Clive celebrates with Speaker Pelosi, Joni Mitchell, Doug Davis, Chance the Rapper and Wiz Khalifa; screen time for the host; Richard Palmese, Steve Bartels, Tom Poleman, Alissa Pollack, Doc Wynter and John Sykes cheer Clive from their excellent table.
So there was copious music and food and drink and schmooze, and lots of Clive love that included dutiful recitations of platinum and diamond sales accrued and Grammys accumulated. And then, after an all-star tribute from the Bad Boy roster and a quick video reel of testimonials, it was time for Diddy. Recording Academy interim President/CEO Harvey Mason Jr. brought him out after a warm introduction. Combs’ candid, funny and moving speech traced his earliest infatuation with music—grooving to James Brown 45s on a toy record player, and revering Brown’s proud blackness—all the way to the present moment. It revisited his dashed dreams of football stardom, his tenure at Howard University and his stint as a dancer in music videos (he didn’t get the Madonna gig because “I didn’t know how to vogue”). He remembered hearing Frankie Crocker playing the Sugar Hill Gang and being electrified by hip-hop. “Hip-hop gave us hope,” he emphasized, long before it was ever a planetary economic engine. He remembered meeting Lyor at Def Jam, who was on the phone in his office in a full-on cursing match with Run-D.M.C., and thinking, “I don’t want this white man cursing at me every day.” He took us through his starving days figuring out the production game at Uptown, under the patient wing of Andre Harrell. And he recalled his first meeting with Clive, whom he saluted as another thoughtful and generous mentor. He related that following Clive’s notes on records resulted in one #1 after another. He told tales of having a tween Usher in his charge, which he owned might not have been the best idea. He was most emphatic in shouting the praises of Gordy, Jones and Avant from the rooftops, as well as the more recent efforts of Jon Platt, Team Roc Nation and others, underlining the importance of work that has moved black culture forward, beyond mere entertainment, and also vouchsafed black ownership of black creativity.“I’m officially starting a clock,” Diddy declared to the Academy. “You’ve got 365 days to get this shit together."
“My goal used to be about making hit records,” he added. “Now it’s about ensuring that the culture moves forward. My culture. Our culture. Black culture.” Wrapping up he reiterated his 365-day ultimatum, dedicated his award to Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall, Prince’s 1999, Beyoncé’s Lemonade, Missy Elliott’s The Real World, Snoop Dogg’s Doggystyle, Kanye West’s Graduation and Nas’ Illmatic. Before leaving the stage, he lavished more affection on Clive. “I love you to death,” he said. Photo credit: Elliot dal Pra