Kendrick Lamar Best Posts: Don't Blow It Grammys: Give Kendrick Lamar His Album Of The Year Award

  1. JFK
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    JFK Bleach on my t-shirt

    Dec 8, 2015
    As a musical piece, TPAB is a masterpiece. Give it all the Grammys.

    As a Hip Hop album, it's a snooze fest. Wake me up for the J. Cole collab.
     
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  2. Flacko
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    Flacko Too Blessed To Be Humble

    Dec 7, 2015
    http://www.laweekly.com/music/dont-...ick-lamar-his-album-of-the-year-award-6355830

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    The Grammy nominations were announced this morning, and as usual, there were few surprises. Over the years the awards show has pretty much become a popularity contest, at least in the major categories, which once again are dominated by the year's top-selling artists: Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, Ed Sheeran, Kendrick Lamar. (Adele's 25 was released past the deadline for the 2016 awards, and so won't be eligible until next year.)

    Among the non-surprises is the apparent coronation of Lamar, who far surpasses all nominees with 11 nods. Although it was not one of the year's best-selling albums, the Compton rapper's To p---- a Butterfly received near-universal critical acclaim, earning a remarkable 96 score on Metacritic and topping many critics' year-end best lists. It is this year's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. So it should be a lock to win Album of the Year, the Grammys' most prestigious award ... right?

    Well, no. Because here's the thing about the Grammys: While they're never shy about showering African-American artists with nominations, they have an unfortunate track record of freezing them out of wins in the major categories.

    Since 2006, in the Grammys' top four categories (Album of the Year, Song of the Year, Record of the Year, Best New Artist), black artists have accounted for roughly one-third of the nominations but only four of the 40 wins. (They also freeze out Latinos, Asians, and pretty much anyone who isn't white European, but that's a whole larger discussion.) Herbie Han**** won Album of the Year in 2008; Beyonce won Song of the Year in 2010; and John Legend and Esperanza Spalding won Best New Artist in 2006 and 2011, respectively. That's it. Technically Nile Rodgers and Pharrell Williams' won Record of the Year in 2014 for their contributions to Daft Punk's "Get Lucky," so let's be generous and say five major wins over the past 10 years have gone to black artists. That's still an abysmally low figure.

    You'll also note that none of the aforementioned artists, with the possible exception of Pharrell, are hip-hop artists. When it comes to honoring hip-hop as a genre, the Grammys' track record is even worse. Only two hip-hop albums have ever won Album of the Year: Lauryn Hill's The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill in 1999 and OutKast's Speakboxxx/The Love Below in 2004.

    Yep, it's been over a decade since the Grammys honored a rap album with their top prize. The other dominant rapper of the past several years, Drake, has never even been nominated in the category. Kanye West hasn't gotten an Album of the Year nomination since Graduation. 808s & Heartbreak, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy and Yeezus were all shut out.

    The Grammys finally did get around to creating a Best Rap Album category in 1996, but even there, they've missed some obvious slam-dunks — most notably in 2014, when they snubbed Kendrick's Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City in favor of Macklemore and Ryan Lewis's The Heist. Even Macklemore himself had to call out the Grammys for getting that one wrong.

    This year, the Grammys have a golden opportunity to finally get it right. To p---- a Butterfly is the kind of rap album even non-rap fans can embrace. It features lush, jazzy instrumentation, thought-provoking lyrics and dazzling performances by its star, whose ability to rap in different voices and cadences is among the best in the game. It's not quite the perfect album it's been made out to be — as some have pointed out, its raw ambition to Make a Serious Statement, especially when compared with the more intimate and emotionally devastating Good Kid, can occasionally make Butterfly feel like an intellectual exercise. But it's still innovative, remarkably well-crafted, and likely to stand the test of time.

    This year, two African-American artists, Kendrick and The Weeknd, are up for Album of the Year, and a third act in the category, Alabama Shakes, is fronted by one of the best black rock singers to emerge in a generation, Brittany Howard. They're all worthy nominees, but Kendrick should win. Not just because the Grammys need to honor more hip-hop, and more artists of color — but because, by nearly any measure, his album is the best one of those nominated.


    Taylor Swift is also nominated for Album of the Year, for 1989, a perfectly decent pop record that has sold approximately a zillion copies. But even Taylor is probably hoping like h--- that her favorite rapper takes home that particular trophy this year. The last thing T-Swift wants to do is send K-Dot another "You got robbed" message.
     
    May 27, 2025
  3. Jehovah
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    Jehovah SB3

    Dec 8, 2015
    low key want to see this
     
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  4. WPG
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    WPG sxn80 Rory Gilmore

    Dec 8, 2015
    i actually do hope it wins. kendrick deserves it, in the abstract if nothing else.

    will you shut the f--- up with this pretentious nonsense? lmao @ sincerely believing it's better than any prince record.
     
    May 27, 2025
  5. Besky
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    Dec 8, 2015
    I had this conversation with him and we both agreed on the fact that TPAB felt more like a Kendrick album than anything on GKMC. You can tell just by listening to s80 or OD that TPAB was supposed to be the next step. Gkmc was probably his introduction to the masses.

    He also said the only reason rapradar had GKMC at #1 for 2012 was because of Pitchfork but this year they gonna give TPAB the #1 spot (and future will be 2, sorry for the spoil) because they really enjoyed it, musically.

    Brian is a Kendrick fan though, he just doesn't f--- with GKMC but he was one of the first persons to give TDE media attention
     
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  6. JFK
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    JFK Bleach on my t-shirt

    Dec 8, 2015
    What's 'so much wrong' with the post?

    I wasn't excited for Cole + Kendrick until the Black Friday tracks released. Made me realize the J. Cole collab is the only sure-fire way to bring Kendrick back to true form. His Black Friday release was better than all of TPAB combined.
     
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  7. Lil Squeed
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    Lil Squeed French Montana Stan

    Dec 8, 2015
     
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  8. Thy
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    Thy 000000

    Dec 8, 2015
    Hope they give it somebody else just so we can witness the fuckery that would follow.
     
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