Grammys President Responds To Beyoncé Snub, Insists Awards Ceremony Doesn't Have A Race Problem

'When you go to vote on a piece of music, you almost put a blindfold on to listen...'

Grammys President Neil Portnow has hit back at the suggestion that the awards show has a “race problem”, following Beyoncé’s snub over the weekend.

On Sunday night (12 February), Adele beat Beyoncé in all three of the major categories, including Album Of The Year.

However, when she went to collect her final award of the night, even Adele said that she “couldn’t possibly accept” the award, claiming that Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ was a more deserving winner than her own album, ‘Lemonade’.

This reopened the debate about whether black artists were being underrepresented at the Grammys, which Recording Academy President Neil has now dismissed.

Beyoncé and Neil Portnow
Beyoncé and Neil Portnow
Michael Kovac via Getty Images

He said (via Rolling Stone): “I don’t think there’s a race problem at all. Remember, this is a peer-voted award, it’s not a corporate entity – it’s the 14,000 members of the Academy.

“It’s always hard to create objectivity out of something that’s inherently subjective, which is what art and music is about. We do the best we can.”

Neil went on to insist that Academy members don’t consider race when listening to the nominated efforts, adding: “When you go to vote on a piece of music – at least the way that I approach it – is you almost put a blindfold on and you listen.

“It’s a matter of what you react to and what in your mind as a professional really rises to the highest level of excellence in any given year. And that is going to be very subjective. That’s what we ask our members to do, even in the ballots.”

Adele's speech will certainly go down in Grammys history
Adele's speech will certainly go down in Grammys history
Kevin Winter via Getty Images

One person who was quick to highlight the importance of awarding black artists was Grammy winner (and Beyoncé’s sister), Solange.

Taking to Twitter the morning after the Grammys, she highlighted the disparity between black performers invited to perform, and how few winners were of non-white origin, a point that was previously made by Kanye West when Beyoncé lost out to Adele in 2015.

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