The Academy of Record, which holds the show, stated that the show needed more than if it was. The trustees say the evening will double both a charity event to raise money and honor both victims and ambulances that risked their lives.
But it will look different than years past.
Showeruners seek to apply the right tone by honoring the victims of the fire and demonstrating the Los -Andgeles, which will insist. But there is a concern that the optics of rich celebrities paid by smiles on the red carpet can come out like a tone of the deaf.
The CEO of the Academy of Record Harvey Mason Jr. said that the show includes a converted format, a red road with a scalable shell and a more reflective tone.
He emphasized the economic influence, noting that thousands are based on Grammy, especially in the service. He made this event as a symbol of sustainability, arguing this abolition, will not benefit the urban or music industry.
“Cancellation, pushing, relocation does not reach what we stand together,” Misson said in the broadcast. The show will “unite and brings together, honoring music, but also the use of music for the treatment, recovery and service to people who need it.”
“I think it can be one of the most important weeks of Grammy we had if they had.”
Mason Mason told The New York Times that they consulted with a number of public officials as to whether they should hold an event – including the mayor and California Governor Gavin Newsom – and whether it will hinder the efforts of the fire.
“They urged us to continue holding the event,” he said in the exit. “Everyone said there was nothing good that is going to postpone.”
But there is still a worry that the night will be a bad kind of music industry.
“I don’t really think the Grammy should happen,” said BBC Elin Kazaran, creative director of the music industry.
“I’m just very strange that there will be celebrities on the red carpet in expensive clothes, while people in other parts of the city suffer and the livelihoods were destroyed.”