Thursday, December 15, 2022
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ROTY is an especially impressive field this time around, with a bevy of icons, superstars and young breakouts vying for the gold. What are the dynamics of the race at present? Here’s our take, with the oft-repeated caveat that
Grammy does what Grammy wants.
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Kendrick Lamar, “The Heart Part 5” (
pgLang/
TDE/
Aftermath/
Interscope): This powerful, soulful, anguished and hopeful cut exemplifies the impact of Kendrick’s hugely acclaimed work. It’s the best top-tier opportunity for Grammy to recognize him—at the moment, he looks like the front-runner.
Beyoncé, “BREAK MY SOUL” (
Parkwood/
Columbia): The club-ready smash that marked Queen Bey’s return to mainstream domination, “SOUL” is a celebration of ballroom culture that serves as a timely anthem of resilience. Is Grammy ready to anoint the most-nominated female artist once again?
Adele, “Easy on Me” (
Columbia): One of the most massive songs of the year, megastar Adele’s return plays to all her strengths, delivering from-the-heart vocal fireworks and all the pleasures of classic popcraft. Is that enough to land her the prize in a very strong field?
Harry Styles, “As It Was” (
Columbia): The charismatic Brit’s post-pandemic meditation is the year’s monster single, having amassed north of 1.6b streams on
Spotify alone—and it’s
still on fire. Could this be the one that brings Harry major-field glory?
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Steve Lacy, “Bad Habit” (
L-M/
RCA): The inclusion of this left-field smash means Grammy has let the ultra-creative Lacy into the club. There’s no question that this artist has a great future ahead of him—does its next level start here?
Doja Cat, “Woman” (
Kemosabe/
RCA): Powerhouse entertainer Doja had a helluva year, scoring hit after hit. Her nomination for this smoky, grooving cut is well deserved. Is there a path for her to take the hardware amid such heavyweight company?
Lizzo, “About Damn Time” (
Nice Life/
Atlantic): This bouncy, disco-infused track captures the empowering sensibility that has made Lizzo a multimedia phenomenon. Grammy certainly wants her to bring that energy to the show. Will she be rewarded here or in genre?
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Brandi Carlile, “
You and Me on the Rock” (
Low Country Sound/
Elektra): The inclusion of this slice of roots-pop from trusty troubadour Carlile underscores how entirely beloved she is by the Grammy establishment. Could “Rock” score a stone upset?
Mary J. Blige, “Good Morning Gorgeous” (
300): The revered vocalist serves up some classic-style R&B with a self-esteem-boosting message here. Her voice is surely in fine fettle, but is the Academy rewarding her for past successes?
ABBA, “Don’t Shut Me Down” (
Capitol): This ultra-sentimental pop throwback has some of the Swedish legend's trademark sparkle, though once again it seems that Grammy is including the group as career-achievement recognition. Is that enough to get it to the podium?