2023 Grammys recap: Biggest wins, all the star-studded performances and more
See all the biggest winners from the 65th Grammy Awards.
The 65th annual Grammy Awards was a night filled with history-making wins and plenty of epic performances.
All eyes were on the four biggest awards handed out each year: album of the year, record of the year, song of the year and best new artist.
Bonnie Raitt won the award for song of the year for "Just Like That" while Lizzo won record of the year for "About Damn Time." Samara Joy took home best new artist while Harry Styles won the coveted album of the year trophy for "Harry's House."
Beyoncé became the artist with the most Grammys ever during the ceremony, winning four of the nine categories for which she was nominated, bringing her total number of Grammy wins to 32.
Trevor Noah hosted the star-studded show from the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
Check out a recap of how music's biggest night unfolded below.
Latest updates:
- Harry Styles wins album of the year
- Lizzo wins the Grammy for record of the year
- Queen Latifah, Missy Elliott, Salt-N-Pepa, Run DMC, Busta Rhymes and more celebrate 50 years of hip-hop
- Beyoncé makes history, becomes artist with most Grammys ever
- Sam Smith, Kim Petras make history by winning best pop duo/group performance
Bad Bunny win best música urbana album
Bad Bunny won the Grammy for best música urbana album for “Un Verano Sin Ti.”
Other nominees in the category included Rauw Alejandro, Daddy Yankee, Farruko and Maluma.
Lizzo delivers powerful performance
Lizzo took the Grammys stage singing a rendition of her song “Special.”
The singer is nominated for some of the night’s biggest awards, including song of the year, record of the year and album of the year.
Sam Smith, Kim Petras make history by winning best pop duo/group performance
Sam Smith and Kim Petras won the Grammy for best pop duo/group performance for their song "Unholy," with Smith becoming the first nonbinary artist and Petras becoming the first transgender artist to win in this category.
In her acceptance speech, Petras spoke about the historic moment and lifted up other transgender performers.
"I just want to thank all the incredible transgender legends before me who kicked these doors open for me so I could be here tonight," she said.
Petras also paid tribute to her friend Sophie, a fellow trans artist who died in 2021, who she said always believed in her.
Stevie Wonder takes the stage to perform classics
Wonder, a 25-time Grammy winner, kicked off his performance with the Temptations' "The Way You Do the Things You Do."
Next, Smokey Robinson joined Wonder onstage to sing his 1967 hit "The Tears Of A Clown."
Wonder was also joined by country artist Chris Stapleton to sing "Higher Ground" from Wonder's 1973 album "Innervisions."