Beyoncé & Taylor Make Grammy History
With the later award, Trevor Noah announced that Beyoncé had tied the all-time record for most Grammy wins by a male or female artist with 27! Minutes later, Beyoncé went ahead broke that record — and set a new one — with her 28th win, taking home the “Best R&B Performance” Grammy for “Black Parade.” She now ties Quincy Jones‘ total for most wins for a non-classical musician. Only the late composer Georg Solti has more wins, with a career total of 31.In a related story, Beyoncé and JAY-Z‘s daughter Blue Ivy Carter becomes one of the youngest Grammy winners ever, as she and her mom won the “Best Music Video” Grammy for “Brown Skin Girl,” along with SAINt JHN and Wizkid.
Other Grammy Highlights…
In a triumph of genre mash-ups, Dan + Shay & Justin Bieber won the Grammy for “Best Country Duo/Group Performance” for “10,000 Hours.” Fiona Apple took home two Grammys — “Best Alternative Music Album” for Fetch The Bolt Cutters and “Best Rock Performance” for “Shameika.” Alabama Shakes’ Brittany Howard won “Best Rock Song” for “Stay High;” John Legend‘s Bigger Love was named Best R&B Album,” while The Strokes won their first Grammy — “Best Rock Album” for The New Abnormal.
Other interesting winners: Kanye West was the winner for “Best Contemporary Christian Music Album” for Jesus Is King, while America’s Sweetheart Dolly Parton was honored with a Grammy for “Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song” for “There Was Jesus” with Zach Williams. Filmmaker James Keach won the Grammy for “Best Music Film” for his terrific documentary, Linda Ronstadt: The Sound Of My Voice.
Posthumous awards — The late John Prine was honored with Grammys for “Best American Roots Performance” and “Best American Roots Song” for “I Remember Everything” (Pat McLaughlin & John Prine, songwriters), while the late Chick Corea, who was nominated for a remarkable 67 Grammys and won 23 over a six-decade career, picked up two more — “Best Improvised Jazz Solo” for “All Blues” and “Best Jazz Instrumental Album” for Trilogy 2 (along with Christian McBride & Brian Blade). The “Best Reggae Album” Grammy went to Got To Be Tough from Toots & the Maytals, whose namesake frontman Toots Hibbert died last September.