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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  



1.1  Category changes  





1.2  Field changes  





1.3  Artificial intelligence ineligibility  







2 Performers  



2.1  Premiere ceremony  





2.2  Main ceremony  







3 Presenters  





4 Winners and nominees  



4.1  General Field  





4.2  Pop & Dance/Electronic  





4.3  Rock, Metal & Alternative  





4.4  R&B, Rap & Spoken Word Poetry  





4.5  Jazz, Traditional Pop, Contemporary Instrumental & Musical Theater  





4.6  Country & American Roots  





4.7  Gospel & Contemporary Christian  





4.8  Latin, Global, African, Reggae & New Age, Ambient or Chant  





4.9  Children's, Comedy, Audio Book Narration & Storytelling, Visual Media & Music Video/Film  





4.10  Package, Notes & Historical  





4.11  Production, Engineering, Composition & Arrangement  





4.12  Classical  







5 Special merit awards  



5.1  MusiCares Person of the Year  





5.2  Lifetime Achievement Awards  





5.3  Grammy Trustees Award  





5.4  Technical Grammy Award  





5.5  Grammy Music Educator Award  





5.6  Dr. Dre Global Impact Award  





5.7  Best Song for Social Change  







6 Multiple nominations and awards  





7 In Memoriam  





8 References  





9 External links  














66th Annual Grammy Awards






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66th Annual Grammy Awards
DateFebruary 4, 2024
LocationCrypto.com Arena
Los Angeles, California
Hosted byTrevor Noah
Most awardsPhoebe Bridgers (4)
Most nominationsSZA (9)
Websitegrammy.com
Television/radio coverage
NetworkCBS
Paramount+
Viewership16.9 million[1]
← 65th · Grammy Awards · 67th →

The 66th Annual Grammy Awards honored the best recordings, compositions, and artists from October 1, 2022, to September 15, 2023, as chosen by the members of The Recording Academy, on February 4, 2024. In its 21st year at the Crypto.com ArenainLos Angeles, the ceremony was broadcast on CBS and available to stream on Paramount+,[2] and was hosted by Trevor Noah for the fourth time.

The nominations were announced on November 10, 2023; SZA received the most nominations with nine, followed by Victoria Monét, Phoebe Bridgers (solo and as part of boygenius), and Serban Ghenea with seven each.[3] Monét's 2-year-old daughter, Hazel, became the youngest nominee in Grammy Awards history; she was a featured artist on her mother's song "Hollywood", which was nominated for Best Traditional R&B Performance.[4]

Bridgers was the night's biggest winner, receiving four awards: Three as part of Boygenius (Best Rock Song, Best Rock Performance, and Best Alternative Music Album), and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance alongside SZA. SZA, Monét, and Killer Mike received three awards each. Taylor Swift made history as the first artist to win Album of the Year four times, and engineer Serban Ghenea extended his record with a fifth award in the category as well.[5] South African singer Tyla was the winner of the inaugural Best African Performance award.[6]

In the big four categories, Swift's Midnights won the aforementioned Album of the Year prize; Miley Cyrus's "Flowers" won Record of the Year; Billie Eilish and her brother Finneas won Song of the Year for "What Was I Made For?" (from the soundtrackofBarbie); and Victoria Monét took home Best New Artist.

Background[edit]

For the 2024 ceremony, the academy announced several changes for different categories, the introduction of new categories, and updates on eligibility rules:[7][8][9]

Category changes[edit]

Field changes[edit]

The Grammy ballot was reduced from 26 fields to 11, not including the General Field. The Recording Academy stated that this was done to ensure that all voting members were able to exercise all 10 of their allocated votes, as this was prevented when some fields only contained one category. In addition to their votes in the General Field, voters are encouraged to cast up to ten genre category votes spread across a maximum of three fields. As of the 66th Annual Grammy Awards, the fields are listed as follows:

  1. General (6 categories)
  2. Pop & Dance/Electronic Music (6 categories)
  3. Rock, Metal & Alternative Music (6 categories)
  4. R&B, Rap & Spoken Word Poetry (10 categories)
  5. Jazz, Traditional Pop, Contemporary Instrumental & Musical Theater (9 categories)
  6. Country & American Roots Music (13 categories)
  7. Gospel & Contemporary Christian Music (5 categories)
  8. Latin, Global, African, Reggae & New Age, Ambient or Chant Music (10 categories)
  9. Children's, Comedy, Audiobook Narration and Storytelling, Visual Media & Music Video/Film (9 categories)
  10. Package, Notes & Historical (4 categories)
  11. Production, Engineering, Composition & Arrangement (8 categories)
  12. Classical Music (8 categories)

Artificial intelligence ineligibility[edit]

On June 16, 2023, in response to the rapidly developing field of artificial intelligence (AI), the Recording Academy declared that "only human creators are eligible to be submitted for consideration for, nominated for, or win a Grammy Award. A work that contains no human authorship is not eligible in any categories." The organization further specified that works featuring AI-generated material are eligible for an award only if a human contributed to the work meaningfully in the creation process and that contributors of only AI-generated material are not eligible for an award.[10][11] This controversy was cleared up when the song "Heart on My Sleeve" by ghostwriter977, which uses AI voice cloning to mimic the vocals of Drake and The Weeknd, was submitted for Grammy consideration. While the song was written by a human, it was deemed ineligible due to its AI vocals, illegal usage of those vocals without clearance by either artists' record labels, and lack of commercial availability.[12]

Performers[edit]

The first three performers for the ceremony, Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, and Olivia Rodrigo, were announced on January 15, 2024.[13] The second batch of performers, consisting of Travis Scott, Luke Combs and Burna Boy, were announced on January 21.[14] Billy Joel, who performed on the Grammys for the first time in 22 years, was announced on January 25, the same day that the performers for the Premiere ceremony were revealed to be J. Ivy, Jordin Sparks, Larkin Poe, Pentatonix, Sheila E, Laufey and more.[15][16] U2 joined the lineup on January 27, with a performance from their U2:UV residency at SphereinLas Vegas.[17] Joni Mitchell, who made her debut performance at the ceremony, was announced on January 28.[18] SZA joined the lineup on January 29.[19] Performers for the In Memoriam segment were announced on February 2,[20] with Miley Cyrus confirmed to perform in the ceremony on the same day.[21] Playboi Carti also performed with Travis Scott.[22]

Premiere ceremony[edit]

List of performers at the premiere ceremony
Artist(s) Song(s)
J. Ivy
Jordin Sparks
Larkin Poe
Pentatonix
Sheila E.
"Let's Go Crazy"
Brandy Clark
SistaStrings
"Dear Insecurity"
Kirk Franklin "All Things"
Laufey "From the Start"
Gaby Moreno
El David Aguilar
"Luna de Xelajú"
Adam Blackstone
Harvey Mason
Bob James
Terrace Martin
Robert Glasper
"Nautilus"

Main ceremony[edit]

List of performers at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards
Artist(s) Song(s)
Dua Lipa "Training Season"
"Houdini"
Tracy Chapman
Luke Combs
"Fast Car"
SZA "Snooze"
"Kill Bill"
Billie Eilish
Finneas O'Connell[23]
"What Was I Made For?"
Miley Cyrus "Flowers"[21]
Olivia Rodrigo "Vampire"
U2 "Atomic City"
(from the SphereinParadise, Nevada)[24][25]
Stevie Wonder
Annie Lennox
Wendy & Lisa
Jon Batiste
Ann Nesby
Cory Henry
Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis
Fantasia
Adam Blackstone
In Memoriam
"For Once in My Life"
"The Best Is Yet to Come"
(tribute to Tony Bennett)
"Nothing Compares 2 U"
(tribute to Sinéad O'Connor)
"Ain't No Sunshine"
"Lean on Me"
"Optimistic"
(tribute to Clarence Avant)
"Proud Mary"
(tribute to Tina Turner)[26]
Joni Mitchell
Brandi Carlile
SistaStrings
Blake Mills
Lucius
Allison Russell
Jacob Collier[27]
"Both Sides, Now"
Travis Scott
Playboi Carti
"My Eyes"
"I Know ?"
"Fe!n"
Burna Boy
21 Savage
Brandy
"On Form"
"City Boys"
"Sittin' on Top of the World"
Billy Joel
Laufey[28]
"Turn the Lights Back On"[29]
"You May Be Right"

Presenters[edit]

Justin Tranter was announced as the host for the Premiere ceremony on January 25, 2024, alongside the list of presenters.[30] The presenters for the main ceremony were announced on January 31.[31] Watsonx, a generative AI tool of IBM, was used to generate editorial content around nominees during the presentation.[32]

Winners and nominees[edit]

First round voting took place from October 11 to October 20, 2023. The nominations were announced on November 10 on a livestream by Arooj Aftab, Vince Gill and Amy Grant, Jimmy Jam, Jon Bon Jovi, Samara Joy, Muni Long, Cheryl Pawelski, Kim Petras, Judith Sherman, St. Vincent, Jeff Tweedy, Weird Al Yankovic, Gayle King, Nate Burleson, Tony Dokoupil, and Harvey Mason Jr.[33][34]

Final round voting took place from December 14, 2023, to January 4, 2024.[35] Winners were announced during the Grammy Awards Premiere Ceremony and telecast. Winners appear first and highlighted in bold.[36][37][38]

General Field[edit]

General Field

Record of the Year

Album of the Year

Song of the Year

Best New Artist

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical

Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical

Pop & Dance/Electronic[edit]

Pop & Dance/Electronic Field

Best Pop Solo Performance

Best Pop Duo/Group Performance

Best Pop Vocal Album

Best Dance/Electronic Recording

Best Pop Dance Recording

Best Dance/Electronic Album

Rock, Metal & Alternative[edit]

Rock, Metal & Alternative Field

Best Rock Performance

Best Metal Performance

Best Rock Song

Best Rock Album

Best Alternative Music Performance

Best Alternative Music Album

R&B, Rap & Spoken Word Poetry[edit]

R&B, Rap & Spoken Word Poetry Field

Best R&B Performance

Best Traditional R&B Performance

Best R&B Song

Best Progressive R&B Album

Best R&B Album

Best Rap Performance

Best Melodic Rap Performance

Best Rap Song

Best Rap Album

Best Spoken Word Poetry Album

  • The Light InsideJ. Ivy
    • A-You're Not Wrong B-They're Not Either: The Fukc-It Pill RevisitedQueen Sheba
    • For Your Consideration'24 – The Album – Prentice Powell and Shawn William
    • Grocery Shopping with My MotherKevin Powell
    • When The Poems Do What They DoAja Monet

Jazz, Traditional Pop, Contemporary Instrumental & Musical Theater[edit]

Jazz, Traditional Pop, Contemporary Instrumental & Musical Theater Field

Best Jazz Performance

Best Jazz Vocal Album

Best Jazz Instrumental Album

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

Best Latin Jazz Album

Best Alternative Jazz Album

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album

Best Contemporary Instrumental Album

Best Musical Theater Album

Country & American Roots[edit]

Country & American Roots Field

Best Country Solo Performance

Best Country Duo/Group Performance

Best Country Song

Best Country Album

Best American Roots Performance

Best Americana Performance

Best American Roots Song

Best Americana Album

Best Bluegrass Album

Best Traditional Blues Album

Best Contemporary Blues Album

Best Folk Album

Best Regional Roots Music Album

Gospel & Contemporary Christian[edit]

Gospel & Contemporary Christian Field

Best Gospel Performance/Song

Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song

Best Gospel Album

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album

Best Roots Gospel Album

Latin, Global, African, Reggae & New Age, Ambient or Chant[edit]

Latin, Global, African, Reggae & New Age, Ambient or Chant Field

Best Latin Pop Album

Best Música Urbana Album

Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album

Best Música Mexicana Album (including Tejano)

Best Tropical Latin Album

Best Global Music Performance

Best African Music Performance

Best Global Music Album

Best Reggae Album

Best New Age, Ambient Or Chant Album

Children's, Comedy, Audio Book Narration & Storytelling, Visual Media & Music Video/Film[edit]

Children's, Comedy, Audio Book Narration & Storytelling, Visual Media & Music Video/Film Field

Best Children's Album

Best Comedy Album

Best Audio Book, Narration & Storytelling Recording

Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media

Best Score Soundtrack Album for Visual Media

Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media

Best Song Written for Visual Media

Best Music Video

Best Music Film

Package, Notes & Historical[edit]

Package, Notes & Historical Field

Best Historical Album

  • Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos
  • Fragments – Time Out of Mind Sessions (1996–1997): The Bootleg Series, Vol. 17
  • The Moaninest Moan of Them All: The Jazz Saxophone of Loren McMurray, 1920–1922
    • Colin Hancock, Meagan Hennessey & Richard Martin, compilation producers; Richard Martin, mastering engineer; Richard Martin, restoration engineer (Various Artists)
  • Playing for the Man at the Door: Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick, 1958–1971
    • Jeff Place & John Troutman, compilation producers; Randy LeRoy & Charlie Pilzer, mastering engineers; Mike Petillo & Charlie Pilzer, restoration engineers (Various Artists)
  • Words & Music, May 1965 – Deluxe Edition

Best Album Notes

  • Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos
    • Robert Gordon & Deanie Parker, album notes writers (Various Artists)
  • Evenings at The Village Gate: John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy (Live)
  • I Can Almost See Houston: The Complete Howdy Glenn
    • Scott B. Bomar, album notes writer (Howdy Glenn)
  • Mogadishu's Finest: The Al Uruba Sessions
    • Vik Sohonie, album notes writer (Iftin Band)
  • Playing for the Man at the Door: Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick, 1958–1971
    • Jeff Place & John Troutman, album notes writers (Various Artists)

Best Recording Package

Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package

  • For The Birds: The Birdsong Project
    • Jeri Heiden & John Heiden, art directors (Various Artists)
  • The Collected Works of Neutral Milk Hotel
  • Gieo
  • Inside: Deluxe Box Set
    • Bo Burnham & Daniel Calderwood, art directors (Bo Burnham)
  • Words & Music, May 1965 – Deluxe Edition

Production, Engineering, Composition & Arrangement[edit]

Production, Engineering, Composition & Arrangement Field

Producer of the Year, Classical

  • Elaine Martone
    1. Ascenso (Santiago Cañón-Valencia) (A)
    2. Berg: Three Pieces From Lyric Suite; Strauss: Suite From Der Rosenkavalier (Franz Welser-Möst & The Cleveland Orchestra) (A)
    3. Between Breaths (Third Coast Percussion) (A)
    4. Difficult Grace (Seth Parker Woods) (A)
    5. Man Up / Man Down (Constellation Men's Ensemble) (A)
    6. Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5 (Franz Welser-Möst & The Cleveland Orchestra) (A)
    7. Rachmaninoff & Gershwin: Transcriptions By Earl Wild (John Wilson) (A)
    8. Sirventés - Music From The Iranian Female Composers Association (Brian Thornton, Katherine Bormann, Alicia Koelz, Eleisha Nelson, Amahl Arulanadam & Nathan Petipas) (A)
    9. Walker: Antifonys; Lilacs; Sinfonias Nos. 4 & 5 (Franz Welser-Möst & The Cleveland Orchestra) (A)
  • David Frost
    1. The American Project (Yuja Wang, Teddy Abrams, Louisville Orchestra) (A)
    2. Arc II - Ravel, Brahms, Shostakovich (Orion Weiss) (A)
    3. Blanchard: Champion (Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Latonia Moore, Ryan Speedo Green, Eric Owens, Stephanie Blythe, Metropolitan Opera Chorus & Orchestra) (A)
    4. Contemporary American Composers (Riccardo Muti & Chicago Symphony Orchestra) (A)
    5. The Guitar Player (Mattias Schulstad) (A)
    6. Mysterium (Anne Akiko Meyers, Grant Gershon & Los Angeles Master Chorale) (A)
    7. Verdi: Rigoletto (Daniele Rustioni, Piotr Beczala, Quinn Kelsey, Rosa Feola, Varduhi Abrahamyan, Andrea Mastroni, The Metropolitan Opera Chorus & Orchestra) (A)
  • Morten Lindberg
    1. An Old Hall Ladymass (Catalina Vicens & Trio Mediæval) (A)
    2. Thoresen: Lyden Av Arktis - La Terra Meravigliosa (Christian Kluxen & Arktisk Filharmoni) (A)
    3. The Trondheim Concertos (Sigurd Imsen & Baroque Ensemble Of The Trondheim Symphony Orchestra) (A)
    4. Yggdrasil (Tove Ramlo-Ystad & Cantus) (A)
  • Dmitriy Lipay
    1. Adès: Dante (Gustavo Dudamel & Los Angeles Philharmonic) (A) Fandango (Gustavo Dudamel, Anne Akiko Meyers & Los Angeles Philharmonic) (A)
    2. Price: Symphony No. 4; Dawson: Negro Folk Symphony (Yannick Nézet-Séguin & Philadelphia Orchestra) (A)
    3. Rachmaninoff: The Piano Concertos & Paganini Rhapsody (Yuja Wang, Gustavo Dudamel & Los Angeles Philharmonic) (A)
    4. Walker: Lyric For Strings; Folksongs For Orchestra; Lilacs For Voice & Orchestra; Dawson: Negro Folk Symphony (Asher Fisch & Seattle Symphony) (A)
  • Brian Pidgeon
    1. Fuchs: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1 (John Wilson & Sinfonia Of London) (A)
    2. Music For Strings (John Wilson & Sinfonia Of London) (A)
    3. Nielsen: Violin Concerto; Symphony No. 4 (James Ehnes, Edward Gardner & Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra) (A)
    4. Pierre Sancan - A Musical Tribute (Jean-Efflam Bavouzet, Yan Pascal Tortelier & BBC Philharmonic) (A)
    5. Poulenc: Orchestral Works (Bramwell Tovey & BBC Concert Orchestra) (A)
    6. Rachmaninoff: Symphony No. 3; Voclaise; The Isle Of The Dead (John Wilson & Sinfonia Of London) (A)
    7. Schubert: Symphonies, Vol. 3 (Edward Gardner & City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra) (A)
    8. Shostakovich: Symphonies Nos. 12 & 15 (John Storgårds & BBC Philharmonic) (A)
    9. Tchaikovsky: Orchestral Works (Alpesh Chauhan & BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra) (A)

Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical

Best Immersive Audio Album

Best Instrumental Composition

Best Engineered Album, Classical

Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical

Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella

Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals

Classical[edit]

Classical Field

Best Orchestral Performance

Best Opera Recording

Best Choral Performance

Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance

Best Classical Instrumental Solo

Best Classical Vocal Solo

Best Classical Compendium

Best Contemporary Classical Composition

Special merit awards[edit]

MusiCares Person of the Year[edit]

MusiCares Person of the Year is a charity award celebrating an artist's creative achievements and their dedication to philanthropy.

Lifetime Achievement Awards[edit]

Grammy Trustees Award[edit]

Technical Grammy Award[edit]

Grammy Music Educator Award[edit]

Dr. Dre Global Impact Award[edit]

Best Song for Social Change[edit]

Multiple nominations and awards[edit]

The following received multiple awards:

The following received multiple nominations:

In Memoriam[edit]

The following individuals were included a montage during the In Memoriam performance at the ceremony.[45] An expanded list of those who died during the previous year was included on the Grammy website.[46]

  • Harry Belafonte
  • Astrud Gilberto
  • Robbie Robertson
  • Wayne Shorter
  • Bill Lee
  • Jerry Moss
  • Les McCann
  • Peter Schickele
  • Tom Smothers
  • Carla Bley
  • André Watts
  • Denny Laine
  • Dick Waterman
  • Chita Rivera
  • Jimmy Buffett
  • Shane MacGowan
  • Mary Weiss
  • Jane Birkin
  • Wayne Kramer
  • Jim Ladd
  • Andy Rourke
  • David Lindley
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto
  • David Jolicoeur
  • Randy Meisner
  • Charlie Robison
  • Michael Rhodes
  • Gary Rossington
  • María Jiménez
  • Melinda Wilson
  • Gary Wright
  • Sinéad O'Connor
  • Burt Bacharach
  • Cynthia Weil
  • Seymour Stein
  • Terry Kirkman
  • Phil Quartararo
  • George Winston
  • Jaquelyne Ledent-Vilain
  • Charlie Monk
  • Menahem Pressler
  • Melanie
  • Ahmad Jamal
  • Clarence Avant
  • Rudolph Isley
  • Jean Knight
  • Sixto Rodriguez
  • Marlena Shaw
  • Jerry Bradley
  • Russell Batiste Jr.
  • Jeffrey Foskett
  • Rita Lee
  • Royal Blakeman
  • Bobby Caldwell
  • Aaron Spears
  • DJ Mark the 45 King
  • Gangsta Boo
  • Chris Strachwitz
  • Kris L. Claver
  • Magoo
  • Kendall A. Minter
  • Gordon Lightfoot
  • Tina Turner
  • References[edit]

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  • ^ a b Earl, William (February 2, 2024). "Miley Cyrus Set to Perform 'Flowers' at Grammy Awards (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on February 3, 2024. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
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  • External links[edit]


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