Entertainment Awards Shows and Events Bad Bunny, Mary J. Blige and Brandi Carlile to Take the 2023 Grammy Awards Stage More performers for the Feb. 5 award show include Steve Lacy, Lizzo, Kim Petras and Sam Smith By Daniela Avila Daniela Avila Daniela Avila is an editorial assistant at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2021. Her work previously appeared on The Poly Post. People Editorial Guidelines Published on January 25, 2023 03:05PM EST Bad Bunny, Mary J. Blige and Brandi Carlile . Photo: Alexander Tamargo/Getty, Danielle Del Valle/Getty, Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic The 65th annual Grammy Awards performances will make this year one for the books. On Wednesday, the recording academy released its first round of performers including Bad Bunny, Mary J. Blige and Brandi Carlile. More performers include Steve Lacy, Lizzo, Kim Petras and Sam Smith. The award show, hosted by Trevor Noah, will broadcast live on Feb. 5 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS from the Crypto.com arena. Grammys 2023 Nominations: Beyoncé Earns 9, Ties with JAY-Z for Most of All-Time — See the Full List Noah, 38, is hosting the award show for the third year in a row. Luke Combs, Steve Lacy and Lizzo. Toni Anne Barson/FilmMagic, Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty, Rachpoot/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images "I don't think it's normal to host it once, so I don't have a great frame of reference for this," he said in an announcement via Billboard. "It is thrilling. For me, it's a cheat code because I'm a fan of almost all the people who are there." This will mark Noah's first time hosting in Los Angeles; the previous two shows he emceed were held in New York City and Las Vegas. "I am 1,000% a fan, and what I love about the Grammys is that I become a fan of a new artist every single time," he added. "I come in and then I meet this new artist, and all of a sudden, here I am going, 'Who are the Black Pumas?' It introduces you to music that you maybe wouldn't have been [exposed to]." Leading the pack for nominations this year is Beyoncé, whose album Renaissance helped her earn nine nods — tying her with husband JAY-Z for most-nominated artist of all time, with 88 apiece. The "Break My Soul" singer, 41, is up for some of the night's most coveted prizes, including record of the year, album of the year and song of the year. Kendrick Lamar followed with eight nominations, while Adele and Brandi Carlile earned seven each. Mary J. Blige, DJ Khaled, Future, The-Dream, Randy Merrill and Harry Styles each notched six nods. Close