Grammys 2024: Dua Lipa opens show with song of the year

Grammys 2024: Dua Lipa opens show with song of the year

Entertainment

Dua Lipa opens show and SZA sizzles

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(Web Desk) - Pop star Dua Lipa opened the 2024 Grammy Awards with an athletic medley of her songs Training Season, Houdini and Dance the Night - the latter of which is up for song of the year.

She was followed on stage in Los Angeles by Tracy Chapman, making a rare appearance to join Luke Combs for his cover of her song Fast Car.

And R&B star SZA - the show's main nominee - staged a recreation of the Crazy 88 fight scene from Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill to accompany her song of the same name.

The singer had already won two awards in the Grammys pre-ceremony, and is still up for three of the night's biggest prizes - album, record and song of the year.

For her performance, she was joined by a phalanx of sword-wielding female dancers who swiftly dispatched hordes of men in suits - a reference to her song's comical tale of killing her ex.

The first award of the night went Miley Cyrus, who picked up best pop vocal performance for her song Flowers.

It was the star's first Grammy, a fact she noted in her acceptance speech, telling the story of a boy whose futile attempts to catch a butterfly ended when he stopped swinging around a net and stayed still.

"And right when he did is when the butterfly came and landed right on the tip of his nose. And this song, Flowers, is my butterfly," she said.

Only a handful of the 94 prizes are handed out in the live show, with the rest announced during a four-hour "premiere ceremony" in the afternoon.

That ceremony saw multiple wins for rapper Killer Mike and indie-rock trio Boygenius, whose debut album The Record combines 1970s California rock harmonies with lyrics about love and friendship.

Kylie Minogue won her second ever Grammy, best pop dance recording, for the viral smash Padam Padam; while Joni Mitchell picked up best folk album for a live album that captured her return to the stage in 2022 after a brain aneurysm.

And South African singer Tyla made history by picking up the first ever award for best African performance.

 




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