Grammy 2023 nominations
Music fans, rejoice! The 2023 GRAMMY nominations were announced on Tuesday and some of this past year's top performers and recording artists made the list. Show
The nominations were announced during a livestream from the GRAMMY Museum in Los Angeles, which featured Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. as well as some special guests like Cyndi Lauper, Smokey Robinson, Olivia Rodrigo, Machine Gun Kelly and more. The selection process for the GRAMMY Awards was altered last May, following very public criticisms from The Weeknd. The show no longer uses anonymous review committees to determine its nominees, however, this year also saw prominent artists like Drake and Silk Sonic declining to submit their latest projects for consideration. See who made this year's list below: Record Of The Year "Don't Shut Me Down" — ABBA Song Of The Year "abcdefu" — GAYLE Album Of The Year Voyage — ABBA Best New Artist Anitta Best Pop Solo Performance "Easy On Me" — Adele Best Pop Duo/Group Performance "Don't Shut Me Down" — ABBA Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Higher — Michael Bublé Best Pop Vocal Album Voyage — ABBA Best Dance/Electronic Recording "BREAK MY SOUL" — Beyoncé Best Dance/Electronic Music Album RENAISSANCE — Beyoncé Best Contemporary Instrumental Album Between
Dreaming and Joy — Jeff Coffin Best Rock Performance "So Happy It Hurts" — Bryan Adams Best Metal Performance "Call Me Little Sunshine" — Ghost Best Rock Song "Black Summer" — Red Hot Chili Peppers Best Rock Album Dropout Boogie — The Black Keys Best Alternative Music Performance "There'd Better Be A Mirrorball" — Arctic Monkeys Best Alternative Music Album WE — Arcade Fire Best R&B Performance "VIRGO'S GROOVE" — Beyoncé Best Traditional R&B Performance "Do 4 Love" — Snoh Aalegra Best R&B Song "CUFF IT" — Beyoncé Best Progressive R&B Album Operation Funk — Cory
Henry Best R&B Album Good Morning Gorgeous (Deluxe) — Mary J. Blige Best Rap Performance "GOD DID" — DJ
Khaled Featuring Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, JAY-Z, John Legend & Fridayy Best Melodic Rap Performance "BEAUTIFUL" — DJ Khaled feat. Future & SZA Best Rap Song "Churchill Downs" — Jack Harlow feat. Drake Best Rap Album GOD DID — DJ Khaled Best Country Solo Performance "Heartfirst" — Kelsea Ballerini Best Country Duo/Group Performance "Wishful Drinking" — Ingrid Andress & Sam Hunt Best Country Song "Circles Around This Town" — Maren Morris Best Country Album Growin’ Up — Luke Combs Best New Age, Ambient or Chant Album Positano Songs — Will Ackerman Best Improvised Jazz Solo "Rounds (Live)" — Ambrose Akinmusire, soloist Best Jazz Vocal Album The Evening : Live At APPARATUS — The Baylor Project Best Jazz Instrumental Album New Standards Vol. 1 — Terri Lyne Carrington, Kris Davis, Linda May Han Oh, Nicholas Payton and Matthew Stevens Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album Bird
Lives — John Beasley, Magnus Lindgren and SWR Big Band Best Latin Jazz Album Fandango at the Wall in New York — Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra featuring the Congra Patria Son Jarocho Collective Best Gospel Performance/Song "Positive" — Erica Campbell Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song "God Really Loves Us (Radio Version)" — Crowder feat. Dante Bowe and Maverick City Music Best Gospel Album Die to Live — Maranda Curtis Best Contemporary Christian Music Album Lion — Elevation Worship Best Roots Gospel Album Let’s Just Praise the Lord — Gaither Vocal Band Best Latin Pop Album AGUILERA — Christina Aguilera Best Música Urbana Album TRAP CAKE, VOL. 2 — Rauw Alejandro Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album El Alimento — Cimafunk Best Regional Mexican Music Album (Including Tejano) Abeja — Reina Chiquis Best Tropical Latin Album Pa’lla Voy — Marc Anthony Best American Roots Performance "Someday It’ll All Make Sense (Bluegrass Version)" — Bill Anderson feat. Dolly Parton Best Americana Performance "Silver Moon (A Tribute to Michael Nesmith)" — Eric Alexandrakis Best American Roots Song "Bright Star" — Anaïs Mitchell Best Americana Album In These Silent Days — Brandi Carlile Best Bluegrass Album Toward
the Fray — The Infamous Stringdusters Best Traditional Blues Album Heavy Load Blues — Gov’t Mule Best Contemporary Blues Album Done Come Too Far — Shemekia Copeland Best Folk Album Spellbound — Judy Collins Best Regional Roots Music Album Full Circle — Sean Ardoin and Kreole Rock and Soul feat. LSU Golden Band from Tigerland Best Reggae Album The Kalling — Kabaka Pyramid Best Global Music Performance "Udhero Na" — Arooj Aftab and Anoushka Shankar Best Global Music Album Shuruaat — Berklee Indian Ensemble Best Children's Music Album Into the Little Blue House —
Wendy and DB Best Audio Book, Narration, and Storytelling Recording Act Like You Got Some Sense — Jamie Foxx Best Spoken Word Poetry Album Black Men Are Precious — Ethelbert Miller Best Comedy Album The Closer -
Dave Chappelle Best Musical Theater Album Caroline, Or Change Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media ELVIS Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media The Batman — Michael Giacchino, composer Best Score Soundtrack For Video Games And Other Interactive Media Aliens: Fireteam Elite — Austin Wintory, composer Best Song Written For Visual Media "Be
Alive" [from King Richard] — Beyoncé Best Instrumental Composition "African Tales" — Paquito D’Rivera, composer (Tasha Warren and Dave Eggar) Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella "As Days Go By (an Arrangement of the Family Matters Theme Song)" — Armand Hutton, arranger (Armand Hutton Featuring Terrell Hunt and Just 6) Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals "Let It Happen" — Louis Cole, arranger (Louis Cole) Best Recording Package Beginningless Beginning — Chun-Tien Hsia and Qing-Yang Xiao, art directors (Tamsui-Kavalan Chinese Orchestra) Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package Artists Inspired By Music: Interscope Reimagined — Josh Abraham, Steve Berman, Jimmy Iovine, John Janick and Jason Sangerman, art directors (Various Artists) Best Album Notes The American Clavé Recordings — Fernando
González, album notes writer (Astor Piazzolla) Best Historical Album Against the
Odds: 1974-1982 — Blondie Songwriter Of The Year, Non-Classical Amy Allen Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical Adolescence — Baynk Producer of the Year, Non-Classical Jack Antonoff Best Remixed Recording "About Damn Time (Purple Disco Machine
Remix)" — Purple Disco Machine, remixer (Lizzo) Best Immersive Audio Album Aguilera — Christina Aguilera Best Engineered Album, Classical Bates: Philharmonia Fantastique — The Making of the Orchestra — Edwin Outwater and Chicago Symphony Orchestra Producer of the Year, Classical Jonathan Allen Best Orchestral Performance "Adams, John Luther: Sila — The Breath of the World" — Doug Perkins, conductor off Michigan Department of Chamber Music and University of Michigan Percussion Ensemble) "Dvořák: Symphonies Nos. 7-9" — Gustavo Dudamel, conductor (Los Angeles Philharmonic) "Eastman: Stay on It" — Christopher Rountree, conductor (Wild Up) "John Williams — The Berlin Concert" — John Williams, conductor (Berliner Philharmoniker) "Works by Florence Price, Jessie Montgomery, Valerie Coleman" — Michael Repper, conductor (New York Youth Symphony) Best Opera Recording "Aucoin: Eurydice" — Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor; Barry Banks, Nathan Berg, Joshua Hopkins, Erin Morley and Jakub Józef Orliński; David Frost, producer (The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; The Metropolitan Opera Chorus) "Blanchard: Fire Shut Up in My Bones" — Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor; Angel Blue, Will Liverman, Latonia Moore and Walter Russell III; David Frost, producer (The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; The Metropolitan Opera Chorus) "Davis: X — The Life and Times of Malcolm X" — Gil Rose, conductor; Ronnita Miller, Whitney Morrison, Victor Robertson and Davóne Tines; Gil Rose, producer (Boston Modern Orchestra Project; Odyssey Opera Chorus) Best Choral Performance "Bach: St. John Passion" — John Eliot Gardiner, conductor (English Baroque Soloists; Monteverdi Choir) "Born" — Donald Nally, conductor (Dominic German, Maren Montalbano, Rebecca Myers and James Reese; The Crossing) "Verdi: Requiem — The Met Remembers 9/11" — Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor; Donald Palumbo, chorus master (Michelle DeYoung, Eric Owens, Ailyn Pérez and Matthew Polenzani; The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; The Metropolitan Opera Chorus) Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance "Beethoven: Complete String Quartets, Volume 2 — The Middle Quartets" — Dover Quartet Best Classical Instrumental Solo "Abels: Isolation Variation" — Hilary Hahn Best Classical Solo Vocal Album Eden — Joyce DiDonato, soloist; Maxim Emelyanychev, conductor (Il Pomo D’Oro) Best Classical Compendium An Adoption Story — Starr Parodi & Kitt Wakeley; Jeff Fair, Starr Parodi & Kitt Wakeley, producers Best Music Video "Easy on Me" — Adele Best Music Film Adele One Night Only — Adele The 65th Annual GRAMMY Awards will take place on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2023, at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT and will broadcast and stream live on CBS and Paramount+. Follow along at ETonline.com for everything you need to get ready for music's biggest night, including how to watch, GRAMMY performers and more. RELATED CONTENT: GRAMMY Awards Add Five New Categories Latin GRAMMYs 2022: Christina Aguilera, John Legend to Perform Bruno Mars Declines to Submit Silk Sonic for GRAMMYs Consideration GRAMMYs 2022: Biggest Wins, Standout Performances and Fashion Highlights!GET THE ET NEWSLETTERRelated GalleryLook Back at the Best GRAMMYs Gowns of All Time!Who has most Grammy nominations 2023?Beyoncé landed nine Grammy Award nominations on Tuesday, the most of anybody in contention for the 2023 ceremony. That number puts the decorated singer at a total of 88 career nominations — the same as her husband, rapper Jay-Z, who landed five nods this time around.
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