Drake Withdraws His Two Grammy Nominations; Rapper’s Decision Comes Following The Weeknd’s Snub?
Drake and his management have withdrawn his Grammy Award nominations for the album Certified Lover Boy, which was up for best rap album, and Way 2 Sexy, which was nominated for best rap performance.
Don't expect Drake to walk away with a trophy on the music's biggest night! The artist will not compete in the 2022 Grammy Awards, choosing to withdraw his two nominations. As per People magazine, Drake and his management have withdrawn his Grammy Award nominations for the album Certified Lover Boy, which was up for best rap album, and Way 2 Sexy, which was nominated for best rap performance. Grammy Awards 2022: Taylor Swift, St Vincent and Jack Antonoff Dropped as Fellow Nominees for Olivia Rodrigo’s ‘Sour’ Interpolation.
Sources tell Variety that the decision was made by Drake and his management and the Grammys honoured the request, although his motivation was currently unclear. Without Drake's works nominated, there are now four nominations in each category. Without 'Way 2 Sexy', those up for best rap performance are Baby Keem and Kendrick Lamar for 'Family Ties', Cardi B for 'Up', J. Cole, 21 Savage and Morray for 'My Life' and Megan Thee Stallion for 'Thot S--'. Grammy Awards 2022: Trevor Noah to Host the 64th Annual GRAMMY Awards on January 31.
In the album category, the nominees are now J. Cole's 'The Off Season', Nas' King's 'Disease II', Tyler, the Creator's 'Call Me If You Get Lost' and Kanye West's 'Donda'. The rapper's decision comes about a year after he criticised the awards shows for not nominating The Weeknd for any awards after the high level of success of his album 'After Hours' and its hit single 'Blinding Lights'.
At the time, the rap star said, "I think we should stop allowing ourselves to be shocked every year by the disconnect between impactful music and these awards and just accept that what once was the highest form of recognition may no longer matter to the artists that exist now and the ones that come after." He continued, on his Instagram story, "It's like a relative you keep expecting to fix up but they just can't change their ways. "The other day I said @theweeknd was a lock for either album or song of the year along with countless other reasonable assumptions and it just never goes that way."
Drake added at the time that now is "a great time" for someone to "start something new that we can build up over time and pass on to the generations to come." The year prior, when 'God's Plan' took home the award for the best rap song in 2019, Drake took the stage to criticise the awards show, saying that it was "the first time in Grammys history where I actually am who I thought I was for a second." "I wanted to take this opportunity, while I'm up here, to just talk to all the kids who are watching this who are aspiring to do music, all my peers who make music from their heart, that do things pure and tell the truth," he said. "I want you to know we play in an opinion-based sport, not a factual-based sport. This is not the NBA where at the end of the year, you're holding a trophy because you made the right decisions or won the games."
"This is a business where sometimes it's up to a bunch of people who might not understand what a mixed-race kid from Canada has to say, or a fly Spanish girl from New York, or anybody else, or a brother from Houston, my brother Travis," he continued. "You've already won if you have people who are singing your songs word for word, if you're a hero in your hometown... You don't need this right here. I promise you." Variety also reported that he declined to submit his album 'More Life' in 2017 after JAY-Z won no awards, despite being nominated for eight. Drake has won four Grammys before -- two in 2017 for 'Hotline Bling', one in 2019 for 'God's Plan' and another in 2013 for 'Take Care'. (ANI)
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