MTV Video Music Award for Best R&B | |
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Awarded for | Music songs |
Country | United States |
Presented by | MTV |
First awarded | 1993 |
Currently held by | SZA – "Snooze" (2024) |
Most awards | En Vogue, Destiny's Child, Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, the Weeknd, and SZA (2) |
Most nominations | Alicia Keys (8) |
Website | VMA website |
The MTV Video Music Award for Best R&B was first awarded in 1993 under the name Best R&B Video, and it was given every year until 2006. The following year MTV revamped the VMAs and eliminated all the genre categories. However, in 2008, when MTV returned the Video Music Awards to their previous format, Best R&B Video did not return despite four other genre awards doing so. It was only in 2019 that the R&B award returned to the VMAs, now under the shorter name of Best R&B.
En Vogue, Destiny's Child, Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, the Weeknd, and SZA are tied as this award's biggest winners, each having won it twice. Keys is also the category's biggest nominee, receiving her eighth nomination in 2023.
Year [c] | Winner(s) | Video | Nominees | Ref. |
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2011 – 2018 | — | |||
2019 | Normani (featuring 6LACK) | "Waves" |
| [15] |
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The MTV Video Music Award for Video of the Year Presented by Burger King is the most prestigious competitive award and the final award presented at the annual MTV Video Music Awards. The award was created by the U.S. network MTV to honor artists with the best music videos. At the first MTV Video Music Awards ceremony in 1984, the Video of the Year honor was presented to The Cars for the video "You Might Think". Originally, all winners were determined by a special panel of music video directors, producers, and record company executives. Since the 2006 awards, winners of major categories are determined by viewers' votes through MTV's website, while the jury decides in the technical categories.
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