Grammys rejections are crying.
Twitter temper tantrums have been in vogue as top superstars became the biggest babies in the record industry after being denied recognition of what was released as “Music’s Biggest Night.”
Sure, it’s not the first time pop stars have raged at the Recording Academy, but the 2021 Grammys are a turning point beyond stomach aches over the nominations challenges.
Explosive claims that are the Grammys “Corrupt” sexist and skewed by “The white man” they have suffered the 63rd annual awards since the Recording Academy announced the headline this year in November.
After a two-month delay in COVID-19, the controversial awards ceremony, hosted by Trevor Noah of “The Daily Show,” finally airs on Sunday, March 14, on CBS.
Until then, check out the list of celebrities who have mourned the blues for having overlooked the Grammy gold. Are they just sore losers or are they really into something?
Zayn Malik
“Fk the grammys and all the associates,” said Malik, 28, who cyberneted on Tuesday. “Unless you shake hands and send gifts, there are no nomination considerations. Next year I will send you a pastry basket ”.
The One Direction singer bocabadat it came four months after the Recording Academy released its 2021 viewer list.
Malik, who has never been nominated for a Grammy, released his third solo album, “Nobody Listens,” in January. However, the Recording Academy stated that its 11-song project was not raised for the Grammys to shine because it was released after this year’s eligibility period from October 1, 2019 to 31 August 2020.
The Weeknd
“Starboy” was watching “Blinding Lights” when none of his most prominent works from the “After Hours” album received acclaim from the Recording Academy during the November nominee’s announcement.
“The Grammys are still corrupt. You owe transparency to me, my fans and the industry … ” he shouted through the keyboard a few moments after this year’s names were revealed on November 24th.
The three-time Grammy winner echoed his displeasure with the voting committee by comparing the doubt to a “punch” and saying “forget the awards shows,” during an interview with Billboard in January.
However, three days before the 2021 Grammy airing, The Weeknd really came in: “Because of the secret committees, I will no longer allow my label to present my music at the Grammys,” the “Save” singer said. Your Tears “in a statement to the New York Times on Thursday.
Interim Academy Chairman and CEO Harvey Mason Jr. he denied these claims and said in a statement to Rolling Stone: “Unfortunately, every year there are fewer nominations than the number of deserving artists … To be clear, voting in all categories ended long before s ‘announced The Weeknd’s performance in the Super Bowl, so it could in no way have affected the nomination process.’
As for The Weeknd’s decision to boycott the show from here, “We’re all disappointed when someone is upset,” Mason Jr. said. in his statement.
Halsey
Halsey, 26, gasped and blew “bribes” into the shadow of the Recording Academy in 2019, when his masterpiece “Manic” failed to win any awards.
“The Grammys are an elusive process,” lamented the “You Should Be Sad” singer in a long Instagram story.
“It can often be private backstage shows, meeting the right people, campaigning through the vineyard, with handshakes and the right‘ bribes ’that can be ambiguous enough to pass as‘ non-bribes ’. “.”
Recording Academy representatives did not respond to requests for comments from The Posts on Halsey’s allegations.
Meanwhile, the “Graveyard” singer went on to overshadow the awards franchise as she picked up her 2019 AMA statuette and later sparked the Grammys for excluding her certified platinum ballad “Without Me,” from the list. names of 2020.
Justin Bieber
Bieber could not cap when his platinum-selling anthology “Changes” won the headline for best pop vocal album instead of best R&B album.
“Changes was and is an R&B album,” the 27-year-old Canadian vocalist lamented on Instagram after receiving her four nominations at this year’s ceremonies. “I’m not recognized as an R&B album which is very strange to me.”
Although “flattered” by the Recording Academy’s recognition, Bieber continued, “For not being able to be included in this category feels weird considering from the chords to the melodies to the vocal style to the drums of The hip hop that was chosen is, without a doubt, an R&B album, unequivocally! ”
Apparently, the Biebs were so worried about the poor rating of their album that they eventually opted to boycott the awards handed out all together.
Nicki Minaj
Queens crooner “Queen” called for the Grammys not to bow to her musical skill from day one.
“Never forget that the Grammys didn’t give me my award for best new artist when I had seven songs appearing simultaneously on the billboard and the first week bigger than any female rapper of the last decade, inspired a generation. They gave it to white man Bon Iver, ”tweeted Minaj, 38, after the Recording Academy had selected its selections to praise in 2021.
Although the rhyme “Tusa” has been nominated for 10 Grammys since 2011, it has never won a golden gramophone yet.
Kanye West
What has to be done to urinate with a Grammy? Apparently, a lot.
In the midst of his 2020 presidential campaign, West, 43, targeted the Recording Academy at one of his most famous digital expenses. After sinking one of his 21 Grammys into a toilet, the Chicago native showered the trophy with pee and shared a picture of the irreverent act on Twitter in September.
A fellow hip-hop TV star LL Cool J called West for not respecting his Grammys, advising him to “Piss in a Yeezy.”
The liquid reproach of the awards, which was removed from the “Stronger” emissary, appeared amid a wide range of tweets that plunged the music industry into subjecting black artists to unfair treatment.
Representatives from the Recording Academy did not respond to requests for comment from The Posts on Minaj and West’s claims about racial inequity in the nomination process and the industry in general.
The real tearing
Despite Twitter adjustments of despised singers, researchers call for women to account for less than 3 percent of all music producers and engineers, despite the Recording Academy’s big push for gender equality in the industry.
“Women were 2.6% of the total producers in 600 songs,” according to the authors of a recent study by the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative. His findings were explained in published tweets by the Initiative’s verified Twitter account Monday.
The recording academy launched its Women in the Mix engagement in 2019 as an effort to welcome more female music teachers into the studio. The call to action brought together artists, record label executives and other producers to consider at least two women in the hiring process to make any song.
Still, the Inneniative Inclusion Annenberg found that the Academy’s efforts failed to generate a single graphic song produced by a woman in 2020.
Still, the Recording Academy has began to bridge the gender gap when it comes to nodding to women in the top five categories: album of the year, album of the year, song of the year, best new artist and producer of the year.
But the study noted that of all the nominees for award-winning recognitions in the past nine years, only 13.4% were women.
Some might consider it a crying shame.