Top female talents will take on the Beatles at Sunday’s show, where THR expects they’ll prevail in the big four categories: album, record and song of the year and best new artist.
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.
Beyoncé leads the 2025 Grammy nominations, including yet another Album of the Year nod, begging the question of whether she'll attend and finally win the top prize.
Music’s biggest night is happening Sunday and the lineup of scheduled performers is pretty impressive. The Grammy Awards air live from Los Angeles and will be hosted again this year by Trevor Noah. There has already been excitement about potential performances,
"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.
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
Grammy Awards will be handed out Feb. 2. Here are our predictions for who should win and who will bring home one the coveted awards.
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.
The Boston-bred group announced over the weekend the launch of a fundraiser they’ve dubbed “Heed the Call For California,” with 100% of the proceeds going to the California Fire Foundation Wildlife & Disaster Relief Fund, which will directly support victims across the state.
Even as most Grammy Week events were canceled due to wildfires, L.A. officials said the same thing: ‘You have to do the show,' as long as it's safe.