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Beyonce makes history with 28th Grammy Award; whole family wins, too

Free Press wire reports | 3/18/2021, 6 p.m.
Queen Bey is the Queen of the Grammys now.
Beyonce, left, and Megan Thee Stallion accept the award for best rap song for “Savage” at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards held Sunday at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Photo by Chris Pizzello/Associated Press

Queen Bey is the Queen of the Grammys now.

On Sunday, Beyoncé became the most honored woman in Grammy history, winning her 28th award.

The superstar walked into the show with 24 wins and picked up four more honors, including best R&B performance for “Black Parade,” best music video for “Brown Skin Girl” as well as best rap performance and best rap song for “Savage,” with Megan Thee Stallion.

“As an artist I believe it’s my job, and all of our jobs, to reflect time and it’s been such a difficult time,” Beyoncé said as she won best R&B performance for “Black Parade,” which was released on Juneteenth.

She went on to say she created the song to honor the “beautiful Black kings and queens” in the world.

She added: “I have been working my whole life ... This is such a magical night.”

Beyoncé now ties producer and multi-instrumentalist Quincy Jones for second place among all Grammy winners. She is only behind the late conductor Georg Solti, who is the most decorated Grammy winner with 31 wins.

But Beyoncé didn’t only make history, her whole family did. The royal family of music all won honors Sunday: Jay-Z picked up his 23rd Grammy, sharing the best rap song win with his wife since he co-wrote “Savage.”

And their daughter, 9-year-old Blue Ivy Carter, who won for best music video alongside her mother, became the second youngest honeree to win a Grammy in the show’s 63-year history.

Leah Peasall was 8 when The Peasall Sisters won album of the year at the 2002 Grammy Awards show for their appearance on the T Bone Burnett-produced soundtrack, “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”

The awards show, a jam-packed but socially distanced show highlighted by live music sorely absent during the pandemic era, saw four women, including Beyoncé, win the top four prizes.

Taylor Swift became the first female performer to win album of the year three times. H.E.R. won song of the year and Billie Eilish picked up her second consecutive record of the year honor, telling the audience that best new artist winner Megan Thee Stallion deserved the award.

H.E.R. poses in the press room with the award for song of the year for “I Can’t Breathe” and best R&B song.

H.E.R. poses in the press room with the award for song of the year for “I Can’t Breathe” and best R&B song.

Though women have won all top four awards in the past — including Ms. Eilish’s sweep last year — it marked the first time four separate and solo women won the top four honors.

“I feel like there’s been a lot of female empowerment and lots of women winning awards tonight. And so it’s been absolutely amazing to just be alongside all that, to feel that energy,” Dua Lipa, who won best pop vocal album, said backstage.

Ms. Swift won the top prize with “folklore,” the folky, alternative album she released as a surprise last year. She previously won album of the year with “Fearless” and “1989.”

Megan Thee Stallion, who won three Grammys, also made history and became the first female rapper to win best rap song. She’s also the fifth rap-based act to win best new artist.

Beyoncé was the night’s top contender with nine nominations. She didn’t perform but Ms. Swift did. She sang “cardigan” and “august” from “folklore,” as well as “willow” from “evermore,” and was joined by the collaborators who helped her make the albums, Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner, who both won album of the year with Ms. Swift.

The Grammys featured pre-taped performances that helped the nearly four-hour show run seamlessly — a not-so-easy feat during a global pandemic. Host Trevor Noah told jokes about the pandemic and the year that was 2020, appearing live from downtown Los Angeles with attendees wearing masks and sitting, socially distanced, at small round tables.

Silk Sonic, aka Bruno Mars and Anderson Paak, also performed, bringing a throwback R&B vibe to the show with their smooth new single, “Leave the Door Open.” Dua Lipa proved her pop star status with a performance of her hits “Don’t Start Now” and “Levitating,” where she was joined by DaBaby, who was an all-star during his own performance of his guitar-tinged rap hit “Rockstar,” flipping the song for an exceptional live rendition featuring R&B singer Anthony Hamilton, a skilled violinist and background singers.

In this video grab provided by CBS and the Recording Academy, Anderson .Paak, left, and Bruno Mars, together as Silk Sonic, perform “Leave The Door Open.”

In this video grab provided by CBS and the Recording Academy, Anderson .Paak, left, and Bruno Mars, together as Silk Sonic, perform “Leave The Door Open.”

Country singer Mickey Guyton — the first Black woman nominated for best country solo performance — gave a top notch performance of her song “Black Like Me,” which she released last year as police brutality continued to devastate Black families and the coronavirus ravished Black America disproportionately. Lil Baby, joined by Killer Mike and activist Tamika Mallory, gave a political performance that impressed.

“Black Parade” joined a list of songs honoring the Black experience that won Grammy Awards on Sunday, including H.E.R.’s protest anthem “I Can’t Breathe” and Anderson Paak’s “Lockdown,” which was released on Juneteenth like “Black Parade.”

Other performers Sunday included Cardi B, Bad Bunny, Miranda Lambert, Maren Morris and Harry Styles, who won best pop solo performance for the hit “Watermelon Sugar.”

“To everyone who made this record with me, thank you so much,” said Mr. Styles, the first member of One Direction to win a Grammy.

Double winners included H.E.R., Fiona Apple, Kaytranada