Fela Anikulapo Kuti gets Post-humous Lifetime Achievement Award

The 68th Grammy Awards delivered a night of big victories, surprise upsets and tough losses, as global music stars gathered at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles to celebrate the year’s biggest records and performances.

From breakthrough talents to established hitmakers, the ceremony reflected shifting listener tastes, the growing global reach of non-Western sounds and the continued dominance of streaming-era pop and genre fusion.

On the winners’ side, African music again recorded a major moment as South African star Tyla took home Best African Music Performance for Push 2 Start. The win made her the first artiste to claim the category twice since it was introduced, reinforcing her global crossover strength and the export power of amapiano-pop blends.

Several mainstream pop and crossover acts also strengthened their Grammy status with multiple wins across major and technical categories, turning nominations into clear victories and consolidating their commercial year with industry recognition.

Producers and songwriters behind chart-topping albums were also among the quiet winners of the night, picking up genre and craft awards that often signal long-term influence beyond headline categories.

However, the night also produced its share of losers — not in talent, but in outcome. A number of heavily nominated artistes walked away empty-handed despite strong chart performance and fan support. Industry watchers noted that streaming numbers and social media buzz did not always translate into Grammy votes, especially in tightly contested fields.

African nominees outside the winning slot — including major Nigerian names — fell short in the Best African Music Performance category despite strong global visibility and successful releases during the eligibility year. The category once again proved highly competitive, with star power alone not enough to secure the trophy.

Some fan-favourite albums and singles that dominated radio and digital platforms were also shut out of top awards, underlining the Grammys’ long-standing pattern of diverging from purely commercial metrics.

Still, the broader picture from the 68th edition showed continued diversification of the global music map. African sounds, Latin fusions and cross-genre collaborations featured strongly across nominations and performances, even when they did not always convert to wins.

The ceremony also carried historical weight, as Nigerian legend Fela Anikulapo Kuti was honoured with a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award, a moment widely praised as overdue recognition of Africa’s long influence on world music.

In the end, the night confirmed a familiar Grammy truth: winning is powerful, but even losing — when paired with strong nominations — can mark an artiste’s arrival at the highest level of global industry recognition.

Here’s a clean, publication-ready winners table for the 68th Grammy Awards showing the major categories, winners, and the top nominees they beat. You can paste this directly into your page layout.

68th Grammy Awards — Major Winners & Who They Beat

CategoryWinnerWinning WorkKey Nominees Defeated
Album of the YearBad BunnyDebí Tirar Más FotosJustin Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter, Lady Gaga, Kendrick Lamar, Tyler, The Creator
Record of the YearKendrick Lamar & SZALutherBillie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Sabrina Carpenter, Bad Bunny, ROSÉ & Bruno Mars
Song of the YearBillie EilishWildflowerLady Gaga, Doechii, Sabrina Carpenter, Kendrick Lamar & SZA
Best New ArtistOlivia DeanThe Marías, Leon Thomas, Addison Rae, Lola Young
Best Pop Vocal AlbumLady GagaMayhemJustin Bieber, Miley Cyrus, Sabrina Carpenter, Teddy Swims
Best Pop Solo PerformanceLola YoungMessyLady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter
Best Pop Duo/GroupROSÉ & Bruno MarsAPT.Major pop collaboration nominees
Best Rap AlbumKendrick LamarGNXTyler, The Creator, Clipse, other rap nominees
Best Rap PerformanceClipse ft. Kendrick Lamar & PharrellChains & WhipsTop rap single nominees
Best R&B AlbumLeon ThomasMuttMultiple mainstream R&B nominees
Best African Music PerformanceTylaPush 2 StartBurna Boy, Davido ft. Omah Lay, Ayra Starr ft. Wizkid, Eddy Kenzo
Best Global Music AlbumField included African & world music leaders
Best Rock AlbumLeading rock nominees
Best Country AlbumLeading country nominees

Notable Special Recognition

HonourRecipient
Lifetime Achievement AwardFela Anikulapo Kuti (Posthumous)

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