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domingo, 4 de febrero de 2024

The Morning: Guide to the Grammys

Our critics predict the winners and preview the big performances.
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The Morning

February 4, 2024

By the staff of The Morning

Good morning. The Grammys are tonight, and we have predictions from three Times critics.

A woman in a blue robe and gold hat sings into a gold microphone.
Joni Mitchell Stefani Reynolds/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Present and past

Two beloved songwriters, almost half a century apart in age, are set to be stars of tonight's Grammy Awards.

Joni Mitchell, who nearly died from an aneurysm several years ago, will give her first Grammys performance at the age of 80. And Taylor Swift has a shot to win her fourth album of the year award, something no other artist has done.

But Swift, who has six nominations, faces tough competition. SZA leads the field with nine nominations for her acclaimed "SOS" album and hit single "Kill Bill." The pop and R&B singer Victoria Monét received seven nods; Olivia Rodrigo, Billie Eilish, Miley Cyrus, Jon Batiste, and the indie-rock trio boygenius have six apiece. (Here are all the nominees.)

We asked three Times music critics — Jon Pareles, Jon Caramanica and Lindsay Zoladz — to share their thoughts on who might win tonight's awards.

Let's start with the big one, album of the year. Who do you expect will win?

Lindsay Zoladz: Taylor Swift looks like the front-runner here, less on the merits of "Midnights" than on the massive monocultural impact of her Eras Tour. But I'm going to bet the Grammy voters are experiencing a little Swift fatigue, so I'm predicting a slight upset: I think boygenius will win for "The Record," a gently forward-thinking folk-rock album with a nonetheless traditional, Grammy-approved sound. Personally, though, I'm rooting for Olivia Rodrigo's spunky "Guts" or Lana Del Rey's weird, sprawling "Did You Know That There's a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd."

Jon Pareles: I'd be delighted for SZA, Olivia Rodrigo, boygenius or Janelle Monáe to win — they were all among my picks for the year's best albums — and I wouldn't be too unhappy with a win by Lana Del Rey or Taylor Swift, either. If Swift wins, she will be the first musician with four album of the year awards, surpassing Frank Sinatra, Stevie Wonder and Paul Simon.

Jon Caramanica: Taylor Swift will win, I think. Grammy voters have awarded this prize to her three times already, and they like familiarity. SZA's album was better, though. Olivia Rodrigo's and Lana Del Rey's too.

How about record of the year? (For readers who are unfamiliar, this is the award for the best single.)

Jon Pareles: To be calculating about it as a longtime Grammy observer, I'd guess that "What Was I Made For?," Billie Eilish's song for the "Barbie" movie, has an edge. Grammy voters love ballads (check), soundtrack songs (check) and previous Grammy winners (check).

Jon Caramanica: I think Jon Batiste will win this, and it brings me no joy to say so. The Grammys tend to reward conspicuous musicianship, and Batiste, even though the music he makes is not popular, plays well to the Grammy voters who fancy themselves too sophisticated to acknowledge the craftsmanship that goes into the creation of pop music.

Lindsay Zoladz: I'd love to see Olivia Rodrigo take this award for "Vampire," a sonically adventurous rock-operatic ballad produced with flair by Rodrigo's trusted collaborator Daniel Nigro. But I fear that the voters are going to play it safe here and go with Miley Cyrus's sleek, sturdily assembled "Flowers."

Even if you don't care about the winners, the Grammys usually have a live performance or two that are worth tuning in for. Are there any you're looking forward to this year?

Jon Pareles: I can't imagine missing the performance by Joni Mitchell. Her recovery from a life-threatening brain aneurysm in 2015 has been beyond heartening. An entire musical community rallied around her as she applied a lifetime of artistic instincts to the voice she has now. Her surprise comeback performance at the Newport Folk Festival in 2022, and her preternatural version of "Summertime" when she accepted the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, showed surpassing musicianship and an indomitable will.

Jon Caramanica: A couple of days ago, whispers began circulating that the Grammys might successfully pull off the seemingly unthinkable. No, not the debut Grammy performance of Joni Mitchell (at 80!), but instead the coaxing of Tracy Chapman out of post-music-industry invisibility to duet with Luke Combs, whose cover of her indelible 1988 hit "Fast Car" was one of last year's most impactful releases. Should that actually happen, it would be more than a coup.

So much great music comes out every year, and only a few artists at the top seem to win the big awards. If you were in charge, what unheralded artist would win a Grammy this year?

Jon Caramanica: The pop act with the highest batting average of the last two years is, indisputably, the K-pop girl group NewJeans. "Super Shy," "OMG," "Ditto" — they simply do not miss.

Jon Pareles: Not completely unheralded, but there is a glaring omission from the best new artist nominees: Peso Pluma, who spearheaded a blockbuster international year for regional Mexican music. His songs have racked up more than a billion plays on Spotify. His 2023 album, "Genésis," did get nominated way down in category 59, música Mexicana, but he deserved some notice in prime time.

Lindsay Zoladz: I would give at least one Grammy to the absurdist pop group 100 gecs, just to see them accept it in their signature neon wizard robes.

For more

Taylor Swift performing in Buenos Aires in November.
Taylor Swift Natacha Pisarenko/Associated Press
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NEWS

Middle East

War in Gaza

A child with burns on his body.
Mohamed Abu Rteinah, 12. Samar Abu Elouf for The New York Times

More on International

The forest fire that affected the hills of the city of Viña del Mar.
In Chile. Javier Torres/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

2024 Election

Immigration

Two people ride an all-terrain vehicle amid a gathering of other people and flying flags.
The "Take Our Border Back" convoy in Quemado, Texas. Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Other Big Stories

A zoomed-out shot of an area surrounded by grass.
A Bitcoin operation near Greenbrier, Ark. Rory Doyle for The New York Times
  • The machines that mine Bitcoin are noisy, and people say the sound has ruined their lives and lowered their property values. Arkansas is trying to find a response.
  • Sending the equivalent of a giant beach umbrella into space to combat climate change was once a fringe idea. Not anymore.
  • Ayo Edebiri, from "The Bear," hosted "Saturday Night Live." The show focused much of its energy on politics, along with Taylor Swift conspiracy theories.

FROM OPINION

To understand why the world is divided between the north and the south, read the writings of Frantz Fanon, the psychiatrist and revolutionary, Adam Shatz writes.

Here are columns by Ross Douthat on U.S. dominance and Maureen Dowd on Taylor Swift.

The Sunday question: Should tech giants be responsible for children's safety online?

While companies like Meta and TikTok promote safety features for children, only Congress can "pass legislation that will force Big Tech to protect our children in earnest," Lina Nealon writes in The Hill. But "there's just one problem with that: The public trusts businesses more than politicians to solve social problems," Bloomberg's Jessica Karl writes.

Discover more of the insight you value in The Morning.

The Times is filled with information and inspiration every day. So gain unlimited access to everything we offer — and save with this introductory offer.

MORNING READS

An owl on a tree.
David Lei

Free bird: One year ago, Flaco fled the Central Park Zoo, making all of Manhattan his new habitat. ​What has he been up to?

Modern makeover: The use of artificial intelligence by digital creators is fueling a new era of product placement.

Vows: They got married, finally, after six cancellations.

Lives Lived: Wayne Kramer's explosive guitar playing with the influential Detroit band the MC5 in the late 1960s and early '70s helped set the template for punk rock. He died at 75.

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TALK | FROM THE TIMES MAGAZINE

A person smiles, looking slightly off camera, in front of a blue backdrop.
Mamadi Dambouya for The New York Times

I spoke with the neuroscientist Charan Ranganath, author of the new book "Why We Remember," about memory and identity.

What is the most common misconception about memory?

People believe that memory should be effortless, and their expectations for how much they should remember are totally out of whack with how much they're capable of remembering.

Are there things that we might be able to do in the moment to make events last in our memories?

If we want to form a new memory, focus on aspects of the experience you want to take with you. If you're with your kid, you're at a park, focus on the parts of it that are great, not the parts that are annoying. Then you want to focus on the sights, the sounds, the smells, because those will give you rich detail later on when you remember it. Another part of it, too, is that we kill ourselves by inducing distractions. We have alerts on our phones. We check email. So you don't remember being there, because to some extent you were never really there in the first place.

People get stuck in memories, whether they're traumatic or more benignly negative. What are ways people can get unstuck?

It's very hard. You know, the training environment I was in was very down on psychoanalysis, but it always comes back to memory. A lot of that benefit is from the sharing of memories. We know that people tailor their message for the listener. Then you reflect it back to me and reorganize it as an outsider. Once we go back and forth, we're updating the memory to something that's no longer my own. It's now shared. When you tell someone, "You shouldn't be ashamed," it changes that whole relationship with the past.

Read more of the interview here.

More from the magazine

BOOKS

This image, torn from an old black-and-white newspaper, features an illustration of a man with rope around his neck about to be hanged from a gallows surrounded by other figures, including a priest with a Bible, and a judge in a white wig. A woman in 19th-century dress is climbing the steps up to the gallows from the left.

A bloody history: The roots of true crime literature date back to the prison cells and gallows of 17th-century London.

The progress of love: The only prerequisite for reading the Nobel laureate​ Alice Munro, a master of short stories, is having lived. Here's where to start.

Our editors' picks: "You Dreamed of Empires," a hallucinatory novel about Hernán Cortés and the Aztecs, and eight other books.

Times best sellers: "One in a Millennial," by the pop culture podcaster Kate Kennedy, is one of the new titles on the hardcover nonfiction list.

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

Create the perfect dip for your Super Bowl party.

Impress your valentine even if you're on a budget.

Buy a good air fryer.

THE WEEK AHEAD

What to Watch For

  • El Salvador holds elections today. President Nayib Bukele is being accused of violating the Constitution by seeking re-election.
  • Nevada primary elections are Tuesday, but the state's Republican caucuses are Thursday.
  • The Supreme Court will consider arguments Thursday over whether Donald Trump can be barred from running for president under the 14th Amendment.
  • Pakistan holds elections Thursday. Imran Khan, the former prime minister, was barred from holding office for 10 years.
  • New York Fashion Week begins Friday.
  • Saturday is the start of the Lunar New Year.

What to Cook This Week

An overhead shot of a Dutch baby pancake in a cast-iron skillet. A small bowl of berries and an open jar of jam are nearby, as is a small pink plate.
Dutch baby pancake. Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist; Hadas Smirnoff. Prop Stylist: Megan Hedgepeth.

It's Breakfast Week in Emily Weinstein's Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter. Try a Dutch baby, a brunch favorite or green shakshuka with avocado and lime.

NOW TIME TO PLAY

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was halogen.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku and Connections.

Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Editor: David Leonhardt

Deputy Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Lauren Jackson, Sean Kawasaki-Culligan, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

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