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Megan Thee Stallion accepts 2021 GRAMMY with a look of excited awe

Megan Thee Stallion accepts 2021 GRAMMY

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Megan Thee Stallion Wins Best Rap Performance megan-thee-stallion-beyonce-win-best-rap-performance-savage-2021-grammy-awards-show

Megan Thee Stallion & Beyonce Win Best Rap Performance For "Savage" | 2021 GRAMMY Awards Show

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The Houston hotties take home Best Rap Performance for "Savage Remix" at the 63rd GRAMMY Awards
Ana Monroy Yglesias
GRAMMYs
Mar 14, 2021 - 2:21 pm

Megan Thee Stallion and Beyoncé won Best Rap Performance for "Savage Remix" at the Premiere Ceremony of the 63rd GRAMMY Awards. This marks Megan's first career GRAMMY win, and she gave a joyful acceptance speech for the monumental moment.

Megan Thee Stallion & Beyonce Win Best Rap Perf.

Their track bested fellow nominees Big Sean with Nipsey Hussle, DaBaby, Jack Harlow, Lil Baby and Pop Smoke. 

Stay tuned to GRAMMY.com for all things GRAMMY Awards (including the Premiere Ceremony livestream), and make sure to watch the 2021 GRAMMY Awards show, airing live on CBS and Paramount+ tonight, Sun., March 14 at 8:00 p.m. ET/5:00 p.m. PT.

Check out all the complete 2021 GRAMMY Awards show winners and nominees list here.

Beyonce and Megan Thee Stallion at the 2021 GRAMMYs

Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion at the 2021 GRAMMYs

Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

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Megan Thee Stallion & Beyoncé Win Best Rap Song megan-thee-stallion-beyonc%C3%A9-win-best-rap-song-savage-remix-2021-grammy-awards-show

Megan Thee Stallion & Beyoncé Win Best Rap Song For "Savage Remix" | 2021 GRAMMY Awards Show

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The Houston powerhouses Megan Thee Stallion and Beyoncé accept the GRAMMY for Best Rap Song for "Savage Remix" at the 2021 GRAMMYs
Ana Monroy Yglesias
GRAMMYs
Mar 14, 2021 - 7:37 pm

Megan Thee Stallion and Beyoncé won Best Rap Song for "Savage Remix" at the 63rd GRAMMY Awards.

Megan Thee Stallion & Beyonce Win Best Rap Song

The track also won Best Rap Performance at the GRAMMY Awards Premiere Ceremony earlier in the day, marking Megan's first career GRAMMY win. The "Body" rapper was also crowned Best New Artist, taking her current GRAMMY win total to three. Beyoncé made history as her total career GRAMMY wins hit 27!

Their hit single bested fellow nominees Lil Baby, DaBaby and Roddy Ricch, and Drake and Lil Durk.

Stay tuned to GRAMMY.com and our Twitter for all things GRAMMY Awards, and make sure to catch the rest of the Biggest Night In Music live on CBS and Paramount+.

Check out all the complete 2021 GRAMMY Awards show winners and nominees list here.

Megan Thee Stallion Wins Best New Artist | 2021 GRAMMY Awards Show

 

Megan Thee Stallion_promo

Megan Thee Stallion

Photo: Courtesy of Megan Thee Stallion

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The Rise And Rise Of Megan Thee Stallion megan-thee-stallion-2021-grammys

The Rise And Rise Of Megan Thee Stallion: Juicy J, Scott Storch, LilJuMadeDaBeat & More On The Houston Rapper's Emergence

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GRAMMY.com spoke to the producers and creatives behind Megan Thee Stallion's sound about working with the GRAMMY-nominated rapper, what diehard Hotties would be surprised to learn about her, and why her influence goes beyond music
Max Mertens
GRAMMYs
Mar 9, 2021 - 2:51 pm

For Women's History Month 2021, GRAMMY.com is celebrating some of the women artists nominated at the 2021 GRAMMY Awards show. Today, we honor Megan Thee Stallion, who's currently nominated for four GRAMMY Awards. 

From her no-holds-barred mixtapes to making inescapable chart-topping hits, few artists in recent history have had a more stratospheric rise than Megan Thee Stallion. The Houston rapper, born Megan Jovon Ruth Pete, began writing raps as a teenager but started getting attention when she posted videos of herself freestyling on Instagram while a student at Prairie View A&M University. Even in those early clips, one of which saw her battling male opponents in a cipher, Thee Stallion (a nickname given to her because of her towering height) displayed the poise and fiercely unapologetic raps that would soon make her a star.

A handful of critically-acclaimed projects, including 2018's Tina Snow EP and 2019's Fever mixtape, showcased the rapper's ability to create different personas and challenge gender stereotypes in the genre and society. In August 2019, she released the single "Hot Girl Summer" featuring Nicki Minaj and Ty Dolla $ign (inspired by the body-positive catchphrase popularized on social media by her and her fans known as "Hotties"), scoring her first No. 1 on Billboard's Rhythmic AirPlay Chart. Despite personal tragedy—both her mom (a former rapper and her first manager) and grandmother passed away in 2019—the 24-year-old was well on her way to being a household name. She guested on songs by artists including Chance the Rapper, Gucci Mane, and Khalid, and signed a management deal with Jay-Z's Roc Nation.  

Last year was a major one for Pete. The rapper kicked off 2020 with her collaboration alongside singer Normani, "Diamonds," which appeared on the superhero blockbuster Birds of Prey soundtrack. She earned her first No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart for the surprise Beyoncé-assisted "Savage" remix (proceeds from the song went to COVID-19 relief efforts in Houston), a full-circle moment for Pete, who has named the Houston singer as one of her biggest inspirations. A few months later she collaborated with another powerhouse artist, Cardi B, on her sex-positive, record-breaking anthem "WAP." If all that wasn't enough, she was also named one of TIME Magazine's 100 most influential people. Pete ended the year by releasing her highly-anticipated debut album, Good News, which featured City Girls, SZA, Big Sean, 2 Chainz, and more. 

With four nominations at the 2021 GRAMMY Awards show, including Best New Artist, GRAMMY.com spoke to Scott Storch, LilJuMadeDaBeat, Helluva, Juicy J, and OG Ron C about working with the rapper, what diehard Hotties would be surprised to learn about her, and why her influence goes beyond music.

LilJuMadeDaBeat: "Megan is literally one of the most genuine people I've ever met in my life."

LilJuMadeDaBeat, born Julian Mason, has had a front-row seat to Megan Thee Stallion's ascent. In 2018, when the rapper signed to Houston independent label 1501 Entertainment (started by former baseball player Carl Crawford), the Dallas-born producer got the call to start working with her. His productions can be heard on Tina Snow and Fever.  "We just locked in and started going crazy," he explains to GRAMMY.com. "Some of those early beats we made literally sitting at my kitchen table in Houston."  

One of those beats became "Big Ole Freak," a Tina Snow highlight which sees Pete boasting about her sexual prowess over a bass-heavy beat, and her first song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The pair bonded instantly over their love of '90s/'00s Texas rap groups like UGK (Bun B and UGK) and Three 6 Mafia, whose music was a major influence on their work together.

"Anybody that knows me could tell you Pimp C is my favorite rapper. When I met Megan, he just so happened to be her favorite rapper too," says Mason. He even ended up sampling "Sippin On Some Syrup," Three 6 Mafia's 2000 collaboration with UGK and Project Pat, on "Big Drank," which appeared on Pete's 2019 Fever (the cover depicting the rapper as a 70s Blaxploitation heroine). Fittingly, Three 6 Mafia co-founder Juicy J executive produced the project and appears on the track "Simon Says."

Mason also produced "Cash Shit," a Fever standout featuring DaBaby. "She called me and was like 'I want a beat with no melody' and I was like 'Okay cool,'" he says. It would be the first of many Megan Thee Stallion songs to achieve success on TikTok, with users choreographing elaborate dance routines. (When Ohio teenager Keara Wilson posted a video of her dancing to "Savage" on March 10, 2020, it quickly went viral, with celebrities including Hailey Bieber, Jessica Alba, and Pete herself doing the challenge on their accounts.) The rapper ended 2020 as TikTok's most listened-to artist.

From the beginning, the rapper harnessed social media to both build her fanbase and control her own narrative, despite the detractors that come with the territory. "I hate that a lot of people try to paint her as a bad guy on social media," says Mason. "Megan is literally one of the most genuine people I've ever met in my life, she'll do anything for me, and I'll do anything for her."

Helluva: "[Working with her] just gave me confidence to know an artist of that status could use my beats."

Detroit producer Helluva was surprised Pete was a fan of his beats before they started working together. "I didn't even know people outside of Detroit even heard my beats like that," he tells GRAMMY.com.

Previously known for his work with Detroit rapper Tee Grizzly, whose song "No Effort" directly inspired Pete's 2018 track "Freak Nasty," Helluva ended up working on her 2020 Suga EP and Good News. Originally intended to be released as her debut album on May 2—her late mother's birthday—she ended up dropping Suga at the beginning of March 2020 amidst label contract disputes (A judge ended up granting her permission to put out the project). 

Besides collaborations with Oakland R&B singer Kehlani and Atlanta rapper Gunna, the EP also featured production from coast-to-coast GRAMMY-winning hitmakers including The Neptunes, Timbaland, and J. White Did It. Helluva contributed two songs, "Ain't Equal" and the Tupac Shakur-sampling "B.I.T.C.H.," the latter of which Pete performed on "The Tonight Show." "Once she was giving me a shot at it, I wasn't going to miss my shot," he says. "[Working with her] just gave me confidence to know an artist of that status could use my beats." 

Suga spawned the rapper's biggest hit to date, the infectious, J. White-produced "classy, bougie, ratchet" anthem "Savage," and its accompanying internet-breaking remix with Beyoncé, who she met at a New Year's Eve party. The remix featuring co-writing from The-Dream and Starrah quickly reached number one. 

Juicy J: "She's showing women empowerment. We make music every day that's good, but when you can actually give a message too? That's dope."

When producer and rapper Juicy J first heard Pete rap he knew she was going to be huge. "I was like 'Man I ain't never heard no female rap like this,'" he tells GRAMMY.com. "She writes her own stuff, she's in the studio telling the engineer how she wants her voice to sound, she's hands-on with everything." He'd later co-produce "Hot Girl Summer" and multiple songs off Good News, and Pete would guest on his 2020 album, The Hustle Continues.

Juicy J was also impressed with the rapper's "Saturday Night Live" debut. On Oct. 3, 2020, she took the opportunity to make a statement after months of protests and racial reckoning. She performed in front of a screen displaying the words "Protect Black Women," along with quotes from Malcolm X and activist Tamika Mallory calling out Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron over his handling of Breonna Taylor's death at the hands of three Louisville police officers. 

"We need to protect our Black women and love our Black women, 'cause at the end of the day, we need our Black women," she said during the performance. "We need to protect our Black men and stand up for our Black men, 'cause at the end of the day, we're tired of seeing hashtags about Black men." A few days later, she wrote an op-ed for the New York Times titled "Why I Speak Up For Black Women" about her experiences as a Black woman in hip-hop. The piece also touched on her political activism. 

"She's showing women empowerment," says Juicy J. "We make music every day that's good, but when you can actually give a message too? That's dope."

Scott Storch: "She is very down to earth and that's what gives you longevity in the game."

After all her success, expectations were sky-high for Good News, but neither Pete nor her collaborators were fazed by the pressure. Besides long-time producers LilJuMadeDaBeat, Juicy J, and Helluva, she also recruited veteran beatmakers including Cool & Dre, Mustard, and eight-time GRAMMY winner Scott Storch, who helped her pay homage to the music that she grew up listening to on the album.

Opener "Shots Fired," in which the rapper scathingly addresses the July 2020 incident where she was shot in the foot twice, samples Notorious B.I.G.'s Tupac-dissing "Who Shot Ya?" and "Girls in the Hood" flips Eazy-E's 1987 classic "Boyz-in-the-Hood." 

"I was playing with some ideas and melodies and always loved that classic sound of Eazy-E," Storch shares with GRAMMY.com. "I reworked the original sample, replayed all the instruments, and had [co-producer] Illa put some drums behind it. As soon as it was done we thought this could be something special."

Unsurprisingly, Good News topped the U.S. and international charts and made year-end lists including Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, and the Los Angeles Times. The "Savage" remix picked up three GRAMMY nominations (Record of the Year, Best Rap Performance, Best Rap Song), and Pete was nominated for Best New Artist. 

Of the rapper's potential, Storch adds, "She is very down to earth and that's what gives you longevity in the game. She isn't impressed by all the Hollywood smoke and mirrors and cares so much for her fans."

OG Ron C: "Now the labels are calling asking 'Who's the next hot artist in Texas?'"

Pete's achievements have paved the way for the next generation of Lone Star State artists. Houston DJ and Chopstars collective founder OG Ron C, who has remixed several of her projects including Suga, has seen firsthand the new attention she's brought to the city.

"The fans love her. I've been breaking artists around my city for a long time from Slim Thug to Mike Jones, Paul Wall, Lil Flip, the list goes on," he tells GRAMMY.com. "It's always amazing for me to see because I know what Texas artists fight through just to get a point where other people say 'Oh yeah man, we like you and we jamming you.'" 

Ron C is now a general manager at 1501, and points out there's infrastructure and opportunities for Texas rappers and producers today to reach a national platform that didn't exist in the '80s and '90s. "We never had the luxury of being an entertainment hub, we didn't have the luxury of Lyor [Cohen] or Clive [Davis] or LA [Reid] walking around the city and just so happened to see somebody on their grind, or happen to hear somebody's music," he says. "Now the labels are calling asking 'Who's the next hot artist in Texas?'"

Inside The Visual World Of Beyoncé And Black Is King, Her "Love Letter" To Black Men

Megan Thee Stallion Accepts 2021 Best New Artist GRAMMY

Megan Thee Stallion at 2021 GRAMMYs

Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

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Megan Thee Stallion Wins Best New Artist megan-thee-stallion-wins-best-new-artist-2021-grammy-awards-show

Megan Thee Stallion Wins Best New Artist | 2021 GRAMMY Awards Show

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Houston rapper Megan Thee Stallion takes home Best New Artist at the 2021 GRAMMYs
Ana Monroy Yglesias
GRAMMYs
Mar 14, 2021 - 6:21 pm

Megan Thee Stallion won Best New Artist at the 63rd GRAMMY Awards. This marks her second GRAMMY win of the evening—the Houston rapper also won Best Rap Performance for her "Savage Remix" with Beyoncé. Watch the "Captian Hook" rapper's joyful acceptance speech below.

Megan Thee Stallion Wins Best New Artist

Megan held back tears as she accepted her big award from GRAMMY winner Lizzo. In her heartfelt acceptance speech, she celebrated fellow fellow nominees Ingrid Andress, Phoebe Bridgers, Chika, Noah Cyrus, D Smoke, Doja Cat and Kaytranada. 

Stay tuned to GRAMMY.com for all things GRAMMY Awards, and make sure to catch the rest of the action live on CBS and Paramount+.

Check out all the complete 2021 GRAMMY Awards show winners and nominees list here.

2021 GRAMMYs
News
Best Rap Song Nominees | 2021 GRAMMYs best-rap-song-2021-grammys

Pull Up On The Best Rap Song Nominees | 2021 GRAMMYs

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Megan Thee Stallion and Beyoncé, Lil Baby, DaBaby and Roddy Ricch, and Drake and Lil Durk are all GRAMMY nominees in the Best Rap Song category, celebrating songwriting in rap, at the 2021 GRAMMY Awards show
Jennifer Velez
GRAMMYs
Nov 27, 2020 - 12:17 pm

Every year, the GRAMMYs celebrate rap's lyricism with the Best Rap Song category. Houston's own Megan Thee Stallion and Beyoncé, Lil Baby, DaBaby and Roddy Ricch, and Drake and Lil Durk are all up for the award next year.

Check out the 2021 GRAMMYs nominees for Best Rap Song below, and tune into the 63rd GRAMMY Awards Sunday, March 14, on CBS to find out who will take home the award.

Lil Baby "The Bigger Picture"

After Black Lives Matter protests erupted in Atlanta this year, Lil Baby, Noah Pettigrew and Rai'shaun Williams penned a protest song that captures the country's 2020 racial reckoning, calls out police brutality and institutional racism and references the killing of George Floyd. "I find it crazy the police'll shoot you and know that you dead/But still tell you to freeze/Fucked up, I seen what I seen/I guess that mean hold him down if he say he can't breathe," Lil Baby raps in one verse. The track also gets personal, touching on the rapper's own experiences with police, and also expresses his fears for his own family.

Roddy Ricch "The Box"

Roddy Ricch's "The Box," written by Ricch and Samuel Gloade, packs in references about the NBA, Trayvon Martin's killer, street life, cars and money—all within three minutes and 16 seconds. The single, off his debut album, Please Excuse Me For Being Antisocial, was the last one to make it on the project, but it's been among his most successful. In the song, he shouts-out Compton, Calif., one of West Coast rap's most influential cities and his hometown. "I got the pink slip, all my whips is key-less/ Compton, I'm about to get the key to the city," he raps.

Drake Feat. Lil Durk "Laugh Now, Cry Later"

In "Laugh Now, Cry Later," Drake, alongside D. Banks, R. Chahayed, D. Jackson and R. LaTour & R. Martinez, pens a song whose chorus hits on one of life's realities: "Sometimes we laugh and sometimes we cry, but I guess you know now, baby," the Canadian rapper sings. The track celebrates the good times and leaves the bad times for later as he raps about partaking in drugs in moderation, being over beefs with other rappers and taking the opportunity to flex what his success has earned him. The track, featuring Lil Durk, will be on Drake's next album, Certified Lover Boy.

DaBaby Feat. Roddy Ricch "Rockstar"

DaBaby likens himself to a rock star on his single in which he makes clear what he carries around isn't a guitar but a gun. "Have you ever met a real n**** rockstar? (Yeah)/This ain't no guitar, b*tch, this a Glock (Woo)," he raps. The self-made rap star—"It's safe to say I earned it, ain't a n****gave me nothin'," he raps on the track—gets personal when describing how he says he's used a gun to protect his family in the past. The song, also written by Ross Joseph Portaro IV and Roddy Ricch, the latter of whom lays out his own verse about his own weapon, is featured on DaBaby's 2020 album, Blame It On Baby.

Megan Thee Stallion Featuring Beyoncé "Savage"

Two Texas titans come together on the "Savage" remix, Megan the Stallion's single on her new debut album, Good News. On the track, Meg uses her quick rhyming skills to unleash a rap about her boss way of life, but the track only gets hotter with Beyoncé on the remix. "I'm a boss, I'm a leader, I pull up in my two-seater," Bey raps about her own savagery. Songwriters Shawn "JAY-Z" Carter, Brittany Hazzard, Derrick Milano, Terrius Nash, Bobby Session Jr., Jordan Kyle Lanier Thorpe and Anthony White add extra heat to the track.

2021 GRAMMYs: Complete Nominees List

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Some of the content on this site expresses viewpoints and opinions that are not those of the Recording Academy and its Affiliates. Responsibility for the accuracy of information provided in stories not written by or specifically prepared for the Academy and its Affiliates lies with the story's original source or writer. Content on this site does not reflect an endorsement or recommendation of any artist or music by the Recording Academy and its Affiliates.