by
ti-amie Bad Bunny makes Grammys history with nominations in 3 major categories: See the full list of 2026 nominees
The Puerto Rican superstar is the first Spanish-language artist to be nominated for Song, Album, and Record of the Year in a single year.
By Emlyn Travis and Jason Lamphier
Updated on November 7, 2025 12:00 p.m. ET
Take a picture of this! Bad Bunny has made Grammys history.

Bad Bunny.
Rodin Eckenroth/Getty
The 31-year-old "DtMF" singer and upcoming Super Bowl headliner officially became the first Spanish-language artist to receive nominations for Album, Record, and Song of the Year in a single year when the 2026 Grammy nominations were unveiled Friday morning.
The Puerto Rican superstar and three-time Grammy winner is nominated for six categories, bumping him up to 16 career nominations. Meanwhile, Kendrick Lamar once again proved that he's not like us, earning nine nominations for his sixth album, GNX, including Record, Album, and Song of the Year. Following close on his heels are Lady Gaga and songwriter-producers Jack Antonoff and Cirkut, who each racked up seven nods.
The 2026 Grammys will be held at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Feb. 1.
See the full list of major nominations below.
https://ew.com/grammy-nominations-2026- ... t-11845500
by ti-amie The 2026 Grammy nominations
Album of the Year
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny
Swag — Justin Bieber
Man's Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter
Let God Sort Em Out – Clipse, Pusha T & Malice
Mayhem — Lady Gaga
GNX — Kendrick Lamar
Mutt — Leon Thomas
Chromakopia — Tyler, the Creator
Record of the Year
"DtMF" — Bad Bunny
"Manchild" — Sabrina Carpenter
"Anxiety" — Doechii
"Wildflower" — Billie Eilish
"Abracadabra" — Lady Gaga
"Luther" – Kendrick Lamar with SZA
"The Subway" — Chappell Roan
"APT." — Rosé, Bruno Mars
Song of the Year
"Abracadabra" — Lady Gaga, Henry Walter & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Lady Gaga)
"Anxiety" — Jaylah Hickmon, songwriter (Doechii)
"APT." — Amy Allen, Christopher Brody Brown, Rogét Chahayed, Omer Fedi, Philip Lawrence, Bruno Mars, Chae Young Park, Theron Thomas & Henry Walter, songwriters (Rosé, Bruno Mars)
"DtMF" — Marco Daniel Borrero, Scott Dittrich, Benjamin Falik, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, Hugo René Sención Sanabria, Tyler Thomas Spry & Roberto José Rosado Torres, songwriters (Bad Bunny)
"Golden" (from KPop Demon Hunters) — Ejae & Mark Sonnenblick, songwriters (HUNTR/X: Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami)
"Luther" — Jack Antonoff, Roshwita Larisha Bacha, Matthew Bernard, Scott Bridgeway, Sam Dew, Ink, Kendrick Lamar, Solána Rowe, Mark Anthony Spears & Kamasi Washington, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar with SZA)
"Manchild" — Amy Allen, Jack Antonoff & Sabrina Carpenter, songwriters (Sabrina Carpenter)
"Wildflower" — Billie Eilish O'Connell & Finneas O'Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish)
Best New Artist
Olivia Dean
Katseye
The Marias
Addison Rae
Sombr
Leon Thomas
Alex Warren
Lola Young
Best Pop Vocal Album
Swag — Justin Bieber
Man's Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter
Something Beautiful — Miley Cyrus
Mayhem — Lady Gaga
I’ve Tried Everything but Therapy (Part 2) — Teddy Swims
Best Pop Solo Performance
"Daisies" — Justin Bieber
"Manchild" — Sabrina Carpenter
"Disease" — Lady Gaga
"The Subway" — Chappell Roan
"Messy" — Lola Young
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
"Defying Gravity" — Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande
"Golden" (from KPop Demon Hunters) — HUNTR/X: Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami
"Gabriela" — Katseye
"APT." — Rosé, Bruno Mars
"30 for 30" — SZA with Kendrick Lamar
Best Dance Pop Recording
"Bluest Flame" — Selena Gomez & Benny Blanco
"Abracadabra" — Lady Gaga
"Midnight Sun" — Zara Larsson
"Just Keep Watching" (from F1® The Movie) — Tate McRae
"Illegal" — PinkPantheress
Best Rap Album
Let God Sort Em Out — Clipse, Pusha T & Malice
Glorious — GloRilla
God Does Like Ugly — JID
GNX — Kendrick Lamar
Chromakopia — Tyler, the Creator
Best R&B Album
Beloved — Givēon
Why Not More? — Coco Jones
The Crown — Ledisi
Escape Room — Teyana Taylor
Mutt — Leon Thomas
Best R&B Performance
"Yukon" — Justin Bieber
"It Depends" — Chris Brown featuring Bryson Tiller
"Folded" — Kehlani
"Mutt (Live From NPR's Tiny Desk)" — Leon Thomas
"Heart of a Woman" — Summer Walker
Best Rock Album
Private Music — Deftones
I Quit — Haim
From Zero — Linkin Park
Never Enough — Turnstile
Idols — Yungblud
Best Rock Song
"As Alive as You Need Me to Be" — Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails)
"Caramel" — Vessel1 & Vessel2, songwriters (Sleep Token)
"Glum" — Daniel James & Hayley Williams, songwriters (Hayley Williams)
"Never Enough" — Daniel Fang, Franz Lyons, Pat McCrory, Meg Mills & Brendan Yates, songwriters (Turnstile)
"Zombie" — Dominic Harrison & Matt Schwartz, songwriters (Yungblud)
Best Alternative Music Album
Sable, Fable — Bon Iver
Songs of a Lost World — The Cure
Don't Tap the Glass — Tyler, the Creator
Moisturizer — Wet Leg
Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party — Hayley Williams
Best Metal Performance
"Night Terror" — Dream Theater
"Lachryma" — Ghost
"Emergence" — Sleep Token
"Soft Spine" — Spiritbox
"Birds" — Turnstile
Best Traditional Country Album
Dollar a Day — Charley Crockett
American Romance — Lukas Nelson
Oh What a Beautiful World — Willie Nelson
Hard Headed Woman — Margo Price
Ain't in It for My Health — Zach Top
Best Contemporary Country Album
Patterns — Kelsea Ballerini
Snipe Hunter — Tyler Childers
Evangeline vs. the Machine — Eric Church
Beautifully Broken — Jelly Roll
Postcards From Texas — Miranda Lambert
Best Country Solo Performance
"Nose on the Grindstone" — Tyler Childers
"Good News" — Shaboozey
"Bad as I Used to Be" (from F1® The Movie) — Chris Stapleton
"I Never Lie" — Zach Top
"Somewhere Over Laredo" — Lainey Wilson
Best Americana Album
Big Money — Jon Batiste
Bloom — Larkin Poe
Last Leaf on the Tree — Willie Nelson
So Long Little Miss Sunshine — Molly Tuttle
Middle — Jesse Welles
Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical
Amy Allen
Edgar Barrera
Jessie Jo Dillon
Tobias Jesso Jr.
Laura Veltz
Producer of the Year, Non-Classical
Dan Auerbach
Cirkut
Dijon
Blake Mills
Sounwave
Best Music Film
Devo — Devo
Live at the Royal Albert Hall — Raye
Relentless — Diane Warren
Music by John Williams — John Williams
Piece by Piece — Pharrell Williams
Best Song Written for Visual Media
"As Alive as You Need Me to Be" (from Tron: Ares) — Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails)
"Golden" (from KPop Demon Hunters) — Ejae & Mark Sonnenblick, songwriters (HUNTR/X: Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami)
"I Lied to You" (from Sinners) — Ludwig Göransson & Raphael Saadiq, songwriters (Miles Caton)
"Never Too Late (from Elton John: Never Too Late)— Brandi Carlile, Elton John, Bernie Taupin & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Elton John, Brandi Carlile)
"Pale, Pale Moon" (from Sinners) — Ludwig Göransson & Brittany Howard, songwriters (Jayme Lawson)
"Sinners" (from Sinners) — Leonard Denisenko, Rodarius Green, Travis Harrington, Tarkan Kozluklu, Kyris Mingo & Darius Povilinus, songwriters (Rod Wave)
Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media (including film and television)
How to Train Your Dragon — John Powell, composer
Severance: Season 2 — Theodore Shapiro, composer
Sinners — Ludwig Göransson, composer
Wicked — John Powell & Stephen Schwartz, composers
The Wild Robot — Kris Bowers, composer
Best Musical Theater Album
Buena Vista Social Club — Marco Paguia, Dean Sharenow & David Yazbek, producers (original Broadway cast)
Death Becomes Her — Taurean Everett, Megan Hilty, Josh Lamon, Christopher Sieber, Jennifer Simard & Michelle Williams, principal vocalists; Noel Carey, Sean Patrick Flahaven, Julia Mattison & Scott M. Riesett, producers; Noel Carey & Julia Mattison, composers/lyricists (original Broadway cast)
Gypsy — Danny Burstein, Kevin Csolak, Audra McDonald, Jordan Tyson & Joy Woods, principal vocalists; David Caddick, Andy Einhorn, David Lai & George C. Wolfe, producers (Jule Styne, composer; Stephen Sondheim, lyricist) (2024 Broadway cast)
Just in Time — Emily Bergl, Jonathan Groff, Erika Henningsen, Gracie Lawrence & Michele Pawk, principal vocalists; Derik Lee, Andrew Resnick & Bill Sherman, producers (Bobby Darin, composer & lyricist) (original Broadway cast)
Maybe Happy Ending — Marcus Choi, Darren Criss, Dez Duron & Helen J Shen, principal vocalists; Deborah Abramson, Will Aronson, Ian Kagey & Hue Park, producers; Hue Park, lyricist; Will Aronson, composer & lyricist (original Broadway cast)
Best Gospel Performance/Song
"Do It Again" — Kirk Franklin; Kirk Franklin, songwriter
"Church" — Tasha Cobbs Leonard, John Legend; Anthony S. Brown, Brunes Charles, Annatoria Chitapa, Kenneth Leonard, Jr., Tasha Cobbs Leonard & Jonas Myrin, songwriters
"Still (Live)" — Jonathan McReynolds & Jamal Roberts; Britney Delagraentiss, Jonathan McReynolds, David Lamar Outing III, Orlando Joel Palmer & Terrell Demetrius Wilson, songwriter
"Amen" — Pastor Mike Jr.; Adia Andrews, Michael McClure Jr., David Lamar Outing II & Terrell Anthony Pettus, songwriters
"Come Jesus Come" — Cece Winans featuring Shirley Caesa
Best Música Urbana Album
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny
Mixteip — J Balvin
Ferxxo Vol X: Sagrado — Feid
Naiki — Nicki Nicole
EUB Deluxe — Trueno
Sinfónico (En Vivo) — Yandel
Best Música Mexicana Album (including Tejano)
Mala Mía — Fuerza Regida, Grupo Frontera
Y Lo Que Viene — Grupo Frontera
Sin Rodeos — Paola Jara
Palabra De To's (Seca) — Carín León
Bobby Pulido & Friends Una Tuya Y Una Mía - Por La Puerta Grande (En Vivo) — Bobby Pulido
Best Latin Pop Album
Cosa Nuestra — Rauw Alejandro
Bogotá (Deluxe) — Andrés Cepeda
Tropicoqueta — Karol G
Cancionera — Natalia Lafourcade
¿Y ahora qué? — Alejandro Sanz
Best African Music Performance
"Love" — Burna Boy
"With You" — Davido featuring Omah Lay
"Hope & Love" — Eddy Kenzo & Mehran Matin
"Gimme Dat" — Ayra Starr featuring Wizkid
"Push 2 Start" — Tyla
Best Spoken Word Poetry Album
A Hurricane in Heels: Healed People Don't Act Like That (partially recorded live at City Winery & other places) — Queen Sheba
Black Shaman — Marc Marcel
Pages — Omari Hardwick & Anthony Hamilton
Saul Williams Meets Carlos Niño & Friends at Treepeople — Saul Williams, Carlos Niño & Friends
Words For Days Vol. 1 — Mad Skillz
by dryrunguy Nueva Yol is my jam from the DtMF album. But I get it. I'll be rooting for Zombie from YungBlud in the rock song category. Love that tune. And the music video is quite touching.
by ti-amie
Is he wearing a vest?
by
ti-amie Hunter Walker
@hunterw.bsky.social
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Bad Bunny at the Grammys: "Before I say thanks to God, I want to say ICE out. We're not savage, we're not animals, we're not aliens, we are humans, and we are Americans."
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ti-amie Here Are the 2026 Grammys Winners: Full List
Bad Bunny took home the top prize, album of the year.
2/1/2026

Bad Bunny accepts the Best Música Urbana Album onstage during the 68th GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 01, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy
The 2026 Grammys are a wrap, and awards in 95 categories were handed out on Sunday (Feb. 1) — but who left the night’s biggest winner?
Bad Bunny took home the top prize, album of the year, for DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, among his three awards for the night, and he also accepted best música urbana album on the prime-time telecast and won best global music performance for “EoO” earlier in the day. But Kendrick Lamar was the top winner, taking home five awards, including record of the year for “luther” with SZA and best rap album for GNX.
Billboard was following along all day, starting with the Grammy Premiere Ceremony — where 86 of the prizes were handed out — which led in to the prime-time broadcast, where the final nine 2026 awards were doled out.
One of the most-watched races was album of the year, where first-time nominees in the category Leon Thomas, Clipse and Tyler, the Creator faced off against AOTY nominee vets Bad Bunny, Justin Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter, Lady Gaga and Kendrick Lamar. All eight nominees had never won in the category before — but Bad Bunny is now the reigning champ. Thomas was up for his breakthrough album Mutt; Clipse (brother duo Pusha T and Malice) were up for their comeback album Let God Sort Em Out; Tyler was up for CHROMAKOPIA; Bieber was up for SWAG; Carpenter was up for Man’s Best Friend; Gaga was up for MAYHEM; and Lamar was up for GNX.
You can find our complete winners list below. (Next Post)
https://www.billboard.com/lists/2026-gr ... ners-list/
by ti-amie Album of the Year
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny — WINNER
Record of the Year
Luther — Kendrick Lamar with SZA — WINNER
Song of the Year
WILDFLOWER — Billie Eilish O'Connell & Finneas O'Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish) — WINNER
Best New Artist
Olivia Dean — WINNER
Producer of the Year, Non-Classical
Cirkut — WINNER
Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical
Amy Allen — WINNER
Best Pop Solo Performance
Messy — Lola Young — WINNER
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
Defying Gravity — Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande — WINNER
Best Pop Vocal Album
MAYHEM — Lady Gaga — WINNER
Best Dance/Electronic Recording
End of Summer — Tame Impala — WINNER
Best Dance Pop Recording
Abracadabra — Lady Gaga — WINNER
Best Dance/Electronic Album
EUSEXUA — FKA twigs
Best Remixed Recording
Abracadabra (Gesaffelstein Remix) Gesaffelstein, remixer (Lady Gaga, Gesaffelstein)
Best Rock Performance
Changes (Live From Villa Park) Back to the Beginning – YUNGBLUD Featuring Nuno Bettencourt, Frank Bello, Adam Wakeman, II — WINNER
Best Metal Performance
BIRDS — Turnstile — WINNER
Best Rock Song
As Alive as You Need Me to Be — Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, songwriters (Nine Inch Nails) — WINNER
Best Rock Album
NEVER ENOUGH — Turnstile — WINNER
Best R&B Performance
Folded — Kehlani — WINNER
Best Traditional R&B Performance
VIBES DON'T LIE — Leon Thomas — WINNER
Best R&B Song
Folded — Darius Dixson, Andre Harris, Kehlani Parrish, Donovan Knight, Don Mills, Khris Riddick-Tynes & Dawit Kamal Wilson, songwriters (Kehlani) — WINNER
Best Progressive R&B Album
BLOOM — Durand Bernarr — WINNER
Best R&B Album
MUTT — Leon Thomas — WINNER
Best Rap Performance
Chains & Whips — Clipse, Pusha T & Malice Featuring Kendrick Lamar & Pharrell Williams — WINNER
Best Melodic Rap Performance
Luther — Kendrick Lamar with SZA — WINNER
Best Rap Song
tv off — Jack Antonoff, Larry Jayy, Kendrick Lamar, Dijon McFarlane, Sean Momberger, Mark Anthony Spears & Kamasi Washington, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar Featuring Lefty Gunplay) — WINNER
Best Rap Album
GNX — Kendrick Lamar — WINNER
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album
A Matter of Time — Laufey — WINNER
by
ti-amie Best Musical Theater Album
Buena Vista Social Club — WINNER
Best Country Solo Performance
Bad As I Used to Be [From "F1® The Movie"] — Chris Stapleton
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
Amen — Shaboozey & Jelly Roll — WINNER
Best Country Song
Bitin’ List — Tyler Childers, songwriter (Tyler Childers) — WINNER
Best Traditional Country Album
Ain't in It for My Health — Zach Top — WINNER
Best Contemporary Country Album
Beautifully Broken — Jelly Roll — WINNER
Best Latin Pop Album
Cancionera — Natalia Lafourcade — WINNER
Best Música Urbana Album
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny — WINNER
Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album
PAPOTA — CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso — WINNER
Best Música Mexicana Album (including Tejano)
Palabra De To's (Seca) — Carín León — WINNER
Best Tropical Latin Album
Raíces — Gloria Estefan — WINNER
Complete list of winners:
https://people.com/grammys-2026-complet ... t-11892922
by
ti-amie Jelly Roll slammed for 'very MAGA' Grammys speech after veiled Bad Bunny swipe
Country star Jelly Roll delivered an emotional speech as he accepted his first-ever Grammy wins at the 68th annual awards
By Lauren DuBois, Caroline Gaspich

via The Express
21:40 ET, Sun, Feb 1, 2026 Updated: 23:52 ET, Sun, Feb 1, 2026
Country star Jelly Roll was branded "very MAGA" as he delivered an emotional faith-based speech after accepting his first-ever Grammy win.
At the 2026 Grammy Awards, Jelly Roll won multiple awards, including Best Country Duo/Group Performance for Amen with Shaboozey and Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for Hard Fought Hallelujah with Brandon Lake. He was also recognized for Best Contemporary Country Album for Beautifully Broken.
The 41-year-old singer, who previously broke down after MAGA backlash, expressed his gratitude for the recognition and profusely thanked God. In his speech, he passionately thanked his wife, his record label, and his faith in God for carrying him through the darkest days of his life and for leading him to achieve everything he has in music.
In his speech, Jelly Roll was seen carrying a hand-sized Bible and said, "I remember there was a moment in my life, and all I had was a Bible this big and a radio the same size and a 6 by 8 foot cell, and I believed that those two things could change my life. I believed that music had the power to change my life, and God had the power to change my life."
He continued, "And I want to tell y'all right now, Jesus is for everybody. Jesus is not known by one political party; Jesus is not owned by any label. Jesus is Jesus, and anybody can have a relationship with him. I love you, lord."
But many thought his speech was MAGA-coded, especially after a pointed comment targeted toward Bad Bunny's performance at the Super Bowl.
On the red carpet, Jelly Roll suggested that the half-time show needs to be a country music show, something that did not land for many Grammy viewers. In addition to this, many viewers were disappointed as Jelly Roll failed to speak out on ICE amid escalating violence.
Reacting to Jelly Roll's speech on X, one person wrote, "Of course Jelly Roll wouldn’t get on stage and denounce ICE like several of his peers did UNAPOLOGETICALLY. He got on stage and did a fake sermon. And yes, he absolutely is MAGA. F--k him and that MAGA festival he’s doing."
Another added, "Jelly Roll talking about God and Jesus while being part of a MAGA music festival. Fake a-- Christian motherf-----r."
While a third chimed in, "I yelled 'f--- you' at my screen the second they announced Jelly Roll as the winner for that last country category. That 100% should have gone to Snipe Hunter by Tyler Childers. F--k the academy for awarding Jelly's maga a--."
And a fourth critic wrote, "Jelly Roll shoving Religion down everyone’s throats. Sit down and calm down. Stop yelling and preaching."
The 68th annual Grammy Awards will see some of the biggest names in Music compete for top honors from the Recording Academy, and this led to some major moments. The show, which was held at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com arena and hosted by former Daily Show host Trevor Noah, honored the accomplishments of several artists through 2025.
With a tightly packed race for several of the biggest awards of the night, the show was sure to have several moments that took fans by surprise.
https://www.the-express.com/entertainme ... ch-grammys
by ptmcmahon Did Jelly Roll actually say anything about Bad Bunny? I didnt watch but all I can find online is that he wants a future Super Bowl in Nashville and it should have a country half time show.
by
mmmm8 ptmcmahon wrote: ↑Mon Feb 02, 2026 1:51 pm
Did Jelly Roll actually say anything about Bad Bunny? I didnt watch but all I can find online is that he wants a future Super Bowl in Nashville and it should have a country half time show.
No, and people should listen to him when he says:
Jelly Roll Sidesteps Politics at Grammys, Says ‘I’m a Dumb Redneck’ and ‘People Shouldn’t Care to Hear My Opinion’
https://variety.com/2026/music/awards/j ... 236649204/
There were pictures of him with Trump in the past, though.
The only reason I've heard of this guy is because he did a (good) song with Shaboozey.
by
ptmcmahon Yeah I knew him from "hard rock" songs previously as well. I don't necessarily agree with his views (especially if he's friends with Trump) and what he says/thinks but he doesn't seem to be saying anything in an inflammatory way.
I've never seen a big issue with people touting their religion either as long as they aren't mocking others about it. If you're proud of it, be proud. I see nothing wrong there either.
If he said "every other one of you sinners is going to burn in hell" that'd be different

by mmmm8
Basically my thoughts.