58th Annual GRAMMY Awards | 2016

In an era when much of the prevailing cultural dialogue revolves around race relations and personal empowerment, the big winners at the 58th GRAMMY Awards reflected the currency of the times.

With 11 nominations, Compton, Calif., rapper [Kendrick Lamar](/artists/kendrick-lamar/17949) went into Music's Biggest Night as the most nominated artist since [Michael Jackson](/artists/michael-jackson/13202) and [Babyface](/artists/babyface/985) each scored 12 for 1983 and 1996, respectively. He took five GRAMMYs, including Best Rap Album for To Pimp A Butterfly, and Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song for "Alright."

Lamar's performance of "The Blacker The Berry" and "Alright," songs that became unofficial soundtracks for the Black Lives Matter movement, infused the GRAMMYs with the kind of social immediacy at which it excels, whether it's championing marriage equality or honoring late musical icons such as Whitney Houston.

[Alabama Shakes](/artists/alabama-shakes/14656), perhaps fittingly a multiracial band with a multiracial frontwoman, [Brittany Howard](/artists/brittany-howard/3375), won three awards — Best Rock Performance, Best Rock Song and Best Alternative Music Album — all based around their acclaimed sophomore album, Sound & Color. Their performance of "Don't Wanna Fight," introduced with an otherworldly scream by Howard, who looked like a high priestess of rock in a flowing white cape, was a captivating moment from a band that has helped bring back a sense of urgency to rock.

[Taylor Swift](/artists/taylor-swift/15450) took Album Of The Year for 1989 among her three awards. Pointing out she was the first woman to win that award twice, Swift was passionate about giving due credit to the contributions of women during her acceptance speech. Her show-opening performance of "Out Of The Woods" proved she's a powerful, self-assured woman.

Other multiple winners included [D'Angelo](/artists/dangelo/1902), [Diplo](/artists/diplo/8548), [Jason Isbell](/artists/jason-isbell/19091), [Maria Schneider](/artists/maria-schneider/6153), [Ed Sheeran](/artists/ed-sheeran/6178), [Skrillex](/artists/skrillex/6363), [Chris Stapleton](/artists/chris-stapleton/15418), and [The Weeknd](/artists/The-Weeknd/24884).

Rising up, to paraphrase GRAMMY nominee and performer [Andra Day](/artists/andra-day/18980), was the theme of the night. In addition to Lamar's wins and triumphant performance, there were other noteworthy moments.

"Glory," Common and [John Legend](/artists/john-legend/16994)'s defiant song from Selma, the film about the 1965 Montgomery, Ala., voting rights marches, won for Best Song Written For Visual Media. [Lalah Hathaway](/artists/lalah-hathaway/3123) won in the Best Traditional R&B Performance category for "Little Ghetto Boy," a song about overcoming the consequences of growing up in inner-city poverty that was originally recorded by her father, [Donny Hathaway](/artists/donny-hathaway/2656).   

Mexican drummer/composer [Antonio Sanchez](/artists/antonio-sanchez/6087), who won Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media for Birdman, thanked GRAMMY voters specifically because he had been "eliminated by another awards show that starts with an 'O' and ends with 'scars.'" And songwriter [Kendra Foster](/artists/kendra-foster/19024) literally raised a fist and proclaimed "we're trying to rise up" when accepting the Best R&B Song award for her, D'Angelo and [Gina Figueroa](/artists/gina-figueroa/19500)'s "Really Love."

It was also a night of official goodbyes to musical giants, some of whom died within weeks of the GRAMMY telecast.

[Lady Gaga](/artists/lady-gaga/3611)'s tribute to [David Bowie](/artists/david-bowie/4819) was an electrifying appreciation of one of the most influential artists of our time. Bowie — who died Jan. 10 — received a Lifetime Achievement Award from The Recording Academy in 2006, and an appropriate celebration on the GRAMMY telecast with a 10-song medley wrapped by a triumphant version of "Heroes."

The band synonymous with '70s California rock came together to salute their fallen founding member, [Glenn Frey](/artists/glenn-frey/2410), who died Jan. 18. The Eagles strummed through their first hit, the classic "Take It Easy," teaming with the song's co-writer Jackson Browne (who penned the tune with Frey in the early '70s when they lived in the same Los Angeles apartment building). The ode to letting troubles run off your shoulders and grabbing life while you can was a fitting tribute to a singer, guitarist and man who did just that.

Things revved up a few decibels when the Hollywood Vampires (Alice Cooper, Johnny Depp and Joe Perry joined by Guns N' Roses bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Matt Sorum) lit the funeral pyre for Lemmy Kilmister — hard rock's No. 1 anarchist who died Dec. 28, 2015 — with a short blast of Motörhead's "Ace Of Spades."

At the other end of the genre and attitude spectrum, [Earth, Wind & Fire](/artists/earth-wind-fire/14550)'s deeply optimistic pan-spiritual leader [Maurice White](/artists/maurice-white/6905), who died Feb. 4, was feted by [Stevie Wonder](/artists/stevie-wonder/8257) and vocal group [Pentatonix](/artists/pentatonix/20140), who performed an a cappella version of the classic "That's The Way Of The World."

Finally, Stapleton, [Gary Clark Jr.](/artists/gary-clark-jr/17798) and Bonnie Raitt paid tribute to one of the most noteworthy bluesmen of all time, B.B. King, who died May 14, 2015. The three artists — performing King's biggest hit, "The Thrill Is Gone" — reflected disparate generations and genres, but demonstrated that roots music is a single language often spoken with six strings.

Wrapped around these special GRAMMY Moments were additional performances that delivered musical breadth as only the GRAMMYs can.

New country star and former college footballer [Sam Hunt](/artists/sam-hunt/19085)'s "Take Your Time" got an audible via a duet with [Carrie Underwood](/artists/carrie-underwood/10381) and her "Heartbeat."

R&B sensation [The Weeknd](/artists/The-Weeknd/24884) sensitively performed his ballad "In The Night," backed by piano and cello, after teasing his hit "Can't Feel My Face." The vocal triumph scored a standing ovation.

Day was joined by [Ellie Goulding](/artists/ellie-goulding/19043) for one of the night's sweetest melding of voices as they seamlessly brought their respective ballads "Rise Up" and "Love Me Like You Do" together.

[Lionel Richie](/artists/lionel-richie/17291), the 2016 MusiCares Person of the Year honoree and a true hits king of the '80s, rightly received the royal treatment as Luke Bryan, John Legend, Demi Lovato, [Meghan Trainor](/artists/meghan-trainor/18740), and [Tyrese](/artists/tyrese/17506) came together for a mega-salute capped by the man himself singing his signature "All Night Long (All Night)."

Richie collaborator, the late Michael Jackson, was remembered by nominee [Miguel](/artists/miguel/4571), who delivered a smooth version of "She's Out Of My Life" backed by the song's original keyboardist Greg Phillinganes.

[Little Big Town](/artists/little-big-town/10623) turned in a contemplative version of "Girl Crush" rich in the harmonizing of their four collective voices.

Two Best New Artist nominees, James Bay and Tori Kelly, joined forces to show off some fresh multiweapon talent as the pair of singer/songwriter/instrumentalists ran emotively through his "Let It Go" and her "Hollow."

The GRAMMYs aired its first-ever live performance from a Broadway stage by bringing the acclaimed musical "Hamilton" to a nationwide TV audience. Star/writer Lin-Manuel Miranda and his cast ran through the opening number "Alexander Hamilton" before an ecstatic audience at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York, providing a taste of its groundbreaking melding of hip-hop and traditional musical theater.

Despite some well-documented technical glitches, Adele's performance became a triumph over adversity, a testament to the fact that great talent will always shine despite the sometimes unexpected travails of live TV. To paraphrase her song "All I Ask," Adele left her heart on the stage to a standing ovation.

[Justin Bieber](/artists/justin-bieber/10220) teamed with EDM stars Skrillex and Diplo — under their Jack Ü moniker — for a rousing take on "Where Are Ü Now," which followed an acoustic solo turn by Bieber, who played his "Love Yourself." As Billboard noted, "While some previous dance performances have fallen flat in televised awards shows, there was nothing stilted about the energetic ensemble's stage show."

And on a similarly energetic note, the GRAMMYs concluded with a party thrown by one of the night's winners, Pitbull, who was joined by Travis Barker, Joe Perry, Robin Thicke, and actress Sofia Vergara, who showed off some of her best dance moves.

Between honoring our musical legacy and recognizing music's power to reflect and impact our cultural legacy, fans truly had a chance to Witness Greatness on the 58th GRAMMYs.

    Sound & Color

    Alabama Shakes

    To Pimp A Butterfly

    Kendrick Lamar

    Traveller

    Chris Stapleton

    Beauty Behind The Madness

    The Weeknd

    Uptown Funk

    Mark Ronson, Bruno Mars

    Thinking Out Loud

    Ed Sheeran

    Blank Space

    Taylor Swift

    Can't Feel My Face

    The Weeknd

Winners

Category Winner Nomination Actions
Album Of The Year Taylor Swift 1989 All Nominees
Best Album Notes Joni Mitchell Love Has Many Faces: A Quartet, A Ballet, Waiting To Be Danced All Nominees
Best Alternative Music Album Alabama Shakes Sound & Color All Nominees
Best American Roots Performance Mavis Staples See That My Grave Is Kept Clean All Nominees
Best American Roots Song Jason Isbell 24 Frames All Nominees
Best Americana Album Jason Isbell Something More Than Free All Nominees
Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella Ben Bram, Pentatonix, Mitch Grassi, Scott Hoying, Avi Kaplan, Kirstin Maldonado, Kevin Olusola Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy All Nominees
Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals Maria Schneider Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) All Nominees
Best Audio Book, Narration, and Storytelling Recording Jimmy Carter A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety All Nominees
Best Bluegrass Album SteelDrivers The Muscle Shoals Recordings All Nominees
Best Blues Album Buddy Guy Born To Play Guitar All Nominees
Best Boxed Or Special Limited Edition Package Susan Archie, Dean Blackwood, Jack White The Rise & Fall Of Paramount Records, Volume Two (1928-32) All Nominees
Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance Eighth Blackbird Filament All Nominees
Best Children's Music Album Tim Kubart Home All Nominees
Best Choral Performance Charles Bruffy Rachmaninoff: All-Night Vigil All Nominees
Best Classical Compendium Giancarlo Guerrero, Tim Handley Paulus: Three Places Of Enlightenment; Veil Of Tears & Grand Concerto All Nominees
Best Classical Instrumental Solo Augustin Hadelich, Ludovic Morlot Dutilleux: Violin Concerto, L'Arbre Des Songes All Nominees
Best Classical Solo Vocal Album Joyce DiDonato Joyce & Tony - Live From Wigmore Hall All Nominees
Best Comedy Album Louis C.K. Live At Madison Square Garden All Nominees
Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media Julian Raymond Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me All Nominees
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album TobyMac This Is Not A Test All Nominees
Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song Francesca Battistelli Holy Spirit All Nominees
Best Contemporary Classical Composition Stephen Paulus Paulus: Prayers & Remembrances All Nominees
Best Contemporary Country Album Chris Stapleton Traveller All Nominees
Best Contemporary Instrumental Album Snarky Puppy, Metropole Orkest Sylva All Nominees
Best Country Duo/Group Performance Little Big Town Girl Crush All Nominees
Best Country Solo Performance Chris Stapleton Traveller All Nominees
Best Country Song Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna, Liz Rose Girl Crush All Nominees
Best Dance/Electronic Album Skrillex, Diplo Skrillex And Diplo Present Jack Ü All Nominees
Best Dance/Electronic Recording Skrillex, Diplo, Justin Bieber Where Are Ü Now All Nominees
Best Engineered Album, Classical Leslie Ann Jones, John Kilgore, Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum, Justin Merrill, Patricia Sullivan Ask Your Mama All Nominees
Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical Shawn Everett, Bob Ludwig Sound & Color All Nominees
Best Folk Album Béla Fleck, Abigail Washburn Béla Fleck And Abigail Washburn All Nominees
Best Global Music Album Angélique Kidjo Sings All Nominees
Best Gospel Album Israel & New Breed Covered: Alive In Asia [Live] All Nominees
Best Gospel Performance/Song Kirk Franklin Wanna Be Happy? All Nominees
Best Historical Album Steve Berkowitz, Jan Haust, Jeff Rosen, Peter Moore, Mark Wilder The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 All Nominees
Best Immersive Audio Album James Guthrie, Joel Plante Amused To Death All Nominees
Best Instrumental Composition Arturo O'Farrill The Afro Latin Jazz Suite All Nominees
Best Jazz Instrumental Album John Scofield Past Present All Nominees
Best Jazz Performance Christian McBride Cherokee All Nominees
Best Jazz Vocal Album Cécile McLorin Salvant For One To Love All Nominees
Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album Maria Schneider, Maria Schneider Orch. The Thompson Fields All Nominees
Best Latin Jazz Album Eliane Elias Made In Brazil All Nominees
Best Latin Pop Album Ricky Martin A Quien Quiera Escuchar (Deluxe Edition) All Nominees
Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album Natalia Lafourcade Hasta La Raíz All Nominees
Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album Pitbull Dale All Nominees
Best Melodic Rap Performance Kendrick Lamar, Bilal, Anna Wise, Thundercat These Walls All Nominees
Best Metal Performance Ghost Cirice All Nominees
Best Music Film Asif Kapadia, James Gay-Rees Amy All Nominees
Best Music Video Taylor Swift, Kendrick Lamar Bad Blood All Nominees
Best Música Mexicana Album (Including Tejano) Los Tigres Del Norte Realidades - Deluxe Edition All Nominees
Best Musical Theater Album Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Christopher Jackson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Leslie Odom, Jr., Lin-Manuel Miranda, Okieriete Onaodowan, Anthony Ramos, Phillipa Soo, Alex Lacamoire, Bill Sherman, Questlove, Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter Hamilton All Nominees
Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album Paul Avgerinos Grace All Nominees
Best New Artist Meghan Trainor Title All Nominees
Best Opera Recording Seiji Ozawa, Dominic Fyfe, Isabel Leonard Ravel: L'Enfant Et Les Sortilèges; Shéhérazade All Nominees
Best Orchestral Performance Andris Nelsons Shostakovich: Under Stalin's Shadow - Symphony No. 10 All Nominees
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance Mark Ronson, Bruno Mars Uptown Funk All Nominees
Best Pop Solo Performance Ed Sheeran Thinking Out Loud All Nominees
Best Pop Vocal Album Taylor Swift 1989 All Nominees
Best Progressive R&B Album The Weeknd Beauty Behind The Madness All Nominees
Best R&B Album D'Angelo, D'Angelo And The Vanguard Black Messiah All Nominees
Best R&B Performance The Weeknd Earned It (Fifty Shades Of Grey) All Nominees
Best R&B Song D'Angelo, Gina Figueroa, Kendra Foster Really Love All Nominees
Best Rap Album Kendrick Lamar To Pimp A Butterfly All Nominees
Best Rap Performance Kendrick Lamar Alright All Nominees
Best Rap Song Kendrick Lamar, Kawan Prather, Sounwave, Pharrell Williams Alright All Nominees
Best Recording Package Sarah Dodds, Shauna Dodds, Dick Reeves Still The King: Celebrating The Music Of Bob Wills And His Texas Playboys All Nominees
Best Reggae Album Morgan Heritage Strictly Roots All Nominees
Best Regional Roots Music Album Jon Cleary Go Go Juice All Nominees
Best Remixed Recording Dave Audé Uptown Funk (Dave Audé Remix) All Nominees
Best Rock Album Muse Drones All Nominees
Best Rock Performance Alabama Shakes Don't Wanna Fight All Nominees
Best Rock Song Alabama Shakes, Zac Cockrell, Heath Fogg, Brittany Howard, Steve Johnson Don't Wanna Fight All Nominees
Best Roots Gospel Album Fairfield Four Still Rockin' My Soul All Nominees
Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media (Includes Film And Television) Antonio Sanchez Birdman All Nominees
Best Song Written For Visual Media Common, Che Smith, John Legend Glory All Nominees
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Tony Bennett, Bill Charlap The Silver Lining: The Songs Of Jerome Kern All Nominees
Best Traditional R&B Performance Lalah Hathaway Little Ghetto Boy All Nominees
Best Tropical Latin Album Rubén Blades, Roberto Delgado Son De Panamá All Nominees
Producer Of The Year, Classical Judith Sherman Producer Of The Year, Classical All Nominees
Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical Jeff Bhasker Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical All Nominees
Record Of The Year Mark Ronson, Bruno Mars Uptown Funk All Nominees
Song Of The Year Ed Sheeran, Amy Wadge Thinking Out Loud All Nominees