The 58th annual Grammy Awards may be airing on Monday for the first time instead of Sunday, but thereâll be some things that look familiar. LL Cool J will host for the fifth straight time, and the show will continue its tradition of being a music festival masquerading as an awards show, focusing on the performances and a few key awards, while relegating the majority of its 83 awards to a pretelecast ceremony.
With an expected run time of three-and-a-half hours, there will be a lot to take in, but weâre here to help you make it through the night. Be sure to follow The Root on Twitter, where weâll be live-tweeting the show and all the big moments, and on Instagram, where weâll be posting photos from the red carpet.
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Meanwhile, here are the storylines, the categories and the performances you need to know:
1. Will Kendrick Lamar Make History or Will He Get Swift-Boated?
Kendrick Lamar, who leads all with 11 nominationsâone shy of Michael Jacksonâs record 12 nods for ThrillerÂâis a poised for a big night and the Compton, Calif., rapper canât wait for it, telling Billboard, âI want to win them all.â
Well, K-Dotâs chances of winning them all are pretty much zero since heâs nominated twice in two categories. But the desire is understandable given what happen in 2014. That year he was nominated for seven Grammys and didnât win a single one. Not only that, but he had to watch white rapper Macklemore, who is bad at his job, walk away with Best New Artist, Best Rap Album and Best Rap Performance, all awards Lamar was up for. Then he had to put up with Macklemoreâs âapology text,â which Macklemore posted on Instagram, apparently to show the world that he understood how much his white privilege played a role in his wins.
But this year, with nary a Macklemore nomination in sight, this could be a historic night for Lamar.
Except ⊠Taylor Swift. The two artists are competing in two of the major categoriesâAlbum of the Year and Song of the Year. Lamar would be the first hip-hop artist to win Album of the Year since Outkastâs 2004 Speakerboxx/The Love Below, and the first rap artist ever to win Song of the Year. The question is, will the Recording Academyâs 13,000 voting membersâsome of whom may have never heard a single second of Lamarâs album but couldnât escape the earworms produced by the pop starletâs hit-making factoryâgive the rapper enough votes to win? Weâll have to wait and see. (Side note: The two are also nominated together for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance and Best Music Video for Swiftâs âBad Blood.â)
2. Categories to Watch
Album of the Year: Sound & Color, Alabama Shakes; To Pimp a Butterfly, Kendrick Lamar; Traveller, Chris Stapleton; 1989, Taylor Swift; Beauty Behind the Madness, the Weeknd.
As mentioned, Swift and Lamar are the two favorites, and if Lamar wins, heâd be only the third rap artist to win the nightâs biggest prize. But donât count out Alabama Shakes, whose stellar sophomore album could surprise everyone. (Have you forgotten last year, when Beck shocked the worldâand Kanyeâby winning this category over BeyoncĂ©, whose surprise self-titled album was the huge favorite?)
Song of the Year (goes to the songwriters): âAlright,â Kendrick Duckworth, Mark Anthony Spears and Pharrell Williams, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar); âBlank Space,â Max Martin, Shellback and Taylor Swift, songwriters (Taylor Swift); âGirl Crush,â Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose, songwriters (Little Big Town); âSee You Again,â Andrew Cedar, Justin Franks, Charles Puth and Cameron Thomaz, songwriters (Wiz Khalifa Featuring Charlie Puth); âThinking Out Loud,â Ed Sheeran and Amy Wadge, songwriters (Ed Sheeran).
The first hip-hop song ever nominated in the category was Eminemâs âLose Yourselfâ in 2004. Since then, few rap artistsâincluding Kanye (twice)ÂÂâhave had a chance to win this coveted award, so if âAlrightâ takes the crown, it would be a big moment for hip-hop.
Best Rap Song: âAll Day,â Kanye West featuring Theophilus London, Allan Kingdom and Paul McCartney; âAlright,â Kendrick Lamar; âEnergy,â Drake; âGlory,â Common and John Legend; âTrap Queen,â Fetty Wap.
Most of the rap awards will be announced in the pretelecast ceremony, with one, maybe two categories appearing on TV. But who gets the early wins could provide a clue as to how Lamarâs night will go. If heâs winning in the rap category, he may have a shot at winning the big prizes. (Or notâthe Grammysâ voting process is a hot mess, allowing people to vote in genres outside their area of expertise. This is where the popularity of a song or artist could come into play.)
While âAlrightâ was the unofficial anthem of the Black Lives Matter movement, itâs going up against the Oscar-winning song âGlory,â from the movie Selma. And if by some chance Westâs âAll Dayâ wins, Lamar would still get a Grammy as a songwriter.
3. A Night of the Tributes
Lionel Richie: Richie, who is this yearâs MusicCares Person of the Year, is expected to join in a musical celebration of his career, which will feature R&B crooner John Legend, country star Luke Bryan, and pop stars Demi Lovato and Meghan Trainor.
Michael Jackson: R&B singer Miguel, whoâs up for two awards, will perform the King of Popâs âSheâs Out of My Lifeâ to mark the Feb. 26 reissue of Jacksonâs best-selling 1979 album, Off the Wall.
B.B. King:Â The blues legend, who died last year, will get a musical sendoff from country singer Chris Stapleton, guitarist Gary Clark Jr. and blues icon Bonnie Raitt.
David Bowie and Glenn Frey:Â The Grammys will honor the two rock legends who died last month: Lady Gaga will pay respect to Bowie, and Freyâs Eagles bandmates, along with Jackson Browne, will unite in honor of the singer-guitarist.
Maurice White:Â While itâs not a full musical tribute, the late co-founder of Earth, Wind & Fire will get some love when his EWF bandmates present the Record of the Year.
4. Must-See Performances
Taylor Swift: OK, even Iâll admit I canât resist the infectious tunes this pop princess cranks out. The singer will open the show with a song from her Grammy-nominated album, 1989. Then we can all play drinking games based on the number of times the camera shows her dancing to someone elseâs performance.
Kendrick Lamar: I donât know if he can top last yearâs BET Awards performance of âAlright,â where he rapped on top of a police car with the American flag billowing in the background. But no matter what he does, Iâm sure heâll have the Twitterverse lit up.
Adele: Because her chart-topping album, 25, was ineligible for this yearâs Grammys, she wonât be taking home any trophies (maybe next year). But we will be blessed with a performance. What I really want to know is with Adele and Lionel Richie in the same building, can we get that âHelloâ mashup weâve been waiting for?
Alabama Shakes: The rock group, which is up for four awards, is fronted by Brittany Howard, an incredible performer whose voice channels the spirit of Janis Joplin and the soul of Tina Turner.
The Hollywood Vampires: This rock âsupergroupââfeaturing Alice Cooper, Joe Perry from Aerosmith, Matt Sorum and Duff McKagan from Guns Nâ Roses, and ⊠Johnny Depp (?!)âwill be performing live on TV for the first time. Frankly, I have no idea what they sound like or what to expect, but Iâm gonna be watching to see what the hell happens.
Hamilton, the musical: Do not sleep on this performance. Lin-Manual Mirandaâs hip-hop-inspired Broadway musical about founding father and face of the $10 bill, Alexander Hamilton, is the toast of the Great White Way, with soldout shows and seats going for multiple stacks of $10 bills on the resale market. The cast is doing a special live performance of the musicalâs opening number, âAlexander Hamilton,â for the Grammys (Broadway shows are usually dark on Mondays) from New Yorkâs Richard Rodgers Theatre.
For a complete list of performers, go here.
The 58th annual Grammy Awards will air Monday at 8 p.m. on CBS.
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