Taylor
Swift made history (or should that be herstory?) at the 58th annual
Grammy Awards on Monday, becoming the first female artist to take Album
of the Year twice for albums on which she was the lead artist. She won
for her fifth album, 1989, six years after winning for her sophomore set, Fearless.
Swift,
26, is the youngest two-time Album of the Year winner since Stevie
Wonder, who was 24 in 1975 when he won in the category for the second
time. 1989 (the title is a reference to the year of Swift’s
birth) was released in October 2014, near the beginning of the
eligibility year.
Swift, who won Best Country Album six years ago for Fearless, is also the first artist to take Best Album honors in both pop and country.
“Uptown
Funk” by Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars, which was the best-selling
song of 2015, was named Record of the Year. This is Ronson’s second
award in that category. He won eight years ago as the producer of Amy
Winehouse’s “Rehab.”
“Uptown
Funk,” an irresistible throwback to the R&B sound of the 1980s, won
a BRIT Award for British Single of the Year last February. It’s only
the second single to win both of these awards. The first was Phil
Collins’s 1990 smash “Another Day in Paradise.”
Ed
Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud” (which the pop star co-wrote with Amy
Wadge) was named Song of the Year. The exquisite ballad reached #2 on
the pop charts. (It was kept out of the top spot by “Uptown Funk.”)
Meghan
Trainor, who rocketed to pop stardom with the 2014 single “All About
That Bass,” was named Best New Artist. She’s the first female pop artist
to win in this category since Adele seven years ago.
Kendrick
Lamar was the night’s top winner, with five awards. That puts him in a
tie with Lauryn Hill as the hip-hop artist with the most awards in one
night. She swept five Grammys at the 1998 awards.
Lamar,
28, went 0-7 at the Grammys two years ago, losing in four categories to
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. He won two awards last year for “i,” the
first single from To Pimp a Butterfly. He won four more awards for the album this year. That total of six Grammys for the album puts it in a tie with Jay Z’s The Blueprint 3 as the rap album with the most Grammy wins. (Jay Z’s album won three 2009 awards and three more the following year.)
Swift and Alabama Shakes each took home three awards.
All
five Album of the Year contenders took awards in their respective
genres. Swift’s 1989 won as Best Pop Vocal Album. Alabama Shakes’ Sound & Color won for Best Alternative Music Album. Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly won for Best Rap Album. Chris Stapleton’s Traveller won for Best Country Album. The Weeknd’s Beauty Behind the Madness won for Best Urban Contemporary Album.
Traveller
is the second album in as many years to win both the CMA award for
Album of the Year and the Grammy for Best Country Album. Miranda
Lambert’s Platinum took both prizes last year.
Alabama
Shakes, which is fronted by Brittany Howard, is the second mixed-gender
group or duo to win for Best Alternative Music Album. The first was the
White Stripes.
Adding to the historic night for hip-hop at the Grammys: Hamilton won for Best Musical Theater Album. Skrillex and Diplo Present Jack Ü
won for Best Dance/Electronic Album. It’s Skrillex’s third win in the
category, which sets a new Grammy record. A single from the album,
“Where Are Ü Now,” with Justin Bieber, won for Best Dance Recording.
It’s Bieber’s first Grammy win.
Pitbull
also won his first Grammy, not for one of his pop hits, but for Best
Latin Rock, Urban, or Alternative Album. He won for his album Dale, released through Sony Music Latin. He tied with Natalia Lafourcade, who won for her album Hasta la Raíz.
Muse’s Drones won for Best Rock Album, in a mild upset over James Bay’s Chaos and the Calm. Muse is the first British band to win twice in this category. The band won the award five years ago for The Resistance.
Tony Bennett took Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for The Silver Lining: The Songs of Jerome Kern, a collaboration with jazz pianist Bill Charlap. It’s Bennett’s 13th win in the category. He beat Bob Dylan’s Shadows in the Night, in which the rock legend covered songs associated with Frank Sinatra. (Dylan’s older music was remembered by Grammy voters: The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11,
which collects vintage tracks he recorded with the Band, won for Best
Historical Album. Alas, that award goes to the compilation producers and
mastering engineer, not to the artists.)

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