LAS VEGAS — Olivia Rodrigo, Silk Sonic and jazz musician Jon Batiste have shared the top honors at the 64th Grammy Awards.
Batiste's uplifting soul record We Are won album of the year, while Rodrigo won best new artist and best pop album.
Silk Sonic's soul throwback anthem Leave The Door Open took home both the record and song of the year prizes.
The ceremony was held at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, after a three-month delay due to the Covid-19 surge in the US.
"Don't even think of it as an award show," said host Trevor Noah. "Think of it as a concert where we're giving out awards".
He kept his word. For the first 25 minutes, the show shunned prizes to concentrate on music, with three back-to-back performances from the night's main nominees.
Silk Sonic opened the show with a funky strut through their Vegas-themed track 777; followed by Olivia Rodrigo, who gave a sensitive reading of her ballad Drivers License from inside the vintage white Mercedes she drove in the song's video.
Third came reggaeton star J Balvin, who pivoted from the sensual duet Qué Más Pues to a raucous, intricately-choreographed performance of In De Getto.
If the Grammys wanted to display the breadth of this year's nominees in three songs, they succeeded. And then they kept going.
BTS tore the roof off the MGM Grand with a heist-themed performance of their pop smash Butter; while Billie Eilish's scorching rendition of Happier Than Ever could only be extinguished by an on-stage rainstorm.
Chris Stapleton, who dominated the country music categories, gave a gruff but mesmerizing performance of best country song winner Cold; and Lady Gaga threw herself into the jazz standards Love For Sale and Do I Love You, as she paid tribute to her duet partner Tony Bennett, who was unable to attend the ceremony for health reasons.
At the end of the performance, Gaga was moved to tears. "I love you, Tony," she said into the mic. "We miss you."
By focusing on music over sketches and set pieces, the Grammys became pacier and less self-indulgent than years gone by. It was the right lesson to learn from last year's scaled-back ceremony, where Covid restrictions forced artists into more intimate stagings.
The ceremony also continued last year's innovation of celebrating behind-the-scenes talent, whose livelihoods were interrupted by the pandemic. After highlighting independent music venues in 2021, this year's ceremony turned the spotlight on women working behind the scenes.
Among them was Billie Eilish's tour manager Nicole Massey, who called the star as "the best 20-year-old boss in the world".
The ceremony took place a week after the Oscars - and the altercation between Will Smith and Chris Rock wasn't far from people's minds.
During a non-televised portion of the ceremony, one presenter, Nate Bargatze, introduced the classical nominees while sporting a helmet.
"This is what comedians at awards shows have to wear now," he joked.
Noah also referenced the incident during his opening speech.
"We're going to be dancing, we're going to be singing, we're going to be keeping people's names out of our mouths," he said.
In contrast to Rock's barbs, however, the South African's monologue was positively good-natured, full of gentle quips about Lil Nas X's height (he's taller than you'd expect) and the show's Las Vegas setting.
"Look at this, people are doing shots," he gestured to the audience at home. "I mean, last year, people were doing shots, but it was more Moderna and Pfizer. This time, we're back in the mix."
In what must have been a relief for the organisers, habitual award show disruptor Kanye West decided not to attend, after having his invitation to perform withdrawn for "concerning online behaviour".
However, the star (who now goes by the name Ye) picked up two awards in the rap categories: best rap song for Jail and best melodic rap performance for Hurricane.
Bennett, meanwhile, became the second-oldest Grammy winner in history. The star, who is 95, won best traditional pop vocal album for the 14th time for Love for Sale, his collaborative album of Cole Porter songs with Lady Gaga.
The oldest Grammy winner remains 97-year-old Mississippi blues artist Pinetop Perkins, who won best traditional blues album in 2011 for his record Joined At The Hip. — BBC