High and low: The in memoriam
Impassioned, intimate performances from Kacey Musgraves, Quavo, and Bonnie Raitt? Yay! Letting a handful of late legends (Loretta Lynn, David Crosby) have the courtesy of sustained standalone clips? Very nice. Vaguely grouping the deceased together by genre, age demographic, and/or ethnicity? Not great, Bob.
CREDIT: JC OLIVERA/WIREIMAGE
High: Beyoncé's love on top
Plastic off the sofa, passing into Grammy legend: Ask not why James Corden had to be the one to present it; CBS synergy always wins. But Bey didn't need to hear her name to know that history had just been made, and her brief, gracious acceptance speech for Best Dance/Electronic Album — which officially made her the Recording Academy's most awarded artist of all time — paid tribute to her late Uncle Johnny, her teary superstar husband Jay-Z standing in the audience, and the queer community "for your love, and for inventing the genre." (Did also-ran Diplo mouth something shady when her name was announced? Maybe.)
CREDIT: KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES
High: Rapper's delight
Will Smith may have excused himself from the narrative at the last minute, but the evening's high-vibe celebration of the 50th anniversary of hip-hop hardly needed the distraction of a conflicted star. Not when it had Missy Elliott, Salt-N-Pepa, LL Cool J, Big Boi, Rakim, Public Enemy, De La Soul, Method Man, Grandmaster Flash, Too $hort, Ice T, Run DMC, and a Busta Rhymes flow so electric and unreal it made the Micro-Machines guy sound like a medicated loris.
CREDIT: KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES
Whoa: Bonnie Raitt's little ballad that could
It takes a village, typically, to pen a Song of the Year; this award hasn't gone to one written solely by the artist who sang it since Amy Winehouse took the prize in 2008 for "Rehab." Somehow, though, a 73-year-old roots singer with a silver streak in her hair, 11 Grammys on her mantel, and no charting single since 1995 defeated the likes of Beyoncé, Lizzo, Kendrick, and Adele in one of the night's biggest categories with a gentle rumination about organ donation.
CREDIT: FRAZER HARRISON/GETTY IMAGES
Whoa: Best New Artist is actually new
And the Esperanza Spalding award for jazzbo bombshells goes to... Samara Joy, the stunned 23-year-old Bronx native whose previous fame stemmed mostly from being named Jazz Times' Best New Artist in 2021. Nobody looked more surprised than Joy, who gave a charmingly awed speech to a room full of superstars who fully expected to see Latto, Mäneskin, or Wet Leg taking this trophy home.
CREDIT: JOHNNY NUNEZ/GETTY IMAGES
Low: a Harry situation
Speaking of upsets, Style's Album of the Year prize for Harry's House came as likely confirmation that Beyoncé's career will always come with an asterisk now: The winningest superstar in pop history who somehow failed to take a single AOTY trophy in an otherwise unparalleled career. (We'd like to say there will be another chance after Renaissance, but those prizes come to pop stars over 40 about as often as an asteroid.) Then again, this kind of chaos also feels exactly on brand for the Recording Academy — a reminder that Grammys gonna Grammy, no matter what the bookies (and the supposed winds of change) say.
CREDIT: KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/GETTY IMAGES
Low: Not the closure we came for
Much like last year's Oscars ceremony rearranging itself around the prospect of a posthumous win for Chadwick Boseman, only to have Anthony Hopkins — who wasn't even in the room — take home the Best Actor prize, the placing of a DJ Khaled performance of "God Did" following Styles' surprise win felt like a truly unfortunate misreading of where the evening was headed. Jay-Z, doing his obligatory bit alongside Khaled, Rick Ross, and Lil Wayne, looked like he wanted to teleport himself right off the stage after his wife's AOTY loss, and the entire vibe of the performance felt both chaotic and hollow. God giveth, yes, and sometimes He taketh; but fate did this one dirty.
 
Beyonce has won more Grammy's than Micheal Jackson, Prince, Aretha Franklin, Dolly Parton, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Earth Wind & Fire, Quincy Jones, Frank Sinatra, Burt Bachrach. So I guess that means she's better than all of those artists?
 
It was sweet of Beyonce to thank the gays when she was in Dubai last week, a country where it is illegal to be gay.
 
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