NEW YORK – The chairman of the Recording Academy and the music industry veteran who wrote a scathing critique of this year's Grammy results have agreed to start a dialogue.
Neil Portnow, chairman and CEO of the academy, and Steve Stoute, a former top music executive who now works in marketing, released a joint statement Thursday saying they planned discussions on how each side could better understand each other.
"This is a beginning, because Steve put his hand up and wanted to express his opinion, and I think the place to start is a few of us at the Academy," Portnow said in an interview Thursday night. "We'll see where that goes and that makes sense. I'm a collaborative person, the academy is always changing."
Stoute took out a full-page ad in The New York Times on Feb. 20 to take the Grammys to task. During the Feb. 13 broadcast, Eminem, who was nominated for a leading 10 awards, took home just two in the rap field and lost in the prestigious record, song and album of the year categories, despite having 2010's best-selling album with "Recovery" and one of the most popular songs with "I Love the Way You Lie" featuring Rihanna.
Another upset was the win of jazz singer and cellist Esperanza Spalding, who beat out more recognizable acts, including teen pop phenomenon Justin Bieber.
"I have come to the conclusion that the Grammy Awards have clearly lost touch with contemporary popular culture. My being a music fan has left me with an even greater and deeper sense of dismay, so much so that I feel compelled to write this letter," he said at the time.
On Thursday night, he said he was hopeful his conversations with Portnow and the Academy would provide real change.
"We're planning on working hard and really making a difference," he said.
Stoute, a former top music executive at Interscope who now runs his own branding and marketing firm, Translation, said he wrote the letter after years of artists' frustrations he had been hearing came to a head this year.
"They were very concerned about what was going on. They were concerned about the process in voting and how they were coming up with the nominations and the winners, and they wanted some clarity and some level of understanding," he said. "Their reaction was, 'Thank you for doing that for us, Steve,'" said Stoute. "I know the pain that they were going through."
Portnow said he hoped their dialogue would create better awareness and understanding.
"The place to start is that everybody understands what we do, how we do it, why we do it," he said.
Portnow defended this year's results, which included indie-rocker Arcade Fire's win for best album.
"This is not about popularity or about sales or even about notoriety, it's about excellence in music," he said. "That's why a Grammy means so much to an artist when they get one, because it's a peer recognition."
But Stoute said the voting Academy, which he said numbered 12,000, needed to be younger and more culturally diverse. He said he hoped that he and the Academy could push to get those demographics involved in the process.
He said some of those segments aren't an active part of the Academy because of years of frustrations.
"There's a segment of artists who have gotten so frustrated with what's going on that they felt like voting and being a part of trying to promote change wasn't going to make a difference," he said.
He also stressed that he wasn't saying the wins of Arcade Fire or Spalding weren't worthy. However, he noted that Spalding had already released two other albums and Arcade Fire, up for best alternative album, lost in that category yet won overall album of the year.
"They're not even the best in their genre, so how does that work?" he asked.
Still, Stoute said, despite the frustrations with the Grammys, they are still the pinnacle of achievement for a musician.
"It's not like people don't respect what the Grammys mean. The Grammy is artistic excellence, you just want to make sure that everybody in the music business gets a chance."
© Associated Press
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