Allegations that the Grammy nominations process
is tainted by conflicts of interest were made in a complaint
filed earlier this week by the former chief executive of the
Recording Academy, Deborah Dugan, after she was placed on
administrative leave.
Dugan repeated her claims in interviews on two morning
television shows on Thursday, just days before Sunday's Grammy
Awards ceremony in Los Angeles. The Recording Academy has said
the live televised show will go ahead as planned.
Bill Freimuth, the chief awards officer at the Recording
Academy, denied Dugan's claims.
"Spurious allegations claiming members or committees use our
process to push forward nominations for artists they have
relationships with are categorically false, misleading and
wrong," he said in a statement on Thursday.
Freimuth said it was the goal of the Recording Academy "to
ensure the Grammy Awards process is led in a fair and ethical
manner and that voting members make their choices based solely
on the artistic excellence and technical merits of eligible
recordings."
Dugan was placed on immediate administrative leave on Jan. 17,
five months after taking the helm as the Recording Academy's
first female chief executive and president. The Academy said at
the time that the move was in response to an allegation of
misconduct made against her by a senior member of staff but did
not give details.
Dugan responded by filing a complaint on Tuesday with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission alleging gender
discrimination, unlawful retaliation and unequal pay.
In the complaint, she described what she called a "boys' club
mentality" at the Recording Academy. Dugan also claimed that
some members involved in the Grammy nominations process "push
forward artists with whom they have relationships" and that in
some cases musicians being considered for a nomination sit on
the committee voting in their category.
Dugan took over as the Recording Academy chief from Neil Portnow,
who in 2018 had provoked outrage by telling reporters that
female artists and producers needed to "step up" if they wanted
recognition in the music industry.
The Recording Academy in December said it would double the
number of female voters by 2025 by adding 2,500 more women.
This year's Grammy nominations were dominated by women,
including newcomers Lizzo and Billie Eilish. They will both
perform on the Grammy stage on Jan. 26 along with the likes of
Ariana Grande, Camila Cabello, Gwen Stefani and rapper Lil Nas
X.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant)
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