Rappers, women aiming big at Grammys after past snubs

Music's biggest stars will gather in Los Angeles on Sunday for the Grammy Awards, and this year observers are hoping…

Music’s biggest stars will gather in Los Angeles on Sunday for the Grammy Awards, and this year observers are hoping the hip-hop and women artists leading the pack will get their due.

The industry’s annual gala draws eye rolls every year from critics who say the winners are too white and too male, but for the second consecutive year black hip-hop artists dominated the nominations across the board.

Rapper Kendrick Lamar — who won a Pulitzer Prize for his album “DAMN.” but not a Grammy for Album of the Year — earned eight nominations, while Canadian rapper Drake snagged seven.

Women artists scored nods in all of the top categories after being largely snubbed a year ago, with rapper Cardi B, pop diva Lady Gaga, pop futurist Janelle Monae and folk rocker Brandi Carlile among the frontrunners.

In the Best New Artist category, six of the eight nominees are women.

But skepticism lingers that nods will actually translate into wins, after rap mogul Jay-Z left empty-handed last year despite eight nominations.