Thursday, 13 March 2025

67th GRAMMY Awards - Full Winners & Nominees List





















2025 GRAMMYs: See The Full Winners & Nominees List

The 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards were broadcast live on Sunday, February 2, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA.

From Beyoncé's COWBOY CARTER making history, winning her first Album Of The Year award and becoming the first Black woman to ever take home a golden gramophone in the Best Country Album, to Kendrick Lamar's “Not Like Us” sweeping in all five categories he was nominated in, the 2025 GRAMMYs were a monumental show that showcases why GRAMMY Sunday is Music's Biggest Night. Aside from notable award wins, electrifying performances from artists like Doechii and Chappell Roan rattled Crypto.com Arena and entirely transformed the energy in the room.

Following her momentous first Album Of The Year win, Beyoncé also earned the night's biggest boost for an album. COWBOY CARTER, which also won Best Country Duo/Group Performance for the Miley Cyrus collab "II MOST WANTED," earned 25,000 equivalent album units post-GRAMMYs — a 254 percent gain.

Kacey Musgraves won the 2025 Grammy for Best Country Song with "The Architect." She expressed surprise in her acceptance speech, thanking her team and fans. Musgraves highlighted the importance of fighting darkness through music. Co-written with Shane McAnally and Josh Osborne, "The Architect" is from her album "Deeper Well," released last year.

Chris Stapleton won his 11th GRAMMY for Best Country Solo Performance, and WOODLAND, the latest album by Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, was recognized as Best Folk Album.

Sierra Ferrell, a native of West Virginia and an emerging bluegrass and country artist, achieved notable success by winning in each of the four categories in which she was nominated. She secured awards for Best Americana Album (TRAIL OF FLOWERS), Best American Roots Performance, Best Americana Performance ("Lighthouse"), and Best American Roots Song. The latter award is shared with her co-writer, musician, songwriter, and vocalist Melody Walker.





















ABOVE: Sierra Ferrell: Photo Courtesy of the Richard Shotwell/AP/GRAMMYs

The Americana Music Association congratulated Sierra Ferrell for her wins in the Americana and American Roots categories.
Winners in the American Roots Music Field also included: The Taj Mahal Sextet (Swingin' Live At The Church In Tulsa) for Best Traditional Blues Album; Ruthie Foster (Mileage) for Best Contemporary Blues Album and Kalani Pe'a (Kuini) for Best Regional Roots Music Album award.

The award for Best Bluegrass Album was won by flatpick guitarist Billy Strings for Live Vol. 1, marking his second Grammy win after seven nominations over the last five years.

Watch The Top Moments From The 2025 GRAMMYs

2025 GRAMMYs FASHION

Beyonce donned a gold/ white Schiaparelli Haute Couture gown (Styled By – shionat | HMU – Neal Farinah, Rokael Lizama) and the embroidery rocked a country-inspired theme but the bust was too tight and underwire was visible. See Instagram Post

Kacey Musgraves' Ralph Lauren Collection Spring 2025 outfit struck a perfect balance. A simple white tank allowed the embellished skirt to shine, while a leather cast concho belt—collaboratively made with Navajo silversmith Jimmy Begay Jr. and Shiprock Santa Fe Gallery—added a touch of country flair.

CINDERELLA-INSPIRED CARPET WINNER: Sabrina Carpenter wore a custom JW Anderson gown. A pale blue dream dress with a halter neckline, peplum detailing, and feather accents added a touch of whimsy.













































CLASSIC TAY: With The Tortured Poets Department leading the 2025 Grammy nominations for Album of the Year, Song of the Year, and Record of the Year, Taylor Swift had every reason to present herself with confidence and elegance wearing a red custom Vivienne Westwood mini dress.

Kelsea Ballerini showcased French elegance in a black bugle-beaded mini dress from Tamara Ralph Couture Fall 2024. The dress's dazzling embellishments and perfect fit exuded glamour, but the addition of a white cape might spark mixed opinions.

WHIRLY-TWIRLY: Sierra Ferrell made a significant impact at the Grammys, securing four awards while adorned in an elaborate white gown designed by Jeffrey Kelly Designs. The dress, reminiscent of a bold bridal ensemble, included large luminescent sleeves, pearl embellishments throughout, and a coordinating choker.

Red Carpet Fashion Cam

Red Carpet Gallery – HERE

The Recording Academy's Voting Members, composed of music creators, including artists, producers, songwriters, and engineers determine the GRAMMY winners across all categories revealed on every GRAMMY night. This thorough process underscores the integrity of the GRAMMY Awards as music's only industry-recognized, peer-voted honor.

Key dates for the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards season were as follows:

Sept. 16, 2023 – Aug. 30, 2024 Product Eligibility Period
July 8, 2024 – Aug. 23, 2024 Media Company Registration Period
July 17, 2024 – Aug. 30, 2024 Online Entry Period
Oct. 4, 2024 – Oct. 15, 2024 First Round Voting
Nov. 8, 2024 Nominees Announced for the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards
Dec. 12, 2024 – Jan. 3, 2025 Final Round Voting
Feb. 2, 2025 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards

*** Country & Americana interest shown in BLUE ***

General Field
CATEGORY 1
Record Of The Year]
Award to the Artist(s), Album Producer(s), Recording Engineer(s), and/or Mixer(s), and Mastering Engineer(s) if other than the artist

Now and Then” - The Beatles 
"TEXAS HOLD 'EM" – Beyoncé
"Espresso" – Sabrina Carpenter
"360" – Charli xcx
"BIRDS OF A FEATHER" – Billie Eilish
"Not Like Us" – Kendrick Lamar - WINNER
"Good Luck, Babe!" –  Chappell Roan
"Fortnight" – Taylor Swift Featuring Post Malone

CATEGORY 2
Album Of The Year
Award to Artist(s) and to Featured Artist(s), Songwriter(s) of new material, Producer(s), Recording Engineer(s), Mixer(s) and Mastering Engineer(s) credited with 20% or more playing time of the album.)

New Blue Sun – André 3000
COWBOY CARTER – Beyoncé WINNER
Short n' Sweet – Sabrina Carpenter
BRAT – Charli xcx
Djesse Vol. 4 – Jacob Collier
HIT ME HARD AND SOFT – Billie Eilish
Chappell Roan The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess – Chappell Roan
THE TORTURED POETS DEPARTMENT – Taylor Swift

CATEGORY 3
Song Of The Year
A Songwriter(s) Award. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.

"A Bar Song (Tipsy)" — Sean Cook, Jerrel Jones, Joe Kent, Chibueze Collins Obinna, Nevin Sastry & Mark Williams, songwriters (Shaboozey)
"BIRDS OF A FEATHER" — Billie Eilish O'Connell & Finneas O'Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish)
"Die With A Smile" — Dernst Emile II, James Fauntleroy, Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars & Andrew Watt, songwriters (Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars)
"Fortnight" — Jack Antonoff, Austin Post & Taylor Swift, songwriters (Taylor Swift Featuring Post Malone)
"Good Luck, Babe!" — Kayleigh Rose Amstutz, Daniel Nigro & Justin Tranter, songwriters (Chappell Roan)
"Not Like Us" — Kendrick Lamar, songwriter (Kendrick Lamar) - WINNER
"Please Please Please" — Amy Allen, Jack Antonoff & Sabrina Carpenter, songwriters (Sabrina Carpenter)
"TEXAS HOLD 'EM" — Brian Bates, Atia Boggs, Beyoncé, Elizabeth Lowell Boland, Megan Bülow, Nate Ferraro & Raphael Saadiq, songwriters (Beyoncé)

CATEGORY 4
Best New Artist
This category recognizes an artist whose eligibility-year release(s) achieved a breakthrough into the public consciousness and notably impacted the musical landscape.

Benson Boone, Sabrina Carpenter, Doechii, Khruangbin, Raye, Chappell Roan – WINNER, Shaboozey, Teddy Swims

CATEGORY 6
Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical
A Songwriter's Award. (Artists' names appear in parentheses.) (S) stands for Single, (T) stands for Track, and (A) stands for Album.

Jessi Alexander, Amy Allen – WINNER, Edgar Barrera, Jessie Jo Dillon, RAYE

Field 5: Country & American Roots Music

CATEGORY 39
Best Country Solo Performance
For new vocal or instrumental solo country recordings.

"16 CARRIAGES" — Beyoncé
"I Am Not Okay" — Jelly Roll
"The Architect" — Kacey Musgraves
"A Bar Song (Tipsy)" — Shaboozey
"It Takes A Woman" — Chris Stapleton - WINNER

CATEGORY 40
Best Country Duo/Group Performance
For new vocal or instrumental duo/group or collaborative country recordings.

"Cowboys Cry Too" — Kelsea Ballerini With Noah Kahan
"II MOST WANTED" — Beyoncé Featuring Miley Cyrus - WINNER
"Break Mine" — Brothers Osborne
"Bigger Houses" — Dan + Shay
"I Had Some Help" — Post Malone Featuring Morgan Wallen

CATEGORY 41
Best Country Song
A Songwriter(s) Award. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.

"The Architect" — Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves & Josh Osborne, songwriters (Kacey Musgraves) - WINNER

"A Bar Song (Tipsy)" — Sean Cook, Jerrel Jones, Joe Kent, Chibueze Collins Obinna, Nevin Sastry & Mark Williams, songwriters (Shaboozey)

"I Am Not Okay" — Casey Brown, Jason DeFord, Ashley Gorley & Taylor Phillips, songwriters (Jelly Roll)

"I Had Some Help" — Louis Bell, Ashley Gorley, Hoskins, Austin Post, Ernest Smith, Ryan Vojtesak, Morgan Wallen & Chandler Paul Walters, songwriters (Post Malone Featuring Morgan Wallen)

"TEXAS HOLD 'EM" — Brian Bates, Atia Boggs, Beyoncé, Elizabeth Lowell Boland, Megan Bülow, Nate Ferraro & Raphael Saadiq, songwriters (Beyoncé)

CATEGORY 42
Best Country Album
For albums containing greater than 75% playing time of new country recordings.

COWBOY CARTER — Beyoncé - WINNER
F-1 Trillion — Post Malone
Deeper Well — Kacey Musgraves
Higher — Chris Stapleton
Whirlwind — Lainey Wilson

CATEGORY 43
Best American Roots Performance
For new vocal or instrumental American Roots recordings. This is for performances in the style of any of the subgenres encompassed in the American Roots Music field including bluegrass, blues, folk or regional roots. Award to the artist(s).

"Blame It On Eve" — Shemekia Copeland
"Nothing In Rambling" — The Fabulous Thunderbirds Featuring Bonnie Raitt, Keb' Mo', Taj Mahal & Mick Fleetwood
"Lighthouse" — Sierra Ferrell - WINNER
"The Ballad Of Sally Anne" — Rhiannon Giddens

CATEGORY 44
Best Americana Performance
For new vocal or instrumental Americana performance. Award to the artist(s).

"YA YA" — Beyoncé
"Subtitles" — Madison Cunningham
"Don't Do Me Good" — Madi Diaz Featuring Kacey Musgraves
"American Dreaming" — Sierra Ferrell - WINNER
"Runaway Train" — Sarah Jarosz
"Empty Trainload Of Sky" — Gillian Welch & David Rawlings

CATEGORY 45
Best American Roots Song
A Songwriter(s) Award. Includes Americana, bluegrass, traditional blues, contemporary blues, folk or regional roots songs. A song is eligible if it was first released or if it first achieved prominence during the Eligibility Year. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.

"Ahead Of The Game" — Mark Knopfler, songwriter (Mark Knopfler)
"All In Good Time" — Sam Beam, songwriter (Iron & Wine Featuring Fiona Apple)
"All My Friends" — Aoife O'Donovan, songwriter (Aoife O'Donovan)
"American Dreaming" — Sierra Ferrell & Melody Walker, songwriters (Sierra Ferrell) - WINNER
"Blame It On Eve" — John Hahn & Will Kimbrough, songwriters (Shemekia Copeland)

CATEGORY 46
Best Americana Album
For albums containing greater than 75% playing time of new vocal or instrumental Americana recordings.

The Other Side — T Bone Burnett
$10 Cowboy — Charley Crockett
Trail Of Flowers — Sierra Ferrell - WINNER
Polaroid Lovers — Sarah Jarosz
No One Gets Out Alive — Maggie Rose
Tigers Blood — Waxahatchee

CATEGORY 47
Best Bluegrass Album
For albums containing greater than 75% playing time of new vocal or instrumental bluegrass recordings.
I Built A World — Bronwyn Keith-Hynes
Songs of Love and Life — The Del McCoury Band
No Fear — Sister Sadie
Live Vol. 1 — Billy Strings - WINNER
Earl Jam — Tony Trischka
Dan Tyminski: Live From The Ryman — Dan Tyminski

CATEGORY 50
Best Folk Album
For albums containing greater than 75% playing time of new vocal or instrumental folk recordings.
American Patchwork Quartet — American Patchwork Quartet
Weird Faith — Madi Diaz
Bright Future — Adrianne Lenker
All My Friends — Aoife O'Donovan
Woodland — Gillian Welch & David Rawlings - WINNER

CATEGORY 70
Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media

Award to the principal artist(s) and/or ‘in studio’ producer(s) of a majority of the tracks on the album. Award also goes to appropriately credited music supervisor(s).

The Color Purple — (Various Artists) Nick Baxter, Blitz Bazawule & Stephen Bray, compilation producers; Jordan Carroll & Morgan Rhodes, music supervisors

Deadpool & Wolverine — (Various Artists) Dave Jordan, Shawn Levy & Ryan Reynolds, compilation producers; Dave Jordan, music supervisor

Maestro: Music By Leonard Bernstein — Bradley Cooper & Yannick Nézet-Séguin, artists; Bradley Cooper, Yannick Nézet-Séguin & Jason Ruder, compilation producers; Steven Gizicki, music supervisor - WINNER

Saltburn — (Various Artists) Emerald Fennell, compilation producer; Kirsten Lane, music supervisor

Twisters: The Album — (Various Artists) Ian Cripps, Brandon Davis, Joe Khoury & Kevin Weaver, compilation producers; Mike Knobloch & Rachel Levy, music supervisors

CATEGORY 80
Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical
An Engineer's Award. (Artists' names appear in parentheses.)

Algorithm — Dernst Emile II, Michael B. Hunter, Stephan Johnson, Rachel Keen, John Kercy, Charles Moniz & Todd Robinson, engineers; Colin Leonard, mastering engineer (Lucky Daye)

Cyan Blue — Jack Emblem, Jack Rochon & Charlotte Day Wilson, engineers; Chris Gehringer, mastering engineer (Charlotte Day Wilson)

Deeper Well — Craig Alvin, Shawn Everett, Mai Leisz, Todd Lombardo, John Rooney, Konrad Snyder & Daniel Tashian, engineers; Greg Calbi, mastering engineer (Kacey Musgraves)

empathogen — Beatriz Artola, Zach Brown, Oscar Cornejo, Chris Greatti, Mitch McCarthy, Adam Schoeller & Willow Smith, engineers; Joe LaPorta, mastering engineer (WILLOW)

i/o — Tchad Blake, Oli Jacobs, Katie May, Dom Shaw & Mark “Spike” Stent, engineers; Matt Colton, mastering engineer (Peter Gabriel) - WINNER

Short n' Sweet — Bryce Bordone, Julian Bunetta, Serban Ghenea, Jeff Gunnell, Oli Jacobs, Ian Kirkpatrick, Jack Manning, Manny Marroquin, John Ryan & Laura Sisk, engineers; Nathan Dantzler & Ruairi O'Flaherty, mastering engineers (Sabrina Carpenter)

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