Lamar
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 41 |
Date of birth | October 10,1983 |
Zodiac sign | Libra |
Born | Jeddah |
Saudi Arabia | |
Songs | i |
HUMBLE. | |
All The Stars | |
Love. | |
Pray for Me | |
Money Trees | |
Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe | |
DNA. | |
Swimming Pools | |
m. A. A. d city | |
Alright | |
Poetic Justice | |
Loyalty | |
YAH. | |
King Kunta | |
Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst | |
King's Dead | |
The Recipe | |
Backseat Freestyle | |
ELEMENT. | |
Fear. | |
Hol' Up | |
PRIDE. | |
A. D. H. D | |
These Walls | |
XXX. | |
The Blacker The Berry | |
Wesley's Theory | |
HiiiPoWeR | |
How Much a Dollar Cost | |
Duckworth. | |
The Art of Peer Pressure | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2312723 |
Grammy Award for Best Rap Song
MTV Video Music Award for Video of the Year
Grammy Award for Best Music Video
Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance
Grammy Award for Best Rap/Sung Performance
Pulitzer Prize for Music
MTV Video Music Award for Best Hip-Hop Video
MTV Video Music Award for Best Collaboration
MTV Video Music Award for Best Direction
MTV Video Music Award for Best Art Direction
MTV Video Music Award for Best Cinematography
MTV Video Music Award for Best Visual Effects
BET Award for Best Collaboration
BET Award for Best New Artist
Billboard Music Award for Top Rap Album
MTV Europe Music Award for Best Song
MTV Europe Music Award for Best Video
Billboard Music Award for Top Rap Artist
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Hip Hop Video
Billboard Music Award for Top Billboard 200 Album
Billboard Music Award for Top Streaming Songs Artist
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Collabo, Duo or Group
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Lyricist of the Year
Billboard Music Award for Top Streaming Song (Audio)
iHeartRadio Music Award for Hip-Hop Artist of the Year
Soul Train Music Award for Album/Mixtape of the Year
American Music Award for Favorite Album Rap/Hip-Hop
Brit Award for International Male Solo Artist
Billboard Music Award for Top Rap Male Artist
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Hot Ticket Performer
BET Hip Hop Award for MVP of the Year
Teen Choice Award for Choice Collaboration
BET Award for Best Male Hip-Hop Artist
BET Hip Hop Award for Sweet 16: Best Featured Verse
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Album of the Year
BET Hip Hop Award for Best Impact Track
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Album
Soul Train Music Award for Rhythm & Bars Award
Juno Award for International Album of the Year
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Duo or Group
iHeartRadio Music Award for Hip-Hop Album of the Year
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Song - Contemporary
Teen Choice Award for Choice Music – Break-Up Song
Danish Music Award for International Album of the Year
YouTube Music Award
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Soundtrack/Compilation
BET Award for Album of the Year
Lamar Life story
Grammy Awards 2023: Viola Davis becomes an EGOT
......
Grammy Awards 2023: How to watch and who will win
... Beyoncé leads the nominations, with nine in total, followed by Kendrick Lamar with eight, and Adele and Brandi Carlile, who have seven each...
From Rosalía to Beyoncé: 25 of the best songs released in 2022
...By Mark SavageBBC Music CorrespondentWith landmark albums from Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, Bad Bunny and Rosalía, 2022 was a year where the globe s biggest artists stretched the boundaries of what was possible in pop music...
Beyoncé and Adele dominate Grammy Award nominations
... Kendrick Lamar is this year s second biggest nominee, with eight nods for his fourth album Mr Morale and the Big Steppers - a pensive rumination on the state of the world and his own moral failings - and the freestyle The Heart Part 5...
Oscars 2019: How will the ceremony change this year?
... It means you can hit the parties by 8:15, Lady Gaga and Kendrick Lamar are both nominated for best song this year Such changes might make the ceremony tighter, but those may not be the only things preventing viewers from tuning in...
Grammy Awards 2023: How to watch and who will win
By Mark SavageBBC Music Correspondent
Will Adele continue her winning streak? Will Abba win their first Grammy? Will Beyoncé be snubbed again?
All these questions be answered when the 65th Grammy Awards take place in Los Angeles on Sunday.
Beyoncé leads the nominations, with nine in total, followed by Kendrick Lamar with eight, and Adele and Brandi Carlile, who have seven each.
Comedian Trevor Noah hosts the ceremony for the third year running, starting at 20:00 in LA (01:00 GMT).
This year, there are a staggering 91 categories, from best new age, ambient or chant album - shout out to Cheryl B. Engelhardt - to the night's biggest prize, album of the year.
There'll also be performances from some of music's biggest names, and bittersweet tributes to the stars we've lost.
Here's what you need to know ahead of the event.
1) How to watch the GrammysFirst of all, stock up on snacks.
The first awards are handed out in what's called the " premiere ceremony" at 20:30 GMT on Sunday (12:30 in Los Angeles). Proceedings then continue for eight mind-numbing hours, until the album of the year trophy is finally presented around 04:30 GMT.
The main show, which starts at 01:00 GMT, will be broadcast live in America on CBS, with streams on Paramount Plus and the website.
Paramount Plus is available over here, but has yet to confirm whether the Grammys will be streamed as part of its package.
However, should be available to UK viewers; and red carpet coverage will be streamed on from 23:30GMT.
2) Beyoncé could become the winningest winner of all timeBeyoncé is already the most-awarded woman in the history of the Grammys, with 28 victories. This year, she received another nine nominations, tying her with her husband Jay-Z for the most nods collected by any artist, with 88.
On the night, she needs just four wins to beat the record for the most overall wins, a position currently held by the conductor Georg Solti, who died in 1997.
Her meticulously-researched homage to black and queer dance music, Renaissance, is a front-runner for album of the year, but fans know not to get their hopes up.
Despite her impressive haul of trophies, all but one of Beyoncé's previous awards have come in genre categories like R& B and soul - feeding a perception that the Grammys fails to recognise Black artists with its top awards.
That could change this year, after almost 2,000 new members joined the voting organisation, 44% of whom come " from traditionally underrepresented communities, " according to the Recording Academy.
3) DJ Khaled, who doesn't rap, is nominated for best rap albumDJ Khaled is one of the most fascinating figures in hip-hop.
A former radio DJ, he's become a sort of musical Nick Fury, assembling an all-star cast of super-powered beatmakers and rappers to collaborate on songs that are, ultimately, released under his name.
The extent of his input is unclear - but he does pop up on most of his hits, shouting " we the best" or " another one" through a megaphone, while acts like Drake, Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion do the heavy lifting.
He explained his creative philosophy in an: " If you can't find it, you gotta go make it. If you can't make it, you gotta go find it. "
That hustle has earned him four number one albums in the US, the latest of which, God Did, is up for best rap album.
4) Lizzo and Harry Styles are set to performSadly, not together.
The Grammys always keep a few surprises up their sleeves, but these are the artists currently scheduled to perform on Sunday.
Bad BunnyBrandi CarlileHarry StylesLizzoLuke CombsMary J BligeSam Smith & Kim PetrasSteve Lacy5) Taylor Swift's Midnights isn't nominatedTaylor Swift is one of only three artists to win album of the year three times; but her latest record, Midnights, came out too late to be eligible for this year's ceremony.
However, Swift still managed to pick up four nominations, including song of the year for the expanded, re-recorded version of All Too Well.
She's never won that prize before, despite six nominations. Could this be her year?
6) The in memoriam section will be especially movingFrom Coolio to Olivia Newton-John, we've said goodbye to an upsetting number of musicians in the last 12 months, and the Grammys will mark the loss with an emotionally-charged in memoriam section.
Kacey Musgraves will perform Coal Miner's Daughter in a tribute to country music legend Loretta Lynn,
British songwriter Christine McVie will be honoured by Sheryl Crow, Bonnie Raitt and her bandmate Mick Fleetwood, with a rendition of her classic ballad, Songbird.
And Migos rapper Quavo will join the Maverick City Music choir to " remember the life and legacy" of his nephew, Takeoff, who was in October at the age of 28.
7) It could be a big night for Latin musicAfter spending 13 weeks at the top of the US Billboard charts last summer, Bad Bunny's Un Verano Sin Ti has become the first Spanish-language record to be nominated for album of the year at the Grammys.
It's an achievement that caps his almost mythological rise from a grocery bagger in the small Puerto Rican town of Vega Baja to a global superstar, and a torchbearer for Latin pop and música urbana.
Clocking in at 23 tracks, Un Verano Sin Ti is a record of two halves, split evenly between sun-kissed party anthems and more experimental, political tracks that explore gender violence and the gentrification of Puerto Rico.
He's not the only Latin artist to bask in the Grammy spotlight, with Brazilian singer Anitta considered a front-runner for best newcomer.
Confusingly, her nomination comes almost a decade into her career, but recognises the crossover success of her latest album, Versions of Me, which became the first Brazilian pop album to hit one billion streams on Spotify.
Her competition comes from breakout rap star Latto, British indie duo Wet Leg and Italian Eurovision winners Måneskin. It is a truly odd category this year.
8) Grammy voters have discovered TikTokWhile some US politicians are calling for TikTok to be banned, the app's outsize influence on the music industry has been recognised by the Grammys.
Spanish star Rosalía gets a nomination for best music film for a and four of the artists up for song of the year scored hits from viral TikTok videos.
One of the more surprising ones is Gayle's ABCDEFU, if only for its origin story.
The star was challenged on TikTok to compose a break-up song using the alphabet, and replied with an early version of ABCDEFU. After it started trending on the app, a finished version was recorded and became a global smash.
But it was later discovered that the " fan" was in fact an employee of her record label, leading to accusations of hype and marketing.
But when hasn't the music industry been about hype and marketing? ABCDEFU is still a fun, if slight, pop anthem. Whether it deserves a Grammy nomination is another question.
9) Hip-hop's golden anniversary will be celebratedThe Grammys stage is going to groan under the weight of three dozen rap legends (and their gold chains) when the ceremony celebrates the 50th anniversary of hip-hop.
Introduced by LL Cool J, with music by The Roots, the performance will include appearances by Busta Rhymes, De La Soul, Missy Elliott, Future, GloRilla, Grandmaster Flash, Ice-T, Lil Wayne, The Lox, Method Man, Nelly, Public Enemy, Queen Latifah, LL Cool J, RUN-DMC, Salt-N-Pepa and Outkast's Big Boi. . amongst others.
The anniversary itself falls in August - recognising the date in 1973 that 18-year-old Clive Campbell, aka DJ Kool Herc threw a back to school party at his apartment in New York.
There, he pioneered the technique of playing two copies of the same song at once, alternating between turntables to extend the instrumental portions of funk and soul records, that became the foundation stone of hip-hop.
10) Ozzy Osbourne could win his first Grammy since 1994The last (and only) time Ozzy Osbourne won a Grammy, it was for a track from Live & Loud, his supposed farewell album, in 1994.
28 short years later, he's got four nominations, all in recognition of his latest album, Patient No. 9, which features contributions from Eric Clapton, Metallica and the late Jeff Beck.
The star says he'll be " floored" if he wins. . and that he hasn't prepared a speech.
" I always end up saying it twice or blowing it or whatever, " he told Billboard. " I'm sure my wife will have it worked out. Behind me is my wife. My wife pulls my strings. "
11) Who'll scoop the big four prizes?The " big four" are the Grammys' most prestigious and hotly-contested awards. Here's a look at the line-up.
Album of the year
Abba - VoyageAdele - 30Bad Bunny - Un Verano Sin TiBeyoncé - RenaissanceMary J Blige - Good Morning GorgeousBrandi Carlile - In These Silent DaysLizzo - SpecialColdplay - Music of the SpheresKendrick Lamar - Mr Morale & The Big SteppersHarry Styles - Harry's HouseThe headline here is the repeat of 2017's best album race, in which Adele's 25 controversially beat Beyoncé's Lemonade. Beyoncé is considered the front-runner this time, but Adele has an unbeatable track record, winning all of the 13 Grammys she's been nominated for since 2012.
The dark horse is Brandi Carlile, a musician's musician who helped bring Joni Mitchell back to the stage last year. The rootsy Americana of her seventh studio album, In These Silent Days, is guaranteed to appeal to the Academy's musically conservative voter base.
Song of the year
Gayle - ABCDEFULizzo - About Damn TimeTaylor Swift - All Too Well (10-minute version)Harry Styles - As It WasSteve Lacy - Bad HabitBeyoncé - Break My SoulAdele - Easy On MeDJ Khaled - God DidKendrick Lamar - The Heart Part 5Bonnie Raitt - Just Like ThatHarry Styles' As It Was should be the front-runner here. It spent 15 weeks at number one in the US, and cemented the British singer as one of his generation's standout talents, but its ubiquity could play against it.
Adele's Easy On Me is a relatively safe choice, sharing about 80% of its DNA with her previous song of the year winner, Hello. But it would be glorious to see Taylor Swift, the most consequential writer of her generation, finally win this songwriting prize, after five previous attempts.
Record of the year
Abba - Don't Shut Me DownAdele - Easy On MeBeyoncé - Break My SoulMary J Blige - Good MorningBrandi Carlile ft Lucius - You And Me On The RockDoja Cat - WomanSteve Lacy - Bad HabitKendrick Lamar - The Heart Part 5Lizzo - About Damn TimeHarry Styles - As It WasWhile the song of the year award recognises the composition of a song, record of the year looks at the finished product - ie the actual sound recording.
No-one has won the category more times than Bruno Mars, suggesting voters feel more comfortable with recognisable, throwback sounds than innovative experimentation. That gives Lizzo's About Damn Time and Harry Styles' As It Was a slight edge over Beyoncé's Break My Soul. But this one is too close to call.
Best new artist
AnittaOmar ApolloDomi and JD BeckMuni LongSamara JoyLattoManeskinTobe NwigweMolly TuttleWet LegWithout a big, breakout star to dominate, this category is an open field. Voters typically opt for mainstream acts like Olivia Rodrigo and Billie Eilish, which would rule out some of the more esoteric nominees, like, or folk singer Molly Tuttle.
Italian Eurovision winners Maneskin have been pretty inescapable on US radio over the last year, giving them a decent edge; but Latto, whose charismatic rap anthem Big Energy, was a Top 3 hit, is the one to beat.
Source of news: bbc.com