Merpedy
VIP Member
I've seen an interesting thread on Twitter and some other Tweets about how mentioning that half of the Brits nominees went to the Brit school speaks for the industry increasingly depending on nepotism and it all just being a Brit alumini get together with a few random names thrown in (and I would imagine if you dig deep enough or scratch the surface they also have some sort of connection or other to the music industry)Also they leave out any established acts who still are selling albums.
Gorillaz, Ellie Goulding, The 1975, Jessie Ware, Ed Sheeran, Freya Ridings, Lewis Capaldi, Noel Gallagher, Sophie Ellis Bexter, Niall Horan, McFly, James, Tom Grennan, Masie Peters, Nothing But Thieves, Anne-Marie, N-Dubz, Miles Kane, Royal Blood, The Chemical Brothers, Joel Corry, Rick Astley, The Streets, Duran Duran, James Blunt, Take That, Elton John all had number one albums….
Album of the year: Little Simz charted at 40… FOURTY and got put into album of the year. A category with only 5 nominees.
Lewis Capaldi spent 3 weeks at number one. It’s a shame that he wasn’t even nominated and Raye for example spend one week in the position… it’s just not right or fair
I think it's an interesting conversation overall and I'm sort of sad to see it hasn't been picked up in general. Yes, it happens in plenty of other countries but it's not necessarily said out loud as a bit of a brag
I also wonder how reflective the rewards are of general UK audience? I think Raye is amazing - I watched the Royal Albert Hall performance last night and listened to the album today - but realistically I only know two of her songs. I'd hardly call her a household name which is what you'd surely expect from someone who has completely swept the whole show?