Jay-Z, who was honored by the Recording Academy
at veteran music producer Clive Davis' annual pre-Grammy party
on Saturday, spoke about his decision to boycott the Grammy
awards in 1998 when rapper DMX did not get any nominations
despite having two hit albums out that year.
Jay-Z said he only returned to the awards show in 2004, when
Beyonce, to whom he is now married, was nominated for her
breakout solo album.
"The Academy, they're human like we are and they're voting on
things that they like, it's subjective ... we care because we're
seeing the most incredible artists standing on that stage and we
aspire to be there, so I was like, I have to be here," the
rapper said.
"It's our duty to make sure that not only are we making the
greatest art, that we're upholding and supporting things that
are super real," he added.
Jay-Z, 48, goes into Sunday's Grammy awards with a leading eight
nominations for his emotional, soul-baring album "4:44," in
which he examine the infidelity that was so scathingly detailed
by Beyonce in 2016's “Lemonade,” as well as searing commentary
on race in America.
The rapper has won 21 Grammy awards over his career, but he is
yet to win the top accolades for song, record or album of the
year, all of which he is nominated for on Sunday.
In 60 years of the Grammys, only two hip-hop albums have ever
won album of the year; Lauryn Hill’s “The Miseducation of Lauryn
Hill” in 1999 and Outkast’s “Speakerboxxx/The Love Below” in
2004.
Brooklyn native Jay-Z, real name Shawn Carter, made his breakout
with 1996's "Reasonable Doubt" and has become one of the
best-selling U.S. musicians and respected rap lyricists.
He was honored on Saturday for not only reshaping rap over his
career but also as an entrepreneur, including reshaping the
music business with his streaming service Tidal.
Singer Alicia Keys said Jay-Z's music was "the soundtrack to my
life" growing up and she sang a medley of his hits including
"Hard Knock Life," "Encore" and their New York anthem, "Empire
State of Mind."
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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