The 67th Annual Grammy Awards -2025-2025 «480p»
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I Disagree, Exit Here
“We aren’t giving a Grammy to a robot,” Noah said flatly. “Not because the robot doesn’t deserve it, but because the robot can’t enjoy the afterparty.” Record of the Year: The Indie Sleeper Hit The night’s first major upset came in the Record of the Year category. While oddsmakers favored Olivia Rodrigo’s orchestral rock epic “Vampire” or Miley Cyrus’s “Flowers” (holdover hits from the previous eligibility period), the award went to Lana Del Rey for “A&W” (American Whore) .
Later, (presenting Best Spoken Word Album) wore a suit covered in names of journalists detained abroad, urging the industry to “pay attention to the First Amendment,” a moment that split the room between enthusiastic applause and awkward silence. Technical Issues and Triumphs The broadcast ran 22 minutes over its scheduled runtime (a Grammy tradition). However, new producer Jesse Collins introduced a “silent disco” recovery segment during the final commercial break, allowing the audience to dance while producers fixed a teleprompter glitch during the Album of the Year presentation.
In a controversial twist, the Best Country Solo Performance was awarded to Beyoncé for “Texas Hold ‘Em” (from Act II: Cowboy Carter ). The win was met with a mixture of cheers and audible boos inside the arena. Beyoncé did not attend the ceremony (she was reportedly working on the visual component of Act III ), but her creative director accepted, saying, “Genre is a code. And codes are meant to be broken.” In Memoriam: A Tearful Tribute to 2024’s Losses The In Memoriam segment of the 67th Grammys was devastatingly long. 2024 saw the passing of icons across every genre. Stevie Wonder led a medley of the songs of Toby Keith , who died in late 2024, while Annie Lennox performed a chilling, a cappella version of “Nothing Compares 2 U” for Sinéad O’Connor . The 67th Annual Grammy Awards -2025-2025
Critics were largely positive. Rolling Stone called it “the most unpredictable Grammys since the 2017 Beck/Beyoncé upset.” Variety praised the diversity of winners but noted the lack of representation for hard rock and metal, which were relegated to the pre-telecast ceremony. The Los Angeles Times argued that the Academy still has a “pop bias,” pointing out that despite Beyoncé’s country win, no traditional Nashville artist took home a major country award. As the night concluded with SZA’s triumphant reprise of “Kill Bill” (complete with a theatrical sword fight on the stage screen), the Recording Academy announced that the 68th Annual Grammy Awards would return to New York City’s Madison Square Garden for the first time since 2018. Early predictions for 2026 already include heavy hitters like Dua Lipa’s Radical Optimism , the debut of whatever supergroup Taylor Swift forms next, and the potential posthumous release of a certain unreleased Prince album. Conclusion: Why the 67th Grammys Mattered The 67th Annual Grammy Awards (2025) will be remembered not for who won the most trophies—no one won more than three—but for what it represented. It was the year the industry finally admitted that genre architecture is crumbling. A rap album won Album of the Year (SZA is technically R&B/rap, though she defies labels). A pop star won Best Country. A UK drill song beat American trap. A seven-minute art-pop song won Record of the Year.
In an era of 15-second attention spans, the Grammys chose complexity. They chose the weird, the vulnerable, and the patient. And for one night in Los Angeles, that gamble paid off in gold. “We aren’t giving a Grammy to a robot,”
Los Angeles, CA – In the sprawling history of recorded music, few nights carry the weight of legacy and the thrill of discovery quite like the Grammy Awards. The 67th Annual Grammy Awards, held on Sunday, February 2, 2025 , at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, was no exception. But this was not merely another year of gold-plated trophies and orchestrated standing ovations. This was a ceremony of profound transition—a bridge between the streaming era’s algorithmic maturity and a renaissance of tactile, human-centric artistry.
The segment ended with a digital projection of (who passed in November 2024) conducting a holographic orchestra of former Grammy winners. Critics were divided on the hologram usage, but the visual of Jones waving to a tearful Oprah Winfrey in the front row was the evening’s emotional epicenter. The Most Talked-About Performance: K-Pop and Latin Fusion Forget the traditional pop medley. The performance that broke the internet was a collaboration between BTS’s Jungkook (fresh from military service) and Karol G . They performed a remix of Jungkook’s “Seven” and Karol G’s “Mi Ex Tenía Razón,” merging reggaeton beats with K-pop choreography. The stage featured a rotating waterfall and a 200-person dance crew. Within ten minutes of the broadcast ending, the clip had 50 million views on TikTok. Political Statements and the Elephant in the Room Unlike the relatively subdued 66th Grammys, the 67th was overtly political. Several artists wore blue ribbons in support of the Music Workers Alliance , protesting streaming royalty rates. During her acceptance speech for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance (for “Guess” with Billie Eilish), Charli XCX delivered an unscripted rant about “the billionaire class of Spotify” that caused the network to cut to a commercial early. Later, (presenting Best Spoken Word Album) wore a
Broadcast live on CBS and streamed on Paramount+, the 2025 Grammys (honoring recordings released between September 16, 2023, and August 30, 2024) delivered a stunning narrative: the coronation of new pop royalty, the long-overdue recognition of legacy hip-hop, and a technical masterclass in live television production following the poignant move from its traditional New York home. For the fourth consecutive year, comedian and former The Daily Show host Trevor Noah returned to the podium. However, 2025 marked his final turn as emcee. Noah delivered a career-defining monologue that balanced the geopolitical weight of a fraught election year with the levity of pop culture. He opened with a joke about the "Taylor Swift economy," noting that her mere attendance had allegedly raised Los Angeles’ GDP by 0.5% for the weekend. But he quickly pivoted to the serious: addressing the Recording Academy’s new diversity, equity, and inclusion protocols and the ongoing conversation about AI-generated music.