There was hardly a dry eye in the Crypto.com Arena nor on couches around the world watching the 2023 Grammy Awards during its in memoriam segment, which honored the biggest names in music that died in the past year.
The segment flashed names and photos of dozens of musicians, producers and artists who the industry has lost since the last Grammys was held in April 2022, and featured special performances honoring three of the most notable stars who died: country icon Loretta Lynn, Migos rapper Takeoff, and Fleetwood Mac member Christine McVie.
Here’s a breakdown of the 2023 Grammys in memoriam tributes – as well as a look at who did not get honored at this year’s ceremony.
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Kacey Musgraves honors Loretta Lynn
Loretta Lynn, who rose from a hardscrabble upbringing to become the most culturally significant female singer-songwriter in country music history, died Oct. 4 at age 90.
Country singer Kacey Musgraves performed Lynn’s 1970 smash hit about her own upbringing, “Coal Miner’s Daughter.”
Read the obituary:Loretta Lynn, country music legend and ‘Coal Miner’s Daughter,’ dies at 90
Quavo honors Takeoff
Takeoff, one-third of the highly influential Atlanta rap group Migos, died Nov. 1 in a Houston shooting at age 28.
Quavo, Takeoff’s uncle and fellow Migos member, was joined by the Maverick City Music choir to perform “Without You,” the original song Quavo debuted last month to honor Takeoff.
Read the obituary:Takeoff, one-third of influential rap group Migos, killed at 28 in Houston shooting
Sheryl Crow, Bonnie Raitt and Mick Fleetwood honor Christine McVie
Christine McVie, the British keyboard player and co-vocalist in Fleetwood Mac for more than 50 years, died Nov. 30 at age 79.
McVie’s tribute featured a rendition of “Songbird,” performed by Sheryl Crow, Bonnie Raitt and Mick Fleetwood.
Read the obituary:Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac dies at 79 after ‘a short illness’
No, Taylor Hawkins and Meat Loaf weren’t snubbed – but these artists were left out
Every year, social media inevitably calls out the artists not included in the Grammys’ in memoriam segment.
This year, that was more complicated due to the scheduling of last year’s awards which took place in April, meaning some of the biggest stars who died in 2022 were already honored last year.
Social media users were quick to complain that Taylor Hawkins, the Foo Fighters drummer who died in March 2022, and rock star Meat Loaf, who died in Jan. 2022, were snubbed by the Academy. They weren’t – their tributes just aired last year.
More:Grammys ‘In Memoriam’ features special remembrance for Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins
But some viewers live-Tweeting the 2023 Grammys voiced outrage for some artists who died since the 2022 show and weren’t mentioned. Among them: singer Aaron Carter and Three 6 Mafia rapper Gangsta Boo.
Contributing: Melissa Ruggieri, USA TODAY; and Peter Cooper, The (Nashville) Tennessean
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Story Credit: usatoday.com