67th Annual Grammy Awards | |
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Date | February 2, 2025 |
Location | Crypto.com Arena Los Angeles, California |
Hosted by | Trevor Noah |
Most awards | Kendrick Lamar (5) |
Most nominations | Beyoncé (11) |
Website | grammy |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | CBS Paramount+ |
Viewership | 15.4 million viewers |
The 67th Annual Grammy Awards honored the best recordings, compositions, and artists from September 16, 2023, to August 30, 2024, as chosen by the members of the Recording Academy, on February 2, 2025.[1] In its 22nd year at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, the main ceremony was broadcast on CBS and available to stream on Paramount+. It was preceded by the premiere ceremony at the Peacock Theater, starting at 12:30 p.m. PT. Nominations were announced through a YouTube livestream on November 8, 2024.[2] South African comedian Trevor Noah hosted the ceremony for the fifth consecutive time.[3]
Kendrick Lamar's "Not Like Us" swept all five of its nominations, which included Record of the Year and Song of the Year, making it the most decorated rap song in Grammy Awards history. He became the second rap artist to win both awards, after Childish Gambino in 2019.[4] Beyoncé received the most nominations at the ceremony with eleven and won three awards, which included Album of the Year and Best Country Album for Cowboy Carter. She became the first Black artist to win Best Country Album and the first Black woman to win Album of the Year since Lauryn Hill in 1999.[5] Chappell Roan took home Best New Artist, and Sierra Ferrell swept the American roots categories, winning all four of her nominations. [6] Best New Artist nominee Doechii won Best Rap Album for Alligator Bites Never Heal, becoming the third woman to win this award, after Hill (with the Fugees) in 1997 and Cardi B in 2019. Other three-time winners included Charli XCX and St. Vincent. Other artists that led nominations included Charli XCX and Post Malone with eight each, and Kendrick Lamar and Billie Eilish with seven each.