The nominees for the 60th Annual Grammy Awards have arrived. JAY-Z leads the field with eight nominations, including nods for Album, Song, and Record of the Year. Kendrick Lamar has the second most nods with seven. Drake, as expected, was not nominated, as he withheld his “playlist” More Life from consideration. Check out the full list of nominees here. The ceremony will take place at Madison Square Garden on January 28 and broadcast live on CBS. It’s the first time in 15 years the Grammys will take place in New York City. James Corden will host the show once again.

Kendrick Lamar’s seven nominations are for Album of the Year (DAMN.), Record of the Year (“HUMBLE.”), Best Rap Performance, Best Rap/Sung Performance (“LOYALTY.” with Rihanna), Best Rap Song, Best Rap Album, and Best Music Video.

JAY-Z is up for eight awards. 4:44 got nominations for Album of the Year and Best Rap Album. “The Story of O.J.” was nominated for Record of the Year, Best Rap Song, and Best Music Video. “4:44” was nominated for Song of the Year and Best Rap Performance. And his Beyoncé duet “Family Feud” is up for Best Rap/Sung Performance.

Lorde received one nomination for Melodrama, which is up for Album of the Year against Kendrick, JAY, Bruno Mars’ 24K Magic, and Childish Gambino’s “Awaken, My Love!”.

In addition to his nomination for Album of the Year, Donald Glover’s 2016 record was also nominated for Best Urban Contemporary Album while the single “Redbone” is up for Record of the Year, Best Traditional R&B Performance, and Best R&B song.

The nominees for Best New Artist are Alessia Cara, Khalid, Lil Uzi Vert, Julia Michaels, and SZA. SZA is also up for Best R&B Performance for Ctrl’s “The Weekend,” Best R&B Song (“Supermodel”), Best Rap/Sung Performance (“Love Galore”), and Best Urban Contemporary Album.

Competing for the Best Alternative Music Album are Arcade Fire (Everything Now), Gorillaz (Humanz), LCD Soundsystem (American Dream), Father John Misty (Pure Comedy), and the National (Sleep Well Beast). The deluxe edition of FJM’s album, as well as the National’s LP, are both up for Best Recording Package too. In addition, Gorillaz and LCD are facing off in Best Dance Recording for “Andromeda” and “Tonite,” respectively.

The nominees for Best Rap Album are JAY-Z, Kendrick Lamar, Migos, Rapsody, and Tyler, the Creator. It’s Tyler’s first solo Grammy nomination. (He was a part of the group up for Album of the Year for Channel Orange in 2013.)

“Bodak Yellow,” Cardi B’s breakout single, is up for two awards: Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song. She faces Big Sean, JAY-Z, Kendrick Lamar, and Migos (featuring Lil Uzi Vert) in the former category; she is up against Danger Mouse (featuring Run the Jewels and Big Boi), Kendrick, Rapsody, and JAY in the latter.

Perfume Genius got a nomination for No Shape. He is up for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Brian Eno was nominated for Best New Age Album for Reflection.

The nominees for Best Rock Album are the War on Drugs, Queens of the Stone Age, Mastodon, Metallica, and Nothing More.

The late Leonard Cohen received two nominations for tracks from You Want It Darker. Curiously, they’re in two different genres: The title song is up for Best Rock Performance while “Steer Your Way” was nominated for Best American Roots Performance.

Taylor Swift received just two nominations: “I Don't Wanna Live Forever,” her Fifty Shades Darker duet with Zayn, is up for Best Song Written for Visual Media. She is also up for Best Country Duo/Group Performance for “Better Man,” a song by Little Big Town that she cowrote. Swift’s Grammy-eligible single “Look What You Made Me Do” did not make the cut.

Four Tet’s remix of the xx’s “A Violent Noise” is up for Best Remixed Recording. He faces Louie Vega, SMLE, Adventure Club, and Latroit.

Senator Bernie Sanders has notably gotten a Grammy nod in the Best Spoken Word Album, which includes poetry, audiobooks, and storytelling. Sanders’ nomination is for his book Our Revolution: A Future to Believe In, which was narrated on audiobook by Mark Ruffalo. They face Bruce Springsteen, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Carrie Fisher, and the songwriter Shelly Peiken.