The 67th | Annual Grammy Awards -2025-2025
Ariana Grande took home her second Song of the Year trophy (her first was for "Thank U, Next" in 2020). Co-written with Max Martin, the song—which interpolates the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind—was lauded for its lyrical deconstruction of public divorce and media villainization.
As the night concluded with SZA’s triumphant reprise of “Kill Bill” (complete with a theatrical sword fight on the stage screen), the Recording Academy announced that the 68th Annual Grammy Awards would return to New York City’s Madison Square Garden for the first time since 2018. Early predictions for 2026 already include heavy hitters like Dua Lipa’s Radical Optimism, the debut of whatever supergroup Taylor Swift forms next, and the potential posthumous release of a certain unreleased Prince album. The 67th Annual Grammy Awards -2025-2025
The 2025 ceremony was heavily defined by the devastating wildfires that swept through Los Angeles in January. The Recording Academy reshaped the ceremony to focus on fire relief efforts. Ariana Grande took home her second Song of
The 67th Annual Grammy Awards, held on February 2, 2025, at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, served as a historic night for the music industry, marked by major milestones and a dedicated focus on community relief. Hosted for the fifth consecutive year by Trevor Noah, the ceremony was "reimagined" as a fundraiser for Los Angeles wildfire relief efforts, successfully raising over $7 million for affected music professionals and first responders. Major Highlights and Historic Wins Inside the 2025 Grammys: What You Didn’t See on TV The 2025 segment, introduced by Dave Grohl (looking
In a category crowded with viral sensations (Tyla, Victoria Monét, Noah Kahan), Chappell Roan won for her unapologetically queer, theatrical pop. Roan’s acceptance speech became an instant meme when she pulled out a scroll listing "every producer who told me to change my drag aesthetic to sell records." She concluded, "I didn't. You were wrong."
The 2025 segment, introduced by Dave Grohl (looking somber following the recent passing of his mother), honored a brutal year for music. The list included:
Fantasia sang a gut-wrenching version of "I Will Always Love You" that transitioned into "Amazing Grace." The telecast cut to Celine Dion in the audience, mouthing the words, tears streaking her immaculate makeup.
