Music

Grammys 2023: Why Harry Styles beating Beyoncé isn't really a surprise

It has been billed as the shock of the Grammys: Harry Styles took home Album of the Year instead of Beyoncé. But should we really be surprised?

Harry Styles collects the award for Album of the Year at the Grammys 2023. Photo by Rob Latour/ Shutterstock

Harry Styles collects the award for Album of the Year at the Grammys 2023. Photo by Rob Latour/ Shutterstock

“This doesn’t happen to people like me very often,” Harry Styles said accepting the Album of the Year award at this year’s Grammys for his excellent Harry’s House. “It’s so, so nice. Thank you!” He seemed honestly moved and appreciative, and sincerely complimented the rest of the records in his category. It was a humble response from a young man who does, genuinely, seem to be grateful for a success he doesn’t take for granted.

The problem is, he’s wrong. This kind of thing happens to people like Harry Styles – young, white, male, cis-gendered, straight, middle class – all the time. As good as Harry’s House is, it’s probably the most predictable choice possible for the album of the year, much as it is for the upcoming Brit Awards.

It’s another example of the music industry’s default setting – success is white, affluent and safe – which is especially true of the Grammys. Styles may play daringly and fabulously with gender norms in his fashion choices, but he’s doing so onstage at Wembley, not walking down the high street being heckled by passers-by. He comes from a nice family (his mum and late stepfather were landlords, his dad works in finance), and went to a nice school. He’s from a very nice village in Cheshire. When he was 16 he joined a boyband and he’s not wanted for anything since. It’s hard to think of anyone more privileged than Harry Styles. He is the absolute prototype for the sort of person this happens to.

The elephant in the room here, the thing that’s made people really furious, is that the award was widely expected to go to Beyoncé for her latest album Renaissance. This is the fourth Beyoncé album to be snubbed for album of the year at the Grammys, each time she’s been beaten by a white artist: Taylor Swift, Adele, Beck and now Harry Styles.

Each time it felt faintly unbelievable. Adele was so shocked when 30 beat Lemonade, arguably Bey’s masterpiece, that she could barely keep it together onstage. Renaissance, another undeniably great record, was supposed to finally give Beyoncé the industry’s ultimate recognition. As Rolling Stone’s Larisha Paul told Teen Vogue last week, “If Renaissance doesn’t win, I think it will be a massive blow to what little credibility the Recording Academy still has as an institution that engages with Black music on any meaningful level.”

In 66 years of the Grammys, only 15 Black artists have won Album of the Year, ostensibly the top prize at the awards. The Recording Academy, the body of industry insiders that vote for the awards, chose Billie Eilish over Lizzo and Lil Naz X, Taylor Swift over Kendrick Lamar, Kacey Musgraves over Janelle Monáe, U2 over Kanye West. Most bafflingly they chose Mumford and Sons over Frank Ocean. Black artists are allowed to do well in the R&B, Rap and Reggae categories, maybe sometimes in the pop and vocal performance categories, but the biggest awards seem ring-fenced. Harry Styles, through no fault of his own, is a beneficiary of that privilege.

Next week Harry’s House will again be up for a big prize, this time on home turf at the Brit Awards. He’s up against Stormzy in the Album of the Year category, which also includes Wet Leg (nice, middle-class, white girls from the Isle of Wight), the 1975 (fronted by the son of two famous actors) and Fred Again (whose great-grandfather was a baron, grandfather was a knighted diplomat and whose father is a King’s Council barrister. You’ll be amazed to hear that he’s white too).

Will the award go to “someone like” Harry Styles again? Over to you, Brits.

Support the Big Issue

For over 30 years, the Big Issue has been committed to ending poverty in the UK. In 2024, our work is needed more than ever. Find out how you can support the Big Issue today.
Vendor martin Hawes

Recommended for you

View all
Jingoism of Rule, Britannia! has long felt shameful. Is it finally time for BBC Proms to axe it?
A 1990s BBC Proms in the Park concert
Music

Jingoism of Rule, Britannia! has long felt shameful. Is it finally time for BBC Proms to axe it?

Zayn Malik: 'I wanted to forge my own path, write my own story and see the world'
Exclusive

Zayn Malik: 'I wanted to forge my own path, write my own story and see the world'

Zayn Malik speaks on new music, home city Bradford and identity: 'I'm a very Northern man'
Music

Zayn Malik speaks on new music, home city Bradford and identity: 'I'm a very Northern man'

'It's always a good time for music somewhere': Kae Tempest talks 80s unrest and new drama This Town
Kae Tempest
Music

'It's always a good time for music somewhere': Kae Tempest talks 80s unrest and new drama This Town

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know
4.

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know