Celebrity Style

Let’s Bring Back the Wild Grammys!

Lets Bring Back the Wild Grammys
Photo: Getty Images

Take Jennifer Lopez and her viral plunging Versace gown in 2000—a dress so good that it literally gave birth to Google Images. It’s a moment in fashion history that’s still talked about today, though Lopez wasn t the first person to wear the design. In her Vogue video revisiting the look s origin story, Lopez remembers that “Donatella had worn [the dress], one of the Spice Girls [Geri Halliwell] had worn it, and Sandra Bullock had worn it in another color.” Yet Lopez still felt the look was it; she was sure she could make it her own, and she did. Today s crop of It girls would never step on the red carpet in an outfit already worn by a fellow performer; they’d sooner skip the Grammys altogether.

Another thing that made the Grammys of yesteryear so fun to watch? A total disregard for trends. In 1996, for example, Mary J. Blige sported a head-to-toe leopard ensemble by Dolce Gabbana. “I was trying to do something new and different,” Blige told Vogue of the daring look. In 2002, Lil Kim donned a red leather (and bejeweled) Chanel moto suit—complete with a Chanel biker helmet to match. These were hardly ploys to land on Best Dressed lists; Stars were just having fun.

None of this is to say that the recent Grammys haven’t been a thrill to watch. Lady Gaga showed up in a Hussein Chalayan vessel in 2011, and I’m still obsessed with Harry Styles’s pink Gucci boa from 2021. But as a whole, recent Grammys fashion has been much more contrived, and less about disrupting the norm. Consider this our plea to bring back some Grammys fashion chaos this weekend. Doja Cat, Lana Del Rey, Billie Eilish—we’re looking at you.

Below, even more of the best Grammys looks over the year.