From Adele to Beyoncé: Grammy speeches that made history over the years | English Movie News
Grammy speeches have this magic; they strip away the flash and leave us with pure, messy human moments. Think about it-gold trophies in hand, artists spill their souls-and suddenly we’re all in on the story. Here are four all-time favorites, pulled straight from the transcripts that fans replay year after year. Each one packs a line or two that feels like a warm-hug across decades, and highlights how history is made. Below are some of the best rated Grammy’s speech.
Adele’s big-hearted shoutout to Beyoncé (2017, Album of the Year)
Picture Adele up there, fresh off 25, voice trembling from happy tears. She, during her Grammy’s speech said- “The artist of my life is Beyoncé,” she said plain and true. “I love you. I always have”. Adele called Beyonce’s Lemonade album “so beautiful and so monumental.” Then she split her Grammy in two and handed it over. That kind of generosity? It reminds you art’s about lifting each other, not just grabbing the spotlight.
Beyoncé’s quiet nod to late Uncle Johnny (2023, Best Dance/Electronic Album)
Beyoncé kept her Renaissance speech short, eyes shining as she thanked the team behind those disco vibes. But the gut–punch came honoring her late Uncle Johnny, the queer Black trailblazer, as she quoted in her Grammy acceptance speech, who sparked the album’s joy. “Thank you, God, for protecting me. Thank you, Uncle Johnny.” Simple words, heavy heart. Beyoncé proclaimed. “I’d like to thank the queer community for your love and inventing this genre.“
Kanye West’s pure breakthrough bliss (2005, Best Rap Album)
Kanye West clutched ‘The College Dropout’ after labels laughed him off, and, the emotion poured out. Voice cracking, he owned it: “Right now, is my time and my moment, thanks to the fans, thanks to the accident, thanks to God”. Then he said i plan to celebrate and scream and pop champaign, at every chance i get”. No filter, just a man from Chicago proving the doubters wrong. It’s the underdog story we all root for, bottled in one triumphant pop.
Helen Reddy’s fierce love letter to women (1973, Best Female Pop Vocal)
Back when “I Am Woman” was shaking things up, Helen Reddy grabbed her win and flipped the script. She thanked her team, “Thank you, everyone, i would like to thank Jeff Wald (husband and manager), because he makes my success possible” then hit with divine fire: “Thank you, God… because She makes all things possible.” Using “She” wasn’t accidental—it was a mic-drop for equality in a man’s world. That quiet power lit a fire for generations, proving one line can change the game.In Grammy chaos, they remind us the best music comes from real hearts, messy and true. We replay them because they make fame feel small and connection huge. These moments remain timeless.