| Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance | |
|---|---|
"Not Like Us" byKendrick Lamar is the most recent recipient | |
| Awarded for | Qualityrap performances |
| Country | United States |
| Presented by | National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences |
| First award | 1989 |
| Currently held by | Kendrick Lamar, "Not Like Us" (2025) |
| Website | grammy.com |
TheGrammy Award for Best Rap Performance is an honor presented to recording artists for qualityrap performances. It was first presented at the31st Annual Grammy Awards in 1989 and again at the32nd Annual Grammy Awards in 1990, after which point the award was split into two categories:Best Rap Solo Performance andBest Rap Performance by a Duo or Group. These two categories were combined again in 2012 as a result of a restructure of Grammy categories, and the reinstated Award for Best Rap Performance was presented at the54th Grammy Awards in 2012. The restructuring was the consequence of the Recording Academy's wish to decrease the number of categories and awards and to eliminate distinctions between solo and duo or group performances.[1]
TheGrammy Awards, an annual ceremony established in 1958, and originally called the Gramophone Awards,[2] are presented by theNational Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) of the United States to "honor artistic achievement, technical proficiency and overall excellence in the recording industry, without regard to album sales or chart position".[3]
The award goes to the artist. The producer, engineer, and songwriter can apply for a Winner's Certificate.[4]
The first award for Best Rap Performance was presented toDJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince (the vocal duo consisting ofDJ Jazzy Jeff andWill Smith) for "Parents Just Don't Understand".[5] The ceremony was not without controversy; nominees Jeff and Smith led aboycott in protest of the awards presentation not being televised, and some members of the rap community felt that more qualified artists were overlooked. After the reintroduction of the category in 2012, American rappersJay-Z andKanye West won the award two consecutive times; the two rappers were surpassed in terms of wins by fellow American rapperKendrick Lamar, who holds the record with seven awards. American rapperMegan Thee Stallion and American singer-songwriterBeyoncé became the first female artists to win the category with "Savage (Remix)".
The Best Rap Performance category was first presented at the 31st Annual Grammy Awards in 1989.[5] NARAS President Mike Green said inBillboard that the music genre has "matured into several kinds of music, with several kinds of artists doing it".[6] Diane Theriot, a representative of the awards department for the academy, recalled being "inundated with eligible rap entries during the first few years of having the category".[7] In 1991, the category was split into the categories Best Rap Solo Performance and Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group. Recognizing that both categories were continuing to receive numerous entries, theBest Rap Album recognition was established for the38th Grammy Awards in 1996—the inaugural award was presented toNaughty by Nature forPoverty's Paradise.[7] In 2003, the Best Rap Solo Performance category was divided into separate recognitions forFemale andMale Rap Solo Performances. The categories remained separated by gender until 2005 when they were combined into the genderless category originally known as Best Rap Solo Performance. Additional rap categories includeBest Rap/Sung Collaboration andBest Rap Song, established in2002 and2004, respectively.[8]


For the 31st Grammy Awards (1989), Best Rap Performance nominees included DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince for "Parents Just Don't Understand",J. J. Fad for "Supersonic" (from thealbum of the same name),Kool Moe Dee for "Wild Wild West",LL Cool J for "Going Back to Cali", andSalt-n-Pepa (the duo consisting ofCheryl James andSandra Denton) for "Push It".[9] The duo known as DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince consisted of DJ Jazzy Jeff (birth name Jeffrey Townes) and actor Will Smith, whose nickname also appeared in the American television sitcomThe Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, in which he starred.[10] "Parents Just Don't Understand" appeared on the duo's 1988 albumHe's the DJ, I'm the Rapper.[11] "Going Back to Cali" appeared on thesoundtrack to the filmLess than Zero as well as LL Cool J's 1989 studio albumWalking with a Panther.[12][13] Kool Moe Dee's "Wild Wild West" and Salt-n-Pepa's "Push It" appeared on the albumsHow Ya Like Me Now andHot, Cool & Vicious, respectively.[14][15]
Rap andheavy metal categories were introduced the same year (along withBest Bluegrass Album),[16] but, according to the show's producers, time constraints prevented both categories from being televised.[17] Nominee Kool Moe Dee performed during the ceremony, but the rap award was presented during the "usually fast-paced pre-televised ceremony".[18] DJ Jazzy Jeff and Will Smith led a boycott of the ceremony and were joined by fellow nominees LL Cool J and Salt-n-Pepa. Salt-n-Pepa issued the following statement: "If they don't want us, we don't want them."[17] Adding to the controversy surrounding the category, some members of the rap community believed artists such asBig Daddy Kane,KRS-One, andN.W.A (whose debut albumStraight Outta Compton "launchedgangsta rap") were overlooked.[5] Awards were presented to Jeff and Smith at theShrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.[19] While Smith was absent from the ceremony, Jeff was present to accept his award.[20] In 2004, Serena Kappes ofPeople magazine ranked Smith's ceremony boycott number eight on its list of Top 10 Grammy Moments.[20] Jeff and Smith were also recognized by theAmerican Music Awards in1989 with awards for Favorite Rap Artists and Favorite Rap Album, and "Parent's Just Don't Understand" also earned the duo thefirstMTV Video Music Award forBest Rap Video.[21] Smith later earned Best Rap Solo Performance awards in1998 for "Men in Black" and1999 for "Gettin' Jiggy wit It", and was nominated again in2000 for "Wild Wild West".[22]
Nominees for the 32nd Annual Grammy Awards includedDe La Soul for "Me Myself and I", DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince for "I Think I Can Beat Mike Tyson",Public Enemy for "Fight the Power",Tone Lōc for "Funky Cold Medina", andYoung MC for "Bust a Move".[23] "Me Myself and I" appears on De La Soul's studio album3 Feet High and Rising and in 2008 was ranked number 46 onVH1's list of the 100 Greatest Hip Hop Songs Ever!!![24][25] "I Think I Can Beat Mike Tyson", written by the duo along with Pete Harris, appears on DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince's third albumAnd in This Corner....[26] "Fight the Power" appeared on the 1988soundtrack for the filmDo the Right Thing and later on Public Enemy's third studio albumFear of a Black Planet (1990).[27][28] The song ranked number one on VH1's aforementioned list, number 40 onAFI's 100 Years...100 Songs list,[29] and number 322 onRolling Stone's 2004 list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[30] "Funky Cold Medina", written by Young MC, Michael L. Ross andMatt Dike, first appeared on Tone Lōc's debut albumLōc-ed After Dark.[31] "Bust a Move" appeared on Young MC's debut albumStone Cold Rhymin'.[32]Allmusic editorStephen Thomas Erlewine described the song as "unabashed catchy" due to its "skittish, rhythmic guitar riff, looped beats", backing vocals, and "funny" rhymes.[33] The award was presented to Young MC.[7] In 2010, Joshua Ostroff ofSpinner included Young MC's win on his list of "The Grammy Awards' Biggest Mistakes", asserting that "Bust a Move" was merely a "fun little hip-pop song" while "Fight the Power" was a "revelatory single that still stands tall as one of music's greatest (and funkiest) political statements and perhaps hip-hop's finest moment".[34]





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