The
Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (now
the Latin Recording Academy) was formed by the
National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (now
The Recording Academy) in 1997. It was founded by Michael Greene and Producers & Songwriters
Rudy Pérez & Mauricio Abaroa. Rudy Pérez was the Grammy Florida chapter's first President of the Board. The concept of a separate Grammy Awards for
Latin music began in 1989. According to organizers, the Latin Grammy Awards was established as the
Latin music universe was deemed too large to fit on the Grammy Awards. The Latin Recording Academy defines Latin music as music in Spanish or Portuguese regardless of an artist's origin. The Latin Grammy Awards mainly encompasses music released in
Latin America,
Spain,
Portugal and the
Latino United States. In 2000, it was announced that the
1st Annual Latin Grammy Awards would take place at the
Staples Center on September 13, 2000. On July 7, 2000, the nominations were announced in
Miami, Florida, United States. The Latin Grammys were introduced with over 39 categories included limited to Spanish and Portuguese-speaking recordings. The first telecast took place at the Staples Center and was broadcast. The
following year's show was
canceled due to the
September 11, 2001 attacks, which was the same day the show was to take place. In 2002, the academy elected its first independent board of trustees. In
2005, the broadcast was moved from CBS to
Univision where the whole telecast was in Spanish. Voting members live in various regions in the US and outside of the US including Latin America and Iberia. For a recording to be eligible for a nomination, it must have at least 60% (previously 51% until 2024) of its content recorded in Spanish or Portuguese and commercially released in North America, Central America, South America, the Caribbean, Spain, or Portugal. Products recorded in languages and dialects from
Ibero-America such as Catalan, Basque, Galician, Valencian, Nahuatl, Guarani, Quechua or Mayan may be accepted by majority vote of the committees of the Latin Recording Academy. According to the organization's bylaws, it can also include recognized dialects from countries where
Portuguese is an official language as well as music in French or Italian if "specific music categories are created or approved by the Board of Trustees". The Latin Recording Academy also accepts Latin instrumental music from Ibero-America as well as compositions that have been composed or interpreted by an Iberian American musician. The eligibility period is June 1 to May 30 for a respective awards ceremony. Recordings are first entered and then reviewed to determine the awards they are eligible for. Following that, nominating ballots are mailed to voting members of the academy. The votes are tabulated and the five recordings in each category with the most votes become the nominees. Final voting ballots are sent out to voting members and the winners are determined. Winners are later announced at the Latin Grammy Awards. The current President & CEO of the
Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences is
Manuel Abud, who succeeded
Gabriel Abaroa in 2021. Altogether there are four events: the
Lifetime Achievement and
Trustees when renowned artists are honored for lifetime achievement; the
Leading Ladies of Entertainment event presented to women for their work in the Latin entertainment industry;
Person of the Year, when one artist is honored at a gala dinner, and Grammy itself, an award that brings together artists from all over Latin America and Iberia and that today is broadcast live to 80 countries, including Brazil, by channel Univision (
TNT in Brazil). == Awards ==