59th Annual GRAMMY Awards | 2017

During a period in our nation's history in which people are constantly reminded about the political and social issues that can divide us, the 59th GRAMMY Awards served as a convincing testament to the undeniable unifying power of music.

[Adele](/artists/adele/528), whose voice is a powerful force unto itself, emerged the top winner of the night, taking home five GRAMMYs: Best Pop Vocal Album and Album Of The Year for 25 and Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year and Best Pop Solo Performance for "Hello." The now-15-time winner also made GRAMMY history by becoming the first artist to sweep Record, Album and Song Of The Year twice in her career.

Fittingly, it was Adele who ushered in Music's Biggest Night with a mesmerizing performance of her smash "Hello." A stark black backdrop provided a blank canvas over which the British singer/songwriter painted an aural masterpiece, her potent vocals reverberating throughout Los Angeles' Staples Center.

The mercurial [David Bowie](/artists/david-bowie/4819), who died just days before releasing his album Blackstar on Jan. 8, 2016, won four posthumous GRAMMYs, including Best Alternative Music Album. [Greg Kurstin](/artists/greg-kurstin/9943), Adele's producer and songwriting partner, also won four awards, including Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical.

[Chance The Rapper](/artists/chancelor-bennett/19614) earned three awards, including Best New Artist, making him the first streaming-exclusive artist to win a GRAMMY. "This is for every indie artist who's been doing this mixtape stuff for a long-a** time," the Chicagoan said during his acceptance for Best Rap Album for Coloring Book. He punctuated his GRAMMY debut with a feel-good performance medley of "How Great" and "All We Got," with his cousin Nicole and 59th GRAMMY winners [Kirk Franklin](/artists/kirk-franklin/9067) and Tamela Mann adding soulful flourishes.

Engineer/mixer [Tom Elmhirst](/artists/tom-elmhirst/2228) also won three GRAMMYs; [Beyoncé](/artists/beyonce-knowles/12474), [Drake](/artists/drake/12370), [Sarah Jarosz](/artists/sarah-jarosz/13600), [John Scofield](/artists/john-scofield/13908), Franklin, and [Hillary Scott & The Scott Family](/artists/hillary-scott-scott-family/20151) were among those winning two awards.

As presenter Celine Dion so eloquently quoted the legendary [Stevie Wonder](/artists/stevie-wonder/8257), "Music, at its essence, is what gives us memories." In addition to crowning recipients in 84 GRAMMY categories, the 59th GRAMMYs created many new memories in the form of signature GRAMMY Moments that spanned several genres.

Equal parts music, theater and spoken word poetry, a golden-clad Beyoncé radiated during her medley of "Love Drought" and "Sandcastles," two songs from her Best Urban Contemporary Album-winning opus, Lemonade. The trance-inducing performance, which was themed around the celebration of motherhood, featured her own mother, Tina Knowles, and daughter, [Blue Ivy Carter](/artists/blue-ivy/292460), and closed on a poignant note with the pregnant Beyoncé reciting a line from a Warsan Shire poem: "If we're going to heal, let it be glorious/1,000 girls raise their arms."

[Bruno Mars](/artists/bruno-mars/5082) dazzled with his seductive "That's What I Like." Commanding the stage with aplomb, showcasing graceful dance moves and flaunting his rich tenor, Mars once again proved the breadth of his 24-karat talent.

[Ed Sheeran](/artists/ed-sheeran/6178) turned in arguably the most energy-efficient performance of the evening. Armed with an acoustic guitar, synthesizer and a pedalboard that doubled as a looping device, Sheeran proved a veritable one-man band in multitasking his romantic ode "Shape Of You."

[The Weeknd](/artists/The-Weeknd/24884) teamed with fellow GRAMMY winners [Daft Punk](/artists/daft-punk/8207) for a medley of "Starboy" and "I Feel It Coming." The duo's trademark synthesizer soundscapes set the tone for a sci-fi inspired set, with The Weeknd's velvety voice drifting into space.

[Katy Perry](/artists/katy-perry/5726) returned to the GRAMMY stage to debut her brand-new single, "Chained To The Rhythm," with reggae artist Skip Marley. Perry — who wore an armband emblazoned with the word "Resist" — earnestly delivered her new socially conscious anthem, which she closed by declaring "No hate!"

Best New Artist nominee [Anderson .Paak](/artists/anderson-paak/19926) and rappers Busta Rhymes, Consequence and [A Tribe Called Quest](/artists/tribe-called-quest/10719) joined for a politically charged medley of "Award Tour," "Movin Backwards" and "We The People." The latter song, A Tribe Called Quest's anthem addressing topics such as racism, xenophobia, homophobia, and misogyny, proved timely given the recent political climate. A Tribe Called Quest's Q-Tip put an exclamation point on the performance by shouting, "Resist! Resist! Resist!"

[Metallica](/artists/metallica/10686) and [Lady Gaga](/artists/lady-gaga/3611) turned the volume up to 10 with a driving performance of the band's "Moth Into Flame." Despite a brief technical glitch with Metallica frontman James Hetfield's mic, the heat generated — stoked by pyrotechnics, headbanging and a stage dive from Gaga — set off a genre-bending explosion.

[Keith Urban](/artists/keith-urban/7015) and [Carrie Underwood](/artists/carrie-underwood/10381) went toe-to-toe for their love-affirming duet "The Fighter." GRAMMY-nominated newcomers [Kelsea Ballerini](/artists/kelsea-ballerini/19558) and [Lukas Graham](/artists/lukas-graham/20132) joined together for a seamless mashup of her "Peter Pan" and their "7 Years," which was up for Song Of The Year. R&B/soul legend William Bell, who earlier won his first career GRAMMY, teamed with guitar slinger [Gary Clark Jr.](/artists/gary-clark-jr/17798) for a gritty "Born Under A Bad Sign."

First-time GRAMMY host James Corden got into the musical act as well. During his opening skit, Corden delivered a free-style rap that name-dropped everyone from President Donald Trump to Drake, Rihanna and Sturgill Simpson. "The Late Late Show" host also sped through a hilarious impromptu GRAMMY edition of Carpool Karaoke. Driving a cardboard cutout vehicle, Corden was flanked by [Jennifer Lopez](/artists/jennifer-lopez/14846), [Tim McGraw](/artists/tim-mcgraw/12018), [Faith Hill](/artists/faith-hill/10850), [Keith Urban](/artists/keith-urban/7015), [Ryan Tedder](/artists/ryan-tedder/16130), [John Legend](/artists/john-legend/16994), Blue Ivy, Jason Derulo, and [Neil Diamond](/artists/neil-diamond/2720) for a singalong of the latter's classic "Sweet Caroline."

In addition to Corden's bits, [Twenty One Pilots](/artists/twenty-one-pilots/20162) provided some unexpected comic relief when they accepted their first career GRAMMY for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for "Stressed Out" in their underwear. Underneath the humor, the duo from Columbus, Ohio, conveyed an important message to musicians of all stripes. "Anyone from anywhere can do anything," said Pilots singer/songwriter Tyler Joseph.

It was also a night of firsts for breakout country star [Maren Morris](/artists/maren-morris/19894). Not only did she make her GRAMMY performance debut with "Once" alongside [Alicia Keys](/artists/alicia-keys/12104), she won her first GRAMMY for Best Country Solo Performance for "My Church," making her the first GRAMMY Camp alumnus to win a GRAMMY.

Music's Biggest Night also provided moments of reflection in the form of tributes.

An all-star troupe paid homage to five-time GRAMMY winners the Bee Gees, who will be celebrated this spring via the CBS TV special "Stayin' Alive: A GRAMMY Salute To The Music Of The Bee Gees." [Demi Lovato](/artists/demi-lovato/19851) glided through "Stayin' Alive" while [Tori Kelly](/artists/tori-kelly/19120) showcased her impressive singing and guitar chops on "Tragedy." [Little Big Town](/artists/little-big-town/10623) were in perfect harmony for "How Deep Is Your Love" and Andra Day bottled the essence of Studio 54 during "Night Fever." The group closed with a vibrant "Stayin' Alive" coda, with Barry Gibb looking on in delight.

[Sturgill Simpson](/artists/sturgill-simpson/18703) and the Dap-Kings convened for "All Around You," a song from Simpson's Best Country Album-winning A Sailor's Guide To Earth. During his introduction, Dwight Yoakam lauded the late singer [Sharon Jones](/artists/sharon-jones/18518), who worked with the Dap-Kings throughout her career.

In recognition of [George Michael](/artists/george-michael/12041), who died Dec. 25, 2016, Adele returned to the stage for a dramatic, orchestrated version of "Fastlove," the final Top 10 hit of Michael's career. The tribute paused abruptly as Adele stopped mid-song, feeling that her performance was not up to par. "I can't mess this up for him," she confided to the audience. Adele reset herself and delivered a moving memorial. The audience obliged with a standing ovation.

Morris Day and the Time did the honors in introducing a special GRAMMY tribute to the late [Prince](/artists/prince/5675). A true showman, Day bobbed and weaved the band through the Time's funky "Jungle Love" and "The Bird." Mars then returned to the stage for a regal reimagining of "Let's Go Crazy." Armed with a Purple Rain-inspired suit, makeup and white guitar, Mars channeled vintage '80s-era Prince, right down to his authentic take on the song's spectacular unaccompanied guitar cadenza.

The In Memoriam segment featured [John Legend](/artists/john-legend/16994) and GRAMMY-winning "The Color Purple" cast member [Cynthia Erivo](/artists/cynthia-erivo/19682) delivering a rendition of the Beach Boys' "God Only Knows," which served as a solemn musical prayer to many other individuals the music community lost during the past year.

The GRAMMY show was also marked by heartfelt, if unexpected, tributes to fellow nominees. In her final acceptance speech of the evening for Album Of The Year, a visibly moved Adele used her platform to acknowledge and thank fellow nominee Beyoncé.

"My artist of my life is Beyoncé," Adele said as a tearful Beyoncé looked on. "The Lemonade album was just so monumental and so well-thought out and so beautiful and soul-bearing. … All us artists here, we f***ing adore you. You are our light.

Music's Biggest Night beamed into the homes of more than 26 million viewers, representing a 4 percent year-over-year increase and the highest viewership since 2014. The luster extended well after the Sunday telecast, with several winners, nominees and performers benefiting from the GRAMMY Effect.

Digital sales of songs performed on the show saw a 140 percent increase in download sales, with Urban and Underwood's "The Fighter" experiencing a 574 percent gain. On-demand streams (audio and video combined) of songs performed rose 30 percent, including Mars' "That's What I Like" spiking 99 percent. Adele's 25 returned to the Top 10, rising to No. 6 with a 137 percent sales increase. Combined with the other Album Of The Year nominees (Beyoncé's Lemonade, [Justin Bieber](/artists/justin-bieber/10220)'s Purpose, Drake's Views, and Sturgill Simpson's A Sailor's Guide To Earth), all five albums saw a collective 91 percent increase in equivalent album sales. Following his GRAMMY performance with Perry, Skip Marley became the first member of the Marley family to score a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100.

More than just impressive statistics, these sizable GRAMMY Effect gains give additional credence to the 59th GRAMMY Awards telecast remarks of Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow, who during his impassioned speech delivered to the new administration an important unified message on behalf of the music community.

"The Recording Academy, together with America's music makers, call on the president and Congress to help keep the music playing by updating music laws, protecting music education and renewing America's commitment to the arts," said Portnow. "It's our collective responsibility to preserve what binds us and to ensure that the whole world continues to benefit from one of our most unique [and] economically and spiritually important assets — and exports: American music."

    25

    Adele

    Lemonade

    Beyoncé Knowles

    Purpose

    Justin Bieber

    Views

    Drake

    A Sailor's Guide To Earth

    Sturgill Simpson

    Hello

    Adele

    Formation

    Beyoncé Knowles

    7 Years

    Lukas Graham

    Work

    Rihanna, Drake

    Stressed Out

    Twenty One Pilots

Winners

Category Winner Nomination Actions
Album Of The Year Adele 25 All Nominees
Best Album Notes Ken Bloom, Richard Carlin Sissle And Blake Sing Shuffle Along All Nominees
Best Alternative Music Album David Bowie Blackstar All Nominees
Best American Roots Performance Sarah Jarosz House Of Mercy All Nominees
Best American Roots Song Vince Gill Kid Sister All Nominees
Best Americana Album William Bell This Is Where I Live All Nominees
Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella Jacob Collier You And I All Nominees
Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals Jacob Collier Flintstones All Nominees
Best Audio Book, Narration, and Storytelling Recording Carol Burnett In Such Good Company: Eleven Years Of Laughter, Mayhem, And Fun In The Sandbox All Nominees
Best Bluegrass Album O'Connor Band With Mark O'Connor, Mark O'Connor Coming Home All Nominees
Best Boxed Or Special Limited Edition Package Gérard Lo Monaco Edith Piaf 1915-2015 All Nominees
Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance Third Coast Percussion, Sean Connors, Robert Dillon, Peter Martin, David Skidmore Steve Reich All Nominees
Best Children's Music Album Secret Agent 23 Skidoo Infinity Plus One All Nominees
Best Choral Performance Krzysztof Penderecki Penderecki Conducts Penderecki, Volume 1 All Nominees
Best Classical Compendium Giancarlo Guerrero, Tim Handley Daugherty: Tales Of Hemingway; American Gothic; Once Upon A Castle All Nominees
Best Classical Instrumental Solo Zuill Bailey, Giancarlo Guerrero Daugherty: Tales Of Hemingway All Nominees
Best Classical Solo Vocal Album Dorothea Röschmann Schumann & Berg All Nominees
Best Classical Solo Vocal Album Ian Bostridge Shakespeare Songs All Nominees
Best Comedy Album Patton Oswalt Talking For Clapping All Nominees
Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media Steve Berkowitz, Don Cheadle, Robert Glasper Miles Ahead All Nominees
Best Contemporary Blues Album Fantastic Negrito The Last Days Of Oakland All Nominees
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album Hillary Scott, Hillary Scott & The Scott Family Love Remains All Nominees
Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song Hillary Scott, Hillary Scott & The Scott Family, Bernie Herms, Emily Weisband Thy Will All Nominees
Best Contemporary Classical Composition Michael Daugherty Daugherty: Tales Of Hemingway All Nominees
Best Contemporary Country Album Sturgill Simpson A Sailor's Guide To Earth All Nominees
Best Contemporary Instrumental Album Snarky Puppy Culcha Vulcha All Nominees
Best Country Duo/Group Performance Pentatonix, Dolly Parton Jolene All Nominees
Best Country Solo Performance Maren Morris My Church All Nominees
Best Country Song Lori McKenna Humble And Kind All Nominees
Best Dance/Electronic Album Flume Skin All Nominees
Best Dance/Electronic Recording The Chainsmokers, Daya Don't Let Me Down All Nominees
Best Engineered Album, Classical Mark Donahue, Fred Vogler, David L. Williams Corigliano: The Ghosts Of Versailles All Nominees
Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical David Bowie, Tom Elmhirst, Kevin Killen, Tony Visconti, Joe LaPorta Blackstar All Nominees
Best Folk Album Sarah Jarosz Undercurrent All Nominees
Best Global Music Album Yo-Yo Ma, Silk Road Ensemble Sing Me Home All Nominees
Best Gospel Album Kirk Franklin Losing My Religion All Nominees
Best Gospel Performance/Song Tamela Mann, Kirk Franklin God Provides All Nominees
Best Historical Album Steve Berkowitz, Jeff Rosen, Mark Wilder The Cutting Edge 1965-1966: The Bootleg Series, Vol.12 (Collector's Edition) All Nominees
Best Immersive Audio Album Alexander Lipay, Dmitriy Lipay Dutilleux: Sur Le Même Accord; Les Citations; Mystère De L'instant & Timbres, Espace, Mouvement All Nominees
Best Instrumental Composition Ted Nash Spoken At Midnight All Nominees
Best Jazz Instrumental Album John Scofield Country For Old Men All Nominees
Best Jazz Performance John Scofield I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry All Nominees
Best Jazz Vocal Album Gregory Porter Take Me To The Alley All Nominees
Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album Ted Nash, Ted Nash Big Band Presidential Suite: Eight Variations On Freedom All Nominees
Best Latin Jazz Album Chucho Valdés Tribute To Irakere: Live In Marciac All Nominees
Best Latin Pop Album Jesse & Joy Un Besito Más All Nominees
Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album ile iLevitable All Nominees
Best Melodic Rap Performance Drake Hotline Bling All Nominees
Best Metal Performance Megadeth Dystopia All Nominees
Best Music Film Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, Scott Pascucci, Nigel Sinclair The Beatles: Eight Days A Week The Touring Years All Nominees
Best Music Video Beyoncé Knowles Formation All Nominees
Best Música Mexicana Album (Including Tejano) Vicente Fernandez Un Azteca En El Azteca, Vol. 1 (En Vivo) All Nominees
Best Musical Theater Album Danielle Brooks, Cynthia Erivo, Jennifer Hudson, Stephen Bray, Van Dean, Frank Filipetti, Roy Furman, Joan Raffe, Scott Sanders, Jhett Tolentino The Color Purple All Nominees
Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album White Sun White Sun II All Nominees
Best New Artist Chancelor Bennett Coloring Book All Nominees
Best Opera Recording James Conlon, Blanton Alspaugh, Joshua Guerrero, Christopher Maltman, Lucas Meachem, Patricia Racette, Lucy Schaufer, Guanqun Yu Corigliano: The Ghosts Of Versailles All Nominees
Best Orchestral Performance Andris Nelsons Shostakovich: Under Stalin's Shadow - Symphonies Nos. 5, 8 & 9 All Nominees
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance Twenty One Pilots Stressed Out All Nominees
Best Pop Solo Performance Adele Hello All Nominees
Best Pop Vocal Album Adele 25 All Nominees
Best Progressive R&B Album Beyoncé Knowles Lemonade All Nominees
Best R&B Album Lalah Hathaway Lalah Hathaway Live All Nominees
Best R&B Performance Solange Cranes In The Sky All Nominees
Best R&B Song Hod David, Maxwell Lake By The Ocean All Nominees
Best Rap Album Chancelor Bennett Coloring Book All Nominees
Best Rap Performance Chancelor Bennett, Lil Wayne, Tauheed Epps No Problem All Nominees
Best Rap Song Drake, Paul Jefferies Hotline Bling All Nominees
Best Recording Package Jonathan Barnbrook Blackstar All Nominees
Best Reggae Album Ziggy Marley Ziggy Marley All Nominees
Best Regional Roots Music Album Kalani Pe'a E Walea All Nominees
Best Remixed Recording André Allen Anjos Tearing Me Up (RAC Remix) All Nominees
Best Rock Album Cage The Elephant Tell Me I'm Pretty All Nominees
Best Rock Performance David Bowie Blackstar All Nominees
Best Rock Song David Bowie Blackstar All Nominees
Best Roots Gospel Album Joey+Rory Hymns All Nominees
Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media (Includes Film And Television) John Williams Star Wars: The Force Awakens All Nominees
Best Song Written For Visual Media Max Martin, Shellback, Justin Timberlake Can't Stop The Feeling! All Nominees
Best Traditional Blues Album Bobby Rush Porcupine Meat All Nominees
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Willie Nelson Summertime: Willie Nelson Sings Gershwin All Nominees
Best Traditional R&B Performance Lalah Hathaway Angel All Nominees
Best Tropical Latin Album Jose Lugo Donde Están? All Nominees
Producer Of The Year, Classical David Frost Producer Of The Year, Classical All Nominees
Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical Greg Kurstin Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical All Nominees
Record Of The Year Adele Hello All Nominees
Song Of The Year Adele, Greg Kurstin Hello All Nominees