Bad Bunny wins album of the year at the 2026 Grammy Awards, a first for a Spanish-language album
- - Bad Bunny wins album of the year at the 2026 Grammy Awards, a first for a Spanish-language album
MARIA SHERMAN February 1, 2026 at 12:00 AM
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1 / 1068th Annual Grammy Awards - ShowBad Bunny accepts the award for album of the year for "DebĂ Tirar MĂĄs Fotos" during the 68th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
LOS ANGELES (AP) â Bad Bunny won album of the year at the 2026 Grammy Awards for his critically-acclaimed âDebĂ Tirar MĂĄs Fotos,â closing out a surprising and history-making night. It is the first time a Spanish-language album has taken home the top prize.
âPuerto Rico, believe me when I tell you that we are much bigger than 100 by 35,â he said in his acceptance speech in Spanish, referring to a Puerto Rican colloquialism about the island's small size. âAnd there is nothing we canât achieve. Thank God, thank you to the Academy, thank you to all the people who have believed in me throughout my career.
âTo all the people who worked on this album, thank you mami for giving birth to me in Puerto Rico, I love you,â he continued.
Then he switched to English: âI want to dedicate this award to all the people who had to leave their homeland to follow their dreams.â
Harry Styles presented the award â the English singer previously took home the top prize in 2023 for âHarryâs House.â He beat Bad Bunny that year, who was nominated for âUn Verano Sin Tiâ -- the first Spanish-language album to be up in the category.
Anti-ICE messages from the stage
Billie Eilish won song of the year for âWildflowerâ and used the moment to add her voice to the chorus of musicians criticizing immigration authorities Sunday.
âNo one is illegal on stolen land,â she said while accepting the award for the song from her 2024 album âHit Me Hard and Soft.â "(Expletive) ICE is all I want to say.â
Immigration was a central theme of the night. The first time Bad Bunny was on stage â after winning the award for mĂșsica urbana album â he used his speech to share an anti-ICE message, highlighting the humanity of all people.
âBefore I say thanks to God, I'm going to say ICE out,â he said, starting out his speech in English to huge applause. âWe're not savage, we're not animals, we're not aliens. We are humans and we are Americans.â
Before that, Olivia Dean was named best new artist.
âI never really imagined that I would be up here,â she said, receiving her first Grammy while wiping away tears. âI'm up here as a granddaughter of an immigrant. I wouldn't be here ⊠I am a product of bravery, and I think that those people deserve to be celebrated.â
Those statements all aired live on the CBS telecast. Earlier in the day, at the Premiere Ceremony where 86 Grammys are handed out, artists were equally as pointed about ICE and immigration enforcement.
Shaboozey accepted the award for country duo/group performance with tears in his eyes. âI want to thank my mother, who as of today, has retired from her job of 30 years ⊠working as a registered nurse in a psych ward ⊠as an immigrant in this country. Thank you, mom.
âImmigrants built this country, literally, actually. So, this for them,â he concluded. âThank you for bring your culture, your music and your stories.â
Kehlani, after winning her first Grammy, ended her acceptance speech with âImma leave this and say, (expletive) ICE.â
âIâm scared,â Gloria Estefan said of the current political moment backstage at the Grammys. âThere are hundreds of children in detention centers. ⊠I donât recognize my country in this moment right now.â
Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga, Jelly Roll and more win big
Kendrick Lamar and SZA won record of the year at an electric 2026 Grammy Awards Sunday night for âLuther.â
Cher presented the award and mistakenly said it goes to âLuther Vandrossâ instead of Kendrick Lamar and SZA.
One of the songâs producers, Sounwave, began the acceptance speech by saying, âLetâs give a shoutout to the late and great Luther Vandross.â
Lamar also won the first televised award of the night, rap album for âGNX,â accepting the trophy from Queen Latifah and Doechii.
âItâs an honor to be here,â he said in his acceptance speech. âHip-hop is always going to be right here ⊠Weâre gonna be having the culture with us.â
The victory means Lamar broke Jay-Zâs record to become the rapper with the most career Grammys. Jay-Z has 25; after he took home rap album and record of the year, Lamarâs total is 27.
Pop vocal album went to Lady Gaga for âMayhem,â while pop solo performance went to Lola Young for âMessy,â whose speech playfully lived up to the songâs spirit.
âI donât know what to say,â she joked about âobviouslyâ not having a speech prepared. âIâm very, very grateful for this.â
The inaugural contemporary country album category went to Jelly Roll for âBeautifully Broken.â
This year, the Grammys renamed country album to contemporary country album and added a traditional country album category, a distinction that exists in other genres. But the news arrived right after BeyoncĂ©âs âCowboy Carterâ won best country album, inspiring backlash online.
âI believe music had the power to change my life,â Jelly Roll said in his acceptance speech, which he spent the majority of thanking God.
Pharrell Williams received the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award.
âTo everyone in this room who believes in the power of Black music,â he said, âthank you so much.â
A live concert experience
A powerful Grammy Awards in memoriam segment celebrated the legacies of the late DâAngelo and Roberta Flack at the 68th annual ceremony Sunday night.
Ms. Lauryn Hill appeared on the Grammy stage for the first time since 1999, when she became the first hip-hop artist to win album of the year for her âThe Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.â
The DâAngelo tribute was first: A medley of several songs, among them âBrown Sugarâ with Lucky Daye, âLadyâ with Raphael Saadiq and Anthony Hamilton and âDevilâs Pieâ with Leon Thomas.
Then, Hill focused her attention on Roberta Flack: âFirst Time Ever I Saw Your Faceâ with Jon Batiste, âWhere Is The Loveâ with John Legend and Chaka Khan, and a mesh of âFeel Like Makinâ Loveâ and âKilling Me Softly with His Songâ with her Fugees bandmate Wyclef Jean.
If there was one set that felt like an avant-garde artistic performance piece on Sunday night, it was Tyler, the Creatorâs medley of âThought I Was Dead,â âLike Him,â (in which he was joined by Regina King) and âSugar On My Tongue.â It played out like theater: others would be wise to take note.
All eight nominees in the best new artist category participated in a medley at the award show across multiple stages, the back halls of the arena and even the venueâs loading dock. It was an interesting and impressive mod-podge of different styles, from the British soul of Young and Dean to Addison Rae and Katseyeâs hypnotic pop. The MarĂas kicked things off with their dreamy indie rock; sombr and Alex Warren offered their radio hits â â12 to 12â and âOrdinaryâ respectively. Leon Thomas reminded the audience why heâs the only nominee also up for album of the year with his fully formed R&B.
The hits arrived fast and furious in the show's first hour. RosĂ© and Bruno Mars' opened Grammys with an electric rendition of their multicultural pop smash, âAPT."; the Blackpink singer channeled a pop-punk Gwen Stefani in her tie and platinum blond hair. Sabrina Carpenter with her âManchildâ kiss-off. Justin Bieber slowed things down with âYukonâ from his comeback record âSwag.â Lady Gaga reimagined her hit âAbracadabraâ as an electro-rock song.
First-time winners were abundant â even before the show started
During the Premiere Ceremony, the Dalai Lama won his first Grammy for audio book, narration and storytelling recording, beating out Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. You read that correctly.
âGoldenâ from âKPop Demon Huntersâ won song written for visual media at the Premiere Ceremony, marking the first time a K-pop act has won a Grammy. Songwriters delivered their acceptance speech in both English and Korean, highlighting the songâs bilingual appeal.
Music film went to âMusic for John Williams,â which means director Steven Spielberg has officially won his first Grammy. That makes him an EGOT winner â an artist with an Emmy, Grammy, Tony and Oscar.
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Writer Berenice Bautista contributed to this report.
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For more coverage of this yearâs Grammy Awards, visit: www.apnews.com/GrammyAwards
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ