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Earlier this year, the Recording Academy made history by awarding their first-ever GRAMMY Award for Best African Music Performance. Never before had the continent’s vibrant musical culture been given a category all their own, and the best and brightest from the African music industry stepped up to receive nominations.
The eventual victor was 22-year-old South African singer Tyla, whose bewitching song "Water" earned the hearts of GRAMMYs voters, as well as millions of listeners that boosted the song to the Billboard Hot 100. She became the first South African in 55 years to make the chart.
Read more: 10 African GRAMMY Winners Through The Years: From Miriam Makeba To Angélique Kidjo & Burna Boy
This year, Tyla will not defend her prize. But five fantastic songs from a multitude of artists, including one high-profile American that has joined up with two Afrobeats stars, will compete for the Golden Gramophone. Check out the nominees below and read the full 2025 GRAMMYs nominations list ahead of Music's Biggest Night on Sunday, Feb. 2, 2025.
One of African pop music’ biggest stars, Yemi Alade would be a legend even without a GRAMMY nod. She first rose to fame a decade ago thanks to continental hits like "Johnny" and "Oh My Gosh" with Rick Ross. In July, she took her sound to new heights on Rebel Queen, an album incorporating genres such as highlife and dancehall for a global celebration of Black music that solidifies her reputation as "Mama Africa."
"Tomorrow," the GRAMMY-nominated song from the album, is a triumphant, bright amapiano tune, the latest result of Alade’s flirtation with the genre. Produced by Yasso and incorporating choral vocals, the lyrics in English and Nigerian Pidgin assert the singer’s unflappable confidence and self-belief. "I dance away my sorrow," she sings, "Rain or shine, I’ll be shining like a diamond."
"Tomorrow" marks the legendary artist’s first-ever GRAMMY nomination, but whether or not she grabs the golden gramophone, it’s clear from her song that nothing will phase this Rebel Queen.
Burna Boy is such an undisputed force in African music, it’s not surprising for him to be nominated in this Category two years in a row. Already a GRAMMY winner for Best Global Music Album (Twice As Tall took the prize in 2021), his bold, American R&B-inspired "City Boys" earned a Best African Music Performance nod last year and was among a medley of tracks Burna performed on the GRAMMY stage. The braggadocious hip-hop song ultimately fell to Tyla’s "Water," however.
The success of his 2023 album I Told Them may have put Burna Boy in a more contemplative state of mind, because "Higher," his current nominated track, is a much more conscious effort. Over a mellow, amapiano-inspired beat from producer Yo Dibs, Burna reflects on his limited time on Earth and the harshness of daily life: "You know say streets don't love you rara / It's full of snakes and spiders / Make a wrong move, lose your life / Make it hard for your mother to sleep at night."
The song’s video, conceptually similar to Drake’s visual for "God’s Plan," shows the singer making an emotional visit to his hometown of Port Harcourt and distributing aid with his charity group Project PROTECT. It seems that magnanimity has already been rewarded: The song gained 1.3 million streams on Spotify in its first day of release, a new record for an African artist, and its video has been viewed over 7.3 million times as of this writing.
It can’t be denied that Chris Brown is something of a survivor in the music industry. The GRAMMY winner for Best R&B Album (F.A.M.E.) is as famous for his hits — from "Run It!" and "Kiss Kiss," to "Look at Me Now" and "No Guidance" — as he is infamous for his checkered past.
Now he’s back in the GRAMMY spotlight with a single from his 2023 album 11:11. "Sensational" marks a bold stylistic pivot for the R&B singer as he adopts Afrobeats for a slick song that could be called, well, "breezy." Adding some African bona-fides, he’s recruited Davido — one of the genre’s most important acts and a GRAMMY nominee last year in this Category — as well as rising artist Lojay, for feature verses. The result is a transatlantic collab that makes the case that Americans can take on African genres too, with a little help from their continental friends.
In just a few short years, Asake has established himself as one of the most creative and charismatic new talents in Afrobeats. His 2023 record Work of Art blended the globally-aspirational Nigerian pop sound with South African house offshoot amapiano and the indigenous Yoruba genre fújì; Asake earned a GRAMMY nod in this category for album single "Amapiano" last year.
Asake isn’t one to rest on his laurels, however. He dropped another record, Lungu Boy, earlier in 2024, for which he switched up his sound further and recruited global stars like Stormzy, Central Cee, and Travis Scott. Single "MMS" keeps things refreshingly local in terms of guest spots, recruiting GRAMMY-winner Wizkid for the feature. Incorporating the same Yoruba-language choral vocals Asake used throughout his last album, he trades verses with Wiz over a glamorous, jazz-inflected, ‘90s R&B-inspired beat by P.Priime. The lyrics, in English, Yoruba, and Nigerian Pidgin, narrate Asake’s journey to finding his signature sound and letting fate determine his path. It’s a classy, reflective song from a pair of Africa’s biggest stars.
Tems — "Love Me JeJe"
Tems is already a GRAMMY winner and the first African artist to top the Billboard Hot 100, all thanks Future sampling her song "Higher" on his hit "Wait For U." Yet 2024 was the year in which the Nigerian artist stepped into her own spotlight, finally releasing her debut album Born in the Wild. Its single "Love Me JeJe" hit No. 1 on the UK Afrobeats charts and No. 3 on Billboard’s U.S. Afrobeats Songs.
Interpolating an identically-titled 1997 hit from Seyi Sodimu that’s regarded as an African pop classic, "Love Me JeJe" is an Afrobeats tune as tender as the Pidgin phrase that makes up its title. Tems’ smooth, heartfelt vocals float over the track as she sings of her desire for unconditional, supportive love: "I need your lovin’, so fresh, so clean / Love me in and out, unfailingly / And I’ll be down now, anytime you call me."
Debuting the song during her set at Coachella 2024, it could be argued that "Love Me JeJe" was meant to provide American audiences with a bridge to African music, from its past icons to its present talents. With her GRAMMY nod for the song, it seems that Tems has done just that.