Beyonce is the most decorated artist in Grammys history, and her album releases have both triggered cultural earthquakes and reshaped music industry norms. Beyonce has thus challenged the Recording Academy to keep up with her by improving on its categorization of music to better reflect industry trends -- something that the Grammy organizers have indeed endeavored to do.
"Texas Hold 'Em" producer Killah B talks to the USA TODAY Network about his Grammy nominations and what it means to make history again with Beyoncé.
From Taylor Swift to Beyoncé to Billie Eilish, music's biggest stars are headed to Los Angeles for the 67th annual GRAMMY Awards on Sunday, Feb. 2. Here's what you need to know. Beyoncé leads this year's GRAMMY Awards with 11 nominations.
Who would have thought Beyoncé would become the Grammys’ favorite country artist? After having had already been nominated in pop, R&B, rap, rock, and EDM categories, Queen Bey is this year’s only artist nominated across all four country genre categories: Best Country Solo Performance (“16 Carriages”),
Best Traditional R&B Performance “Wet,” Marsha Ambrosius “Can I Have This Groove,” Kenyon Dixon “No Lie,” Lalah Hathaway featuring Michael McDonald “Make Me Forget,” Muni Long “That’s You,” Lucky Daye
Rüfüs Du Sol will play a show benefitting Los Angeles wildfire relief efforts on March 6 at the Hollywood Palladium. The one night only performance will feature a DJ set by the Australia-born, U.S.-based group.
Billie Eilish, Chappell Roan and Charli xcx are among the performers at the 67th Grammy Awards at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Sunday.
Some major talent will be on hand for the 2025 GRAMMY Awards. In a new promo for the show, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé were announced as attendees. The women certainly have reason to attend. Swift is up for six awards at the ceremony, while Beyoncé raked in 11 nominations.
Beyoncé last performed on the Grammys in 2017, when she sang “Love Drought” and “Sandcastles,” two songs from her critically lauded Lemonade album. Swift last performed on the Grammys in 2021, when she sang “Cardigan” and “August,” both from Folklore, and “Willow,” from Evermore.
Sunday’s event has high-profile contests featuring Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and Chappell Roan. But the big question may be whether the show strikes the right tone.
Despite the multiple wildfires in recent weeks in Southern California, the Recording Academy announced the star-studded awards will continue.
Beyoncé is the most decorated artist in the history of the Grammys, and her album releases have both triggered cultural earthquakes and reshaped music industry norms.