Beyonce, Kanye West, Billie Eilish among early Grammy Award winners

(From left) Beyonce, Kanye West and Billie Eilish. PHOTOS: AFP, REUTERS

LOS ANGELES (REUTERS) - Kanye West, Beyonce and Billie Eilish won early Grammys on Sunday (March 14) at a reinvented ceremony where the music industry hopes to put a year-long pandemic behind it.

West won in the contemporary Christian music field for his Gospel album Jesus is King, while Beyonce won best music video for Brown Skin Girl, which she shared with her nine-year-old daughter Blue Ivy.

The awards were announced ahead of the main Grammys telecast on CBS, which is expected to be a hybrid ceremony of live and pre-recorded performances without the usual audience of thousands of musicians and music executives.

Eilish, the Los Angeles teen who dominated last year's Grammys, won for her theme song to the upcoming James Bond film No Time to Die. Eilish, 19, also has two other nods for her ballad Everything I Wanted.

Beyonce, the most nominated female artist in Grammy history with 79 career nods, went into the ceremony with a leading nine nominations, mostly from music that celebrated Black culture in a year of racial turmoil in the United States.

But she is not on the list of musicians booked for Sunday's three-hour show, which will feature performances from the likes of Taylor Swift, K-Pop band BTS, newcomer Megan Thee Stallion, Eilish, Harry Styles, Latin star Bad Bunny, and Black country singer Mickey Guyton.

An unusually diverse line-up of contenders for the top prize - album of the year - means it could be anyone's night.

"The nominations were so surprising - The Weeknd not getting nominated - it's a very strange year to try to predict," said Melinda Newman, Billboard's executive editor for the West Coast and Nashville.

"I think it's going to be a year where no-one makes a clean sweep," she added.

The winners are chosen by some 11,000 voting members of the Recording Academy.

Swift and British pop singer Dua Lipa got six nominations apiece, along with rapper Roddy Ricch. Lipa, and her album "Future Nostalgia," may have the edge as the only one of the trio to get nods in all three of the big races - album, record, and song of the year.

"Dua Lipa has been everywhere this last year. It's a really great happy dance disco revival," said Alex Suskind, a senior editor at Entertainment Weekly.

Suskind said he felt that Swift, who got the best reviews of her career for her surprise lockdown album Folklore, has a better shot at winning song of the year - which is awarded for writing - with the track Cardigan.

South Korean boy band BTS marked a breakthrough year in the United States by securing their first major Grammy nomination for their English-language hit Dynamite. They will be performing from Korea on Sunday and hoping for a win in the closely-contested best pop duo or group field.

"We just keep seeing these amazing acts coming out of Korea and it doesn't seem like it's ending at all. It's really great fun, pop music," said Newman.

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