Music

SZA tops Grammy nominations in a year made for women and 'Barbie'

Photo: Collected

Versatile recording artiste SZA led this year's Grammy Award nominations with nine, coming in ahead of industry heavyweights Taylor Swift, Miley Cyrus and Billie Eilish, in a year made for women artistes and the movie blockbuster "Barbie".

The winners will be announced at the awards ceremony on February 4.

The 34-year-old SZA, born Solána Imani Rowe, snagged nominations for album of the year with "SOS" and record of the year and song of the year for "Kill Bill" while being shortlisted in multiple genres including pop, melodic rap and both progressive and traditional R&B.

The song "Kill Bill", also nominated for best R&B performance, takes its name from the two-part Quentin Tarantino film with lyrics about killing an ex-boyfriend and his girlfriend. The narrator concludes she would "rather be in hell than alone."

The album of the year nominees competing with SZA's "SOS" are "Midnights" by Swift, "Endless Summer Vacation" by Cyrus, "World Music Radio" by Jon Batiste, "The Record" by boygenius, "Did you know that there's a tunnel under Ocean Blvd" by Lana Del Rey, "The Age of Pleasure" by Janelle Monáe, and "Guts" by Olivia Rodrigo.

Victoria Monét followed closely behind SZA with seven nominations including Best New Artiste, Record of the Year and Best R&B Song for "On My Mama".

Phoebe Bridgers, apart from her duo performance nomination along with SZA for "Ghost in the Machine", scored six other nominations as part of boygenius, a collaboration with Julien Baker and Lucy Dacus.

Rodrigo took six nominations, with her hit "Vampire" getting nominated for record of the year, song of the year, and best pop solo performance.

Those six nominations tied her with country star Brandy Clark and industry stalwarts Eilish, Cyrus, and Swift.

Swift has dominated headlines this year with her sold-out concert tour spectacular, the eponymous "The Eras Tour" movie documenting the shows, and her relationship with American football star Travis Kelce.

Although Swift failed to break away from the pack in nominations, those six gave her 52 total for her career. She has won 12 times.

Consistent with the girl power theme of this year's nominations, the motion picture "Barbie", directed by Greta Gerwig, captured four of the five nominations for best song written for the visual media category.

Amongst them was Eilish's "What Was I Made For?" which was also nominated for Record of the Year, song of the Year, and Best Pop Solo Performance.

Representing the guys, actor Ryan Gosling's "I'm Just Ken" got nominated in the visual media category.

Jon Batiste led male singers with six nominations.

This year's Grammys cover recordings that were released between October 1, 2022, and September 15, 2023. The voters are recording artistes, songwriters, composers, producers, mixers and engineers. The awards ceremony will be televised live from Los Angeles on Sunday, February 4.

Last year pop icon Beyoncé won four Grammys, breaking the record for most career wins with 32. She is also tied with her husband, rapper Jay-Z, with the most career nominations with 88.

Comments

SZA tops Grammy nominations in a year made for women and 'Barbie'

Photo: Collected

Versatile recording artiste SZA led this year's Grammy Award nominations with nine, coming in ahead of industry heavyweights Taylor Swift, Miley Cyrus and Billie Eilish, in a year made for women artistes and the movie blockbuster "Barbie".

The winners will be announced at the awards ceremony on February 4.

The 34-year-old SZA, born Solána Imani Rowe, snagged nominations for album of the year with "SOS" and record of the year and song of the year for "Kill Bill" while being shortlisted in multiple genres including pop, melodic rap and both progressive and traditional R&B.

The song "Kill Bill", also nominated for best R&B performance, takes its name from the two-part Quentin Tarantino film with lyrics about killing an ex-boyfriend and his girlfriend. The narrator concludes she would "rather be in hell than alone."

The album of the year nominees competing with SZA's "SOS" are "Midnights" by Swift, "Endless Summer Vacation" by Cyrus, "World Music Radio" by Jon Batiste, "The Record" by boygenius, "Did you know that there's a tunnel under Ocean Blvd" by Lana Del Rey, "The Age of Pleasure" by Janelle Monáe, and "Guts" by Olivia Rodrigo.

Victoria Monét followed closely behind SZA with seven nominations including Best New Artiste, Record of the Year and Best R&B Song for "On My Mama".

Phoebe Bridgers, apart from her duo performance nomination along with SZA for "Ghost in the Machine", scored six other nominations as part of boygenius, a collaboration with Julien Baker and Lucy Dacus.

Rodrigo took six nominations, with her hit "Vampire" getting nominated for record of the year, song of the year, and best pop solo performance.

Those six nominations tied her with country star Brandy Clark and industry stalwarts Eilish, Cyrus, and Swift.

Swift has dominated headlines this year with her sold-out concert tour spectacular, the eponymous "The Eras Tour" movie documenting the shows, and her relationship with American football star Travis Kelce.

Although Swift failed to break away from the pack in nominations, those six gave her 52 total for her career. She has won 12 times.

Consistent with the girl power theme of this year's nominations, the motion picture "Barbie", directed by Greta Gerwig, captured four of the five nominations for best song written for the visual media category.

Amongst them was Eilish's "What Was I Made For?" which was also nominated for Record of the Year, song of the Year, and Best Pop Solo Performance.

Representing the guys, actor Ryan Gosling's "I'm Just Ken" got nominated in the visual media category.

Jon Batiste led male singers with six nominations.

This year's Grammys cover recordings that were released between October 1, 2022, and September 15, 2023. The voters are recording artistes, songwriters, composers, producers, mixers and engineers. The awards ceremony will be televised live from Los Angeles on Sunday, February 4.

Last year pop icon Beyoncé won four Grammys, breaking the record for most career wins with 32. She is also tied with her husband, rapper Jay-Z, with the most career nominations with 88.

Comments