Grammy cuts hurt ethnic music: protestors - Action News
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Entertainment

Grammy cuts hurt ethnic music: protestors

A coalition of musicians protested Thursday in Los Angeles over a change to Grammy categories that they say hurts ethnic music.
Bobby Sanabria, shown at the Grammy Awards in 2008, is leading an effort to reinstate some of the 31 categories to be cut in 2012. (Chris Pizzello/Associated Press)

A coalition of musiciansprotested Thursday in Los Angeles over achange to Grammy categories that they sayhurtsethnic music.

A decision by Grammy organizers to reduce award categories from 109 to 78cuts the chances forLatin, world music, Cajun/Zydeco and Native American musicians to win awards, the group claims.

An online petition has been circulating to demand reinstatement of these categories.

'I believe the Grammys have done a disservice to many talented musicians by combining previously distinct and separate types of music into a catch-all of blurry larger categories' Paul Simon

A group of musicians played Latin songs and hoisted bannersreading "Grammys Honor All Music" and "It's Not Just About Rap, Rock or Country" outside Thursday's board meeting of the Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, which administers the music prize.

Bobby Sanabria, a four-time Grammy nominee in the Latin jazz category and leader of the movement against the changes, said the group hoped to convince a member of the board to raise the issue again before the 2012 awards season, when the changes are slated to take effect.

"Hopefully during that time, someone will rise and be brave enough and do this," Sanabria said.

Alberta pow-wow group Northern Cree has been nominated for six Grammys and its frontman, Steve Wood, said he signed the petition against the changes.

So have most of the actsthat sharehis label, Canyon Records, which represents First Nations artists across North America.

The elimination of the best Native American album category means native artists must competein an expanded roots music category.

"You don't make this kind of music because you want awards,"Wood said. "It's not going to hurt the music itself. Aboriginal music is the oldest music in the world and we're going to go on making it whether we get awards or not."

Still, Wood said he regrets theelimination of the categorybecause the award was an opportunity for younger artists to get mainstream exposure.

Though he enjoyed past experiences at the Grammy gala, Wood says he always found the Grammy definition of native music to be artificial.

"The people who are playing this music and the people who are listening to it, they know what is the best music," he said.

Stars object to cuts

Buffy Sainte-Marie, seen in Winnipeg in 2010, has campaigned for more aboriginal music categories at the Junos and the Grammys.

Saskatchewan-born Buffy Sainte-Marie campaigned for aboriginal music categories at both Canada's Juno Awards (added in the 1980s) and at the Grammy Awards (added in the 1990s).

She has maintained there should be more awards at both ceremonies to recognize the diversity of aboriginal music.

Prominent musicians such as Paul Simon and Carlos Santana have alsoobjected to the changes.

"I believe the Grammys have done a disservice to many talented musicians by combining previously distinct and separate types of music into a catch-all of blurry larger categories," Simon wrote in a letter to the academy.

"They deserve the separate Grammy acknowledgements that they've been afforded until this change eliminated them."

Santana and his musician wife, Cindy Blackman Santana, objected to the removal of Latin jazz and other ethnic categories. The couple said the academy is "doing a huge disservice to the brilliant musicians who keep the music vibrant for their fans new and old."

When the academy announced the changes April 6, president Neil Portnow said the effectwould be to make the Grammys more competitive. It was the first comprehensive cull of award categories in the more than 50-year history of the U.S. music awards.

Portnow defends changes

Many jazz, pop, blues and rock categories were eliminated. Other categories were collapsed with male and female singers to compete against each other for the first time.

Portnow defended the changes this week, saying that mainstream categories were just as hard hit as ethnic categories.

"In this year's awards, in the 53rd (annual ceremony), there were 34 mainstream categories. Next year, with the changed revision, there will be 20 mainstream categories. That's a significant reduction in mainstream areas," he said.

"In non-mainstream categories ... there were 71. In the upcoming 54th awards, there will be 54."

Portnow said he's willing to meet with members of the coalition led by Sanabria, but did not hold out hope the board would reverse its decision.

With files from The Associated Press