Tag: Recording Academy

  • How 2025 Grammy award winners were decided – Organisers

    How 2025 Grammy award winners were decided – Organisers

    The 67th annual Grammy Awards honoured the best recordings, compositions and artists from September 16, 2023, to August 30, 2024 on Sunday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports 67th Grammy Awards was held at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles after nominations were announced on November 8 in 2024.

    According to the Recording Academy, organisers of the Grammy Awards, winners of the Grammys are determined by voting.

    The Recording Academy’s Voting Members are composed of music creators, including artists, producers, songwriters, and engineers.

    The Recording Academy’s Voting Members determine the Grammy winners across all categories revealed on GRAMMY night.

    “This thorough process underscores the integrity of the Grammy Awards as music’s only industry-recognized, peer-voted honour,” the Recording Academy said in a statement.

    TNG learnt that this year, the organisers introduced several key updates to the annual Grammy Awards process.

    This include adjustments to eligibility criteria and category renaming, which all went into effect immediately at the 2025 Grammys.

    “All these changes are designed to enhance the integrity and inclusivity of the Grammy Awards and reflect the Recording Academy’s commitment to supporting and progressing the evolving music industry,” it stated.

    TNG reports Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter made history, winning her first Album Of The Year award and becoming the first Black woman to ever take home a golden gramophone in the Best Country Album.

    Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” swept in all five categories he was nominated in while Nigerian singer, Tems won the Best African Music Performance award, defeating Yemi Alade, Asake & Wizkid, Chris Brown Featuring Davido & Lojay and Burna Boy.

    Check out the full list of winners at the 2025 Grammys here.

  • How we select winners – Grammy’s CEO

    How we select winners – Grammy’s CEO

    Harvey Manson Jr., the CEO of the Recording Academy, the organising body for the Grammy Awards, has revealed how winners are selected for the prestigious music award.

    This comes in the wake of the controversy surrounding the 2024 Grammy Awards, where several Nigerian artists, including Burna Boy, Davido,   Asake and Ayra Starr could not secure a win in their respective categories.

    Addressing the concerns in a viral video, Manson said that Grammy winners are chosen based on votes from members of the Recording Academy, who are music professionals in the United States.

    He said that the selection process is not influenced by committees, labels, or journalists.

    “You have to understand that the only way to win is to have the member of the academy vote for you. To be a member of the academy you have to be a professional, working in music in the United States for now. Hopefully, we grow that,” he said.

    “But right now, if you are working professionally in the United States you can become a member of the recording academy.

    “Once you are a member of the recording academy, all the music is submitted, the members listen to it and they evaluate it on the quality of the art.

    “Not the sales, not the streams, not how many fans, but purely on the opinion. It is very hard, as you all know because it is subjective.

    “It is no best song or best record, it is just the opinion of that membership of that particular year. That is how you win a Grammy. The voters vote. There is no committee, no journalist, and there are no labels.

    “It is the music professionals voting for their peers,” he said.

    Jay Z, the US rapper, also slammed the Grammy Awards for “never giving” Beyonce, his wife, ‘Album of the Year’ category in spite of her impressive record of 32 wins.

    During Jay-Z’s acceptance speech for the Dr Dre Global Impact Award at the Grammys,  he stated further: ‘“some of you will go home tonight and feel like you’ve been robbed, some of you may be robbed, some of you don’t even belong in the categories.”

    Also, last year, Angelique Kidjo said the Grammy Awards need to embrace “diversity and gender equality” to survive.

    Greg Carr, associate professor in the Department of Afro-American studies at Howard University, says the music industry was built on exclusion.

    “Once exclusion was no longer an option, the inclusion of Black music has been curated, at least historically, very carefully, to absorb that music while minimizing black people,” he says.

    The grammys snub sparked widespread disappointment and frustration among fans and the Nigerian music community.

    Social media platforms are flooded with expressions of disappointment, as fans lament the loss of their favourite stars.

    The Best African Music Performance category saw South Africa’s Tyla emerge victorious with her song, “Water”.

    Also, in the much-anticipated Best Global Music Album category, Davido and Burna Boy fell short, with Shakti’s “This Moment” clinching the coveted award.

    The hashtag,  #GrammySnubNaija, trended on X formerly Twitter, with fans venting their frustration over what they perceived as a missed opportunity for Nigerian music to gain international recognition.

    The Twitterverse became a virtual town square for fans to voice their disappointment, frustration, and disbelief.

    NaijaMusicLover tweeted, “I can’t believe what I just witnessed. All our hopes dashed in one night. Davido and Burna Boy deserved better.”

    X user,  @AfrobeatsQueen, shared a meme of a shocked face, captioned, “Me watching the Grammys realising they really snubbed our Nigerian kings. #ShameOnGrammys.”

    @NaijaJollofQueen wrote, “This is beyond heartbreaking. Our artistes have been making waves globally, and the Grammys failed to acknowledge their impact. Disappointed but not defeated. We’ll keep shining.

    In a series of passionate tweets, @MusicAficionado expressed, “It’s not just about winning awards. Nigerian music has influenced the world. Our artistes have elevated the game. Grammy or not, we are a force to be reckoned with. #NaijaStandUp.”

    Celebrities also joined the conversation stating, “Sending love and respect to our stars who gave their all. We see your hard work and dedication. The Grammys might have missed it, but the world knows who runs the show. #NaijaToTheWorld,” they said.

    In spite of the disappointment, some X users emphasise the need to focus on the bigger picture.

    @AfrobeatInsider tweeted, “Let’s not forget the impact Nigerian music has made globally. Awards are just one part of the journey. Our artistes have opened doors for Afrobeats worldwide. The movement continues.”

    Burna Boy received four nominations in 2024: Best Melodic Rap Performance (“Sittin’ on Top of the World” with 21 Savage); Best Global Music Performance (Alone); Best African Music Performance (City Boys) and Best Global Music Album (I Told Them).