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Jazz Grammy Nominees Announced 2021

Joshua Redman, Gerald Clayton, and Chick Corea get two nominations apiece; John Beasley has four

The nominees for the 2021 Grammy Awards were announced on Tuesday. It was a banner year for female nominees, with women taking five of the eight nominations for both Record of the Year and Best New Artist, and sweeping the Best Rock Performance category. (Nine nominations went to Beyoncé, already the most nominated woman in Grammy history.)

In the jazz categories, Joshua Redman, Gerald Clayton, and Chick Corea each received two nominations—in all three cases for Best Improvised Jazz Solo and Best Jazz Instrumental Album. In an interesting twist, bassist Christian McBride and drummer Brian Blade also each received two nominations—as band members on Redman’s and Corea’s nominated albums.

Redman’s album nomination was for RoundAgain, which also featured pianist Brad Mehldau along with McBride and Blade—a reunion of the quartet that made Redman’s 1994 album MoodSwing. Corea’s album, too, featured McBride and Blade in a “sequel” recording: Trilogy 2, the follow-up to 2013’s Trilogy with the same personnel.

More nominations—a remarkable total of four—went to pianist, composer, and bandleader John Beasley, who’s in contention this year for Best Jazz Vocal Album (Somi’s Holy Room: Live at Alte Oper, for which he arranged and conducted the Frankfurt Radio Big Band); Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album (MONK’estra Plays John Beasley); Best Arrangement, Instrumental or a Cappella (Charlie Parker’s “Donna Lee,” on the aforementioned MONK’estra album); and Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals (“Asas Fechadas,” a co-credit with singer Maria Mendes on her album Close to Me).

Other standout 2021 nominations include Ambrose Akinmusire, for his album On the Tender Spot of Every Calloused Moment; Thana Alexa, for Ona (for which violinist Regina Carter also received an improvised solo nod); and Orrin Evans and the Captain Black Big Band, for The Intangible Between.

In related categories, jazz artists also took four of the five nominations for both Best Contemporary Instrumental Album and Best Instrumental Composition, with Christian aTunde Adjuah, Jon Batiste, Grégoire Maret with Romain Collin & Bill Frisell, and Snarky Puppy each receiving the honor in the former category and nominations for Arturo O’Farrill, Christian Sands, Maria Schneider, and Remy Le Boeuf in the latter. In addition, Kamasi Washington received a Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media nod for his score to the Michelle Obama documentary Becoming.

The 63rd Annual Grammy Awards ceremony will be held on January 31, 2021 in Los Angeles. Its format is still to be determined.

Below is a full list of the nominees in the jazz categories—which include Best Improvised Jazz Solo, Best Jazz Vocal Album, Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album, and Best Latin Jazz Album—as well as the related fields of Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, Best Contemporary Instrumental Album, and Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals.

Best Improvised Jazz Solo

“Guinevere”

Christian aTunde Adjuah, soloist

Track from: Axiom (Christian aTunde Adjuah)

“Pachamama”

Regina Carter, soloist

Track from: Ona (Thana Alexa)

“Celia”

Gerald Clayton, soloist

Track from: Happening: Live at the Village Vanguard (Gerald Clayton)

“All Blues”

Chick Corea, soloist

Track from: Trilogy 2 (Chick Corea/Christian McBride/Brian Blade)

“Moe Honk”

Joshua Redman, soloist

Track from: RoundAgain (Joshua Redman/Brad Mehldau/Christian McBride/Brian Blade)

Best Jazz Vocal Album

Ona

Thana Alexa

Secrets Are the Best Stories

Kurt Elling feat. Danilo Pérez

Modern Ancestors

Carmen Lundy

Holy Room: Live at Alte Oper

Somi with Frankfurt Radio Big Band

What’s the Hurry

Kenny Washington

Best Jazz Instrumental Album

On the Tender Spot of Every Calloused Moment

Ambrose Akinmusire

Waiting Game

Terri Lyne Carrington & Social Science

Happening: Live at the Village Vanguard

Gerald Clayton

Trilogy 2

Chick Corea/Christian McBride/Brian Blade

RoundAgain

Joshua Redman/Brad Mehldau/Christian McBride/Brian Blade

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

Dialogues on Race

Gregg August

MONK’estra Plays John Beasley

John Beasley

The Intangible Between

Orrin Evans and the Captain Black Big Band

Songs You Like a Lot

John Hollenbeck with Theo Bleckmann, Kate McGarry, Gary Versace, and the Frankfurt Radio Big Band

Data Lords

Maria Schneider Orchestra

Best Latin Jazz Album

Tradiciones

Afro-Peruvian Jazz Orchestra

Four Questions

Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra

City of Dreams

Chico Pinheiro

Viento y Tiempo: Live at Blue Note Tokyo

Gonzalo Rubalcaba and Aymee Nuviola

Trane’s Delight

Poncho Sanchez

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album

Blue Umbrella

Burt Bacharach and Daniel Tashian

True Love: A Celebration of Cole Porter

Harry Connick, Jr.

American Standard

James Taylor

Unfollow the Rules

Rufus Wainwright

Judy

Renée Zellweger

Best Contemporary Instrumental Album

Axiom

Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah

Chronology of a Dream: Live at the Village Vanguard

Jon Batiste

Take the Stars

Black Violin

Americana

Grégoire Maret, Romain Collin & Bill Frisell

Live at the Royal Albert Hall

Snarky Puppy

Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals

“Asas Fechadas”

John Beasley & Maria Mendes, arrangers (for Maria Mendes Featuring John Beasley & Orkest Metropole)

“Desert Song”

Erin Bentlage, Sara Gazarek, Johnaye Kendrick & Amanda Taylor, arrangers (for Säje)

“From This Place”

Alan Broadbent & Pat Metheny, arrangers (for Pat Metheny Featuring Meshell Ndegeocello)

“He Won’t Hold You”

Jacob Collier, arranger (for Jacob Collier Featuring Rapsody)

“Slow Burn”

Talia Billig, Nic Hard & Becca Stevens, arrangers (for Becca Stevens Featuring Jacob Collier, Mark Lettieri, Justin Stanton, Jordan Perlson, Nic Hard, Keita Ogawa, Marcelo Woloski & Nate Werth)

Originally Published November 24, 2020 for jazztimes.com