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The 68th Annual Grammy Awards delivered a packed night of music, emotion, and headline-making moments as the industry’s biggest stars gathered Sunday at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. Hosted by Trevor Noah — returning for his sixth and final time as emcee — the ceremony aired live on CBS and streamed on Paramount+, bringing together artists from nearly every corner of the music world to celebrate a year of creativity, risk, and storytelling.

Kendrick Lamar entered the night leading all nominees with nine nods and left having made history, breaking Jay-Z’s record to become the most-awarded rapper in Grammy history. Lady Gaga, producers Cirkut and Jack Antonoff followed close behind with seven nominations each, while Bad Bunny, Leon Thomas, and Sabrina Carpenter earned six apiece. Performances throughout the night featured a mix of chart-toppers and rising voices, including Carpenter, Clipse, Pharrell Williams, and all eight Best New Artist nominees — a rare spotlight moment for emerging talent.

For Christian and faith-minded viewers, the night included moments of gratitude, humility, and testimony woven into acceptance speeches and wins across gospel, worship, and mainstream categories. From emotional first-time victories to artists openly acknowledging faith, family, and purpose, the Grammys once again showed how music can point beyond the spotlight. Below is the complete list of winners from every category at the 2026 Grammy Awards, spanning pop, hip-hop, country, gospel, and beyond.

See a complete list of winners below.

Album of the Year
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — Bad Bunny

Record of the Year
Luther — Kendrick Lamar with SZA

Song of the Year
WILDFLOWER — Billie Eilish O’Connell & Finneas O’Connell, songwriters (Billie Eilish)

Best New Artist
Olivia Dean

Best Pop Solo Performance
Messy — Lola Young

Best Pop Duo/Group Performance
Defying Gravity — Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande

Best Pop Vocal Album
MAYHEM — Lady Gaga

Best Contemporary Country Album
“Beautifully Broken” — Jelly Roll

Best Rap Album
“GNX” — Kendrick Lamar

Best Music Video
“Anxiety,” Doechii

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album
“Coritos Vol. 1,” Israel & New Breed

Best Gospel Album
“Heart Of Mine,” Darrel Walls, PJ Morton

Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song
“Hard Fought Hallelujah,” Brandon Lake With Jelly Roll; Chris Brown, Jason Bradley Deford, Steven Furtick, Benjamin William Hastings & Brandon Lake, songwriters

Best Gospel Performance/Song
“Come Jesus Come,” CeCe Winans Featuring Shirley Caesar

Best Country Song
“Bitin’ List” — Tyler Childers, songwriter (Tyler Childers)

Best Country Duo/Group Performance
“Amen” — Shaboozey & Jelly Roll

Best Country Solo Performance
“Bad As I Used To Be” [From “F1: The Movie”] — Chris Stapleton

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