Taylor Swift, Kanye West were last-minute additions for top Grammy awards
"We saw it as an incredible opportunity for us to honour more artistes and shine a light on more great music, and potentially offer a greater opportunity for more genres of music to be honoured," says CEO Harvey Mason jr.
The Recording Academy decided to expand the number of Grammy nominees just 24 hours before the list was announced on Tuesday — to the benefit of artistes including Kanye West, Taylor Swift, ABBA and Lil Nas X, according to a report in the New York Times.
The move, which saw the list of nominees in the top four general categories grow from eight nominees to 10, was positioned as a natural progression by CEO Harvey Mason jr. when asked about it by Variety on Monday.
"We saw it as an incredible opportunity for us to honour more artistes and shine a light on more great music, and potentially offer a greater opportunity for more genres of music to be honoured," he said, reports variety.com.
As for the abruptness of the move, "It's something that we've talked about for quite some time but it ended up happening fairly recently," he said. "We looked at the voting and the amount of submissions (for the 2022 Grammys) and saw it as a great opportunity."
Advance lists of the nominees, which are traditionally serviced to the media 24 hours before the announcement, arrived much later than usual on Monday.
Sources tell Variety that the expansion of the top lists was the cause of the delay.
Lil Nas X's 'Montero (Call Me by Your Name)' and ABBA's 'I Still Have Faith in You' were added to record of the year; Swift's 'Evermore' and West's 'Donda' were the additional candidates for album of the year; Doja Cat's 'Kiss Me More' and Brandi Carlile's 'Right on Time' were put it at the last minute for song of the year and Baby Keem and Arooj Aftab were added to the best new artist field, according to the report.
The Times was able to ascertain which artists benefitted from the shift from eight to 10 by comparing the final list with a list created prior to the Monday decision — a version that "had begun circulating outside the Recording Academy before the nominations were announced on Tuesday." The Times said it had obtained a copy of the earlier list.
Mason told the publication that the artistes added to the list were simply the ninth and tenth most voted by the Academy's members, and were determined by Deloitte, its partner in collecting and tabulating votes. As whether ratings for the multimillion dollar Grammy telecast were a consideration for the Swift-West addition, he responded, "A thousand percent no. That was not a consideration."
Academy co-president Valeisha Butterfield Jones added: "While it may seem rushed, it really was a thoughtful, well intentioned process that was also data-driven."
Other questions about the final nominations were being raised this week by recording artist Linda Chorney, who said she awoke this week to Google alerts linking to news stories showing she had been nominated for best American roots performance for her song 'Bored'.
Rolling Stone was among the publications that included Choney's song in a list of nominees, screenshots and cached search results show. Yet when the official list was disseminated, Chorney's song was not among the nominees, and a song by Rhiannon Giddens took the spot that seemingly had been hers.
Chorney says she wrote to some of the reporters who published a story claiming a nomination for her and heard back apologetically from one that the information had been cut-and-pasted from an incorrect source, but she hasn't gotten any feedback on what that source was.
With no explanations forthcoming about why erroneous news accounts might have credited her with a nod, Chorney believes she did earn a nomination — and that it somehow got axed. Chorney has taken on the Grammys about changes in the voting process in the years since she landed a nod in the best Americana album category in 2012, which she believes were made to keep self-releasing artists like her from getting in again. Variety has reached out to Acedemy reps as well about Chorney's questions.
The Times' news about details of the last-minute expansion of top nominations sets an awkward tone for the next Grammy Awards, an institution that has been marred by an ongoing series of unsavory controversies over the past five years.