Welcome to Beyonce country! When it comes to the 2025 Grammy Awards, Cowboy Carter is the undisputed leader. With 11 nominations this year, she tops the list, bringing her career total to 99—making her the most nominated artist in Grammy history.
Carter is up for Album of the Year and Country Album of the Year, with her track Texas Hold 'Em earning nods for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Country Song of the Year. Additionally, she’s received nominations across multiple genres, including Pop, Country, Americana, and Melodic Rap Performance.
This is her first time receiving nominations in the country and Americana categories. Previously, she and her husband Jay-Z were tied for most-career nominations, at 88.
If Beyonce wins the album of the year, she'll become the first Black woman to do so in the 21st century. Lauryn Hill last won in 1999 for The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, joining Natalie Cole and Whitney Houston as the only Black women to take home the Grammys' top prize.
Post Malone also received his first ever nominations in the country categories this year, having released his debut country album F-1 Trillion" in August. That one is up for country album and I Had Some Help, his collaboration with Morgan Wallen, is nominated for country song and country duo/group performance. They are Wallen's first ever Grammy nominations.
Malone is just behind Beyonce, with seven nominations, tied with Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar and Charli XCX, who earned her first nominations as a solo artist.
Lamar's ubiquitous diss track released during his feud with Drake, Not Like Us, is nominated for record and song of the year, rap song, music video as well as best rap performance. He has two simultaneous entries in the latter category, a career first: Future & Metro Boomin featuring Lamar, Like That is up for best rap performance and best rap song.
This is his third time receiving two simultaneous nominations for best rap song.
Taylor Swift and first-time nominees Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan boast of six nominations each
Last year, women artists dominated the major categories. This year, that continues somewhat, but the main trend seems to be a variance of genre. In the album of the year category, alongside Cowboy Carter is Andre 3000's new age, alt-jazz New Blue Sun and multi-instrumentalist Jacob Collier's Djesse Vol. 4. Rising pop stars Carpenter and Roan round it out, with Short n' Sweet and The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess respectively, as well as Swift's The Tortured Poets Department, Eilish's Hit Me Hard and Soft, and Charli XCX's rave-ready BRAT.
Eilish is the only artist to have her first three albums become nominated for album of the year.
Last year, Swift won album of the year for Midnights, breaking the record for most wins in the category with four. This year, she becomes the first ever woman to seven career nominations in the category.
The breadth and the variety of genres represented in the general field feels new and really exciting, says the Recording Academy CEO and President Harvey Mason jr.
He credits an active and evolving voting body for its success. We've been very intentional in how we looked at and tried to rebalance our membership. So not just gender or people of colour, different racial makeup, but also genre equity and trying to make sure that all different types of music in different regions and different locations are being represented in every way possible.
Only recordings commercially released in the US between September 16, 2023 through August 30, 2024 were eligible for nominations. The final round of Grammy voting, which determines its winners, will take place December 12 through January 3.
In the best new artist category, Carpenter and Roan will go head-to-head, alongside Benson Boone, Doechii, Khruangbin, RAYE, Shaboozey and Teddy Swims.
In the song of the year category, Beyonce is joined by Eilish with Birds of a Feather, Swift and Post Malone with Fortnight, Roan's Good Luck, Babe!, Carpenter's Please Please Please, Lamar's Not Like Us, Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars' Die With A Smile, and Shaboozey's A Bar Song (Tipsy).
Shaboozey is also a first-time nominee. His A Bar Song (Tipsy) is the biggest song of the year, having spent more weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 than any other it is so popular, a remix of the track is also up for remixed recording.
Elsewhere, Shaboozey is nominated in the melodic rap performance category for his feature on Beyonce's SPAGHETTII. Linda Martell, the first commercially-successful Black woman musician in country, is also featured on the song, delivering the 83-year-old artist her first Grammy nomination.
For record of the year, Texas Hold 'Em will compete against Swift and Post Malone's Fortnight, Eilish's Birds of a Father, Lamar's Not Like Us, Roan's Good Luck, Babe!, Carpenter's Espresso, Charli XCX's 360, and the Beatles last new song, the AI-assisted Now and Then.
The 2025 Grammy Awards will air February 2 live on CBS and Paramount+ from the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
(AP via PTI)