Female acts, rap songs win big at the Grammys
'You've already won if you have people who are singing your songs word for word,' Drake says
Women returned at the Grammys on Sunday as female acts won album of the year and best new artist, while rap also triumphed, with Childish Gambino's This Is America becoming the first rap-based song to win record and song of the year.
Kacey Musgraves's win for best country album for Golden Hour helped her match Gambino's haul of four Grammys, while Dua Lipa won best new artist.
"I never dreamed that this record would be met with such love, such warmth, such positivity," said Musgraves, who performed a stately version of her song Rainbow.
Gambino — who didn't attend the event — was the night's big winner, picking up four honours, including best music video and best rap/sung performance.
Childish Gambino's disturbing look at race relations, This is America, won record and song of the year on Sunday's telecast. It was the first time a rap-based song won both of those awards, considered — with album of the year — the recording industry's most prestigious.
Drake surprised the music world when he emerged on stage to accept the best rap song trophy but told the room of musicians that winning awards isn't necessary if you have real fans attending your concerts and singing your songs.
Drake, who rarely attends awards shows, won the honour for his massive hit God's Plan.
"You've already won if you have people who are singing your songs word for word, if you're a hero in your hometown," he told the crowd.
"If there are people who have regular jobs who are coming out in the rain and the snow, spending their hard-earned money to buy tickets to come to your shows, you don't need this right here. I promise you. You already won."
He tried to continue speaking but was cut off as the ceremony suddenly went to a commercial.
Rap has endured a longtime losing streak at the Grammys. The last time a rapper won album of the year was in 2004, with Outkast. Only a handful of rappers have won best new artist.
Cardi B made history as the first solo female to win best rap album (Lauryn Hill won as a member of the Fugees at the 1997 Grammys).
She was shaking onstage as she tried to give a thank-you speech with her rapper-husband Offset holding her arm.
"The nerves are so bad. Maybe I need to start smoking weed," she said as the audience laughed. "I just want to say thank you everybody that was involved ... I want to thank my daughter."
The Grammys kicked off with a group of powerful women, including Michelle Obama and Lady Gaga, describing the role of music in their lives — a display that came a year after female voices were somewhat muted at the 2018 ceremony.
"Music has always helped me tell my story," said Obama, who surprised the audience with her appearance. "Whether we like country or rap or rock, music helps us share ourselves. It allows us to hear one another."
Gaga told the crowd: "They said I was weird, that my look, that my choices, that my sound wouldn't work. But music told me not to listen to them."
Photo gallery: Check out some of the Grammys fashion.
Jada Pinkett Smith and Jennifer Lopez also spoke and stood in solidarity with Obama, Gaga and Alicia Keys, who is hosting the show airing on CBS.
"Yes, ladies," Keys said. "There's nothing better than this."
The opening contrasted with last year's Grammys, where male acts dominated in nominations and the only woman competing for the top award, Lorde, didn't get a chance to perform onstage.
But this year, Gaga, Brandi Carlile and Kacey Musgraves won three Grammys each.
Carlile took three honours in the Americana category and will compete for the three biggest awards during the live show: album, song and record of the year.
Gaga also won three, including best pop duo/group performance, a win she shared with Bradley Cooper.
Gaga, now a nine-time Grammy winner, won best pop solo performance for Joanne, while hit Shallow, from A Star is Born, was named best song written for visual media. The song is nominated for an Oscar and also won at the Golden Globes, the Critics' Choice Movie Awards and the Satellite Awards.
Women have a strong presence in the top categories. Five of the eight album-of-the-year nominees were women, including Carlile's By the Way, I Forgive You, Janelle Monae's Dirty Computer, Cardi B's Invasion of Privacy and H.E.R.'s self-titled album are also in contention.
When asked about the lack of women in the top categories at the 2018 Grammys, Recording Academy CEO Neil Portnow said women need to "step up." He later acknowledged that it was a "poor choice of words," and his much-criticized remarks forced the academy to launch a new task force focused on inclusion and diversity.
Portnow, who didn't seek a renewal on his contract which ends this year, seemed to address his words from last year during Sunday's show.
"This past year I've been reminded that if coming face to face with an issue opens your eyes wide enough, it makes you more committed than ever to help address those issues. The need for social change has been the hallmark of the American experience, from the founding of our country to the complex times we live in today," he said.
British singer Dua Lipa alluded to Portnow's 2018 words when she won best new artist.
"I guess this year we've really stepped up," she said after telling the audience she was grateful to be nominated alongside so many female performers. Six of the best-new-artist nominees were women, including H.E.R., Chloe x Halle, Margo Price, Bebe Rexha and Jorja Smith.
Musgraves picked up best country album for Golden Hour, best country solo performance for Butterflies and best country song for Space Cowboy.
"I never dreamed that this record would be met with such love," she said onstage.
She also gave a shout-out to her husband in the audience, saying she wouldn't have been able to make the album if he "didn't open my heart like you did."
Yolanda Adams, Fantasia and Andra Day teamed up for stirring performance of (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman in honour Aretha Franklin, who died last year.
Diana Ross earned a standing ovation when she emerged onstage in a bright red dress to perform Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand) and The Best Years of My Life. She celebrated her 75th birthday early with the performance, saying afterward, "Happy birthday to me!" Her actual birthday is March 26.
Ariana Grande won her first Grammy in the same week that she publicly blasted Grammys producer Ken Ehrlich and accused him of lying about why she was no longer performing at the show.
There was a tie for best rap performance, and Drake was surprisingly not one of the winners. Drake's Nice for What lost to Anderson Paak's Bubblin and Kendrick Lamar, Jay Rock, Future and James Blake's King's Dead, from the Black Panther soundtrack.
Canadians score wins
Music producer Greg Wells said winning his first Grammy for the soundtrack to The Greatest Showman felt like a scene lifted from the pages of a Hollywood screenplay.
The Peterborough, Ont.-raised songwriter said reality was still sinking in for him, even though several hours had already passed since he rushed to the stage to accept best compilation soundtrack for visual media.
Wells won as part of the team who helped create the breakout pop hits for the Hugh Jackman-led musical film, including This Is Me.
"It really is that movie moment where they announce your name and you get this euphoric blast of hormones — or whatever it is," the 50-year-old songwriter said by phone from Los Angeles on Sunday.
Wells previously had been nominated twice, once for Katy Perry's Teenage Dream and another time for Mika's single Love Today. He said after losing both of those Grammys he wasn't expecting to win this time either.
"It doesn't feel like a real thing," he added.
Other Canadians marking their first time as Grammy winners included Toronto-raised R&B singer Daniel Caesar, who split his first honour with Gabriella Wilson, known as American performer H.E.R., for their song Best Part.
Volinist James Ehnes received two for his contributions to Kernis. The Brandon, Man.-raised musician was part of the classical violin concerto album, which won best contemporary classical composition. The honour is shared with composer Aaron Jay Kernis.
His second Grammy for best classical instrumental solo is shared with the album's conductor.
Another violinist, Lili Haydn, won as part of the quartet Opium Moon. The Canadian-American musician received best new age album win for the group's self-titled 2018 album.
Haydn accepted the Grammy during a pre-telecast ceremony saying she had "so much love and gratitude and respect" for other musicians nominated at the ceremony.
She said her fellow nominees "devoted literally countless hours of focus, passion and practice to making the most exquisite music we can make to sweeten this world."
Willo Perron, who is from Montreal, nabbed the best recording package Grammy for his work on singer St. Vincent's 2017 album Masseduction.
With files from CBC News, Reuters and The Canadian Press