Daniel Caesar
Ashton Dumar Norwill Simmonds (born April 5, 1995), known professionally as Daniel Caesar, is a Canadian R&B singer-songwriter raised in Oshawa and Toronto, Ontario, whose music features soulful falsetto vocals, gospel influences, and themes of romantic vulnerability.[1][2] Caesar gained prominence through self-released EPs like Praise Break (2014) and the viral singles "Get You" with Kali Uchis and "Best Part" with H.E.R., culminating in his major-label debut album Freudian (2017), which peaked at number six on the Billboard 200 and topped the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[3][4] The album's success yielded a Juno Award for R&B/Soul Recording of the Year, multiple Grammy nominations including Best R&B Album, and platinum certifications for tracks like "Japanese Denim."[3][4] Follow-up releases such as the EP Case Study 01 (2019), the album Case Study (2019), and Never Enough (2023) sustained his chart presence and collaborations with artists like Justin Bieber and Tyler, the Creator, while earning further Grammy nods for Best R&B Performance.[5][3] In 2019, Caesar sparked controversy by publicly defending influencer YesJulz against black cultural gatekeeping accusations on social media, arguing that the black community exhibited excessive tribalism and that personal attraction should not be racially dictated, remarks that drew charges of internalized racism and led to boycott calls from some fans and media outlets.[6][7] He later described the backlash as an overreaction to his candid, alcohol-influenced statements but acknowledged personal growth from the experience without retracting his core views on free speech and individual preference.[8]Early life
Upbringing and family background
Ashton Simmonds, professionally known as Daniel Caesar, was born on April 5, 1995, in the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and raised in the nearby suburb of Oshawa.[1][9] He grew up as the second eldest of four children in a family of Jamaican and Barbadian (Bajan) descent.[10][11] Simmonds was raised in a devout Christian household affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, where spiritual themes permeated daily life.[7] His father, Norwill Simmonds, served as a pastor and recorded multiple gospel albums, providing early immersion in religious music and performance through family and church activities.[12][13] His mother, Hollace Simmonds, contributed to this environment of faith and musical expression.[2] The family's working-class roots in Oshawa, a community tied to manufacturing and suburban life east of Toronto, exposed Simmonds to a mix of cultural influences amid the broader diversity of the Greater Toronto Area, fostering perspectives on resilience and communal ties from an early age.[14][15]Initial musical development
Simmonds first engaged with music publicly around age 6 or 7, singing the hymn "Come, Thou Fount" at church with family members, amid a upbringing in Oshawa, Ontario, where his Caribbean parents emphasized gospel listening and performance.[15] His father, Jamaican gospel singer Norwill Simmonds, further embedded these traditions by involving him in church settings and providing early access to musical tools.[16] This environment cultivated his vocal foundation, rooted in gospel's emotive delivery and communal singing within the Seventh-day Adventist Church.[16] At age 10, Simmonds received his first guitar from his father and self-taught its use through imitation of recordings and querying peers for chords, favoring it over piano for its direct, raw expression.[15] These solitary practices formed his core songwriting method, emphasizing acoustic simplicity during his teenage years, even as he distanced from church activities in high school.[15] [16] By 17, after relocating to Toronto, Simmonds intensified independent experimentation, drawing initial melodic ideas from school-era exposures to artists like John Mayer and Jason Mraz, while gospel's structural influence lingered in his phrasing despite his secular shift.[15] [16] This phase of trial-based skill-building preceded structured production collaborations, prioritizing personal refinement over formal training.[15]Musical career
Independent beginnings and Freudian breakthrough (2014–2017)
Daniel Caesar self-released his debut extended play Praise Break on September 17, 2014, via SoundCloud, comprising seven tracks that drew from his gospel roots and early R&B experimentation.[17] [18] He followed with Pilgrim's Paradise on November 12, 2015, a six-track EP featuring collaborations including BADBADNOTGOOD and Sean Leon on "Paradise," which circulated organically among online listeners through streaming platforms.[19] [20] These independent releases built grassroots momentum, culminating in the 2016 single "Get You" featuring Kali Uchis, whose official video premiered on December 1 and gained viral spread via YouTube covers and social media shares, amassing early streaming traction without major label backing.[21] [22] Caesar co-founded the independent imprint Golden Child Recordings to retain creative control, self-releasing his debut full-length album Freudian on August 25, 2017, after months of production alongside collaborators Jordan Evans and Matthew Burnett, who also funded his initial music video efforts.[23] [24] Freudian entered the Billboard 200 chart, driven by its intimate, self-recorded sound and singles like "Best Part" featuring H.E.R., which topped the Adult R&B Songs chart in 2018 following its October 2017 audio release.[25] [26] "Get You" similarly reached No. 1 on the same tally, reflecting the album's organic growth from SoundCloud uploads to broader radio and streaming play.[27] The project's DIY approach—emphasizing home-based recording and peer-to-peer promotion—yielded 234,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. by January 2018, per Nielsen data, while earning platinum certification in Canada for 80,000 units shipped.[27] [28]Case Study 01 and rising prominence (2018–2019)
Following the success of his debut album Freudian, Daniel Caesar maintained momentum in 2018 through key performances and releases. On April 13, 2018, he performed at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, showcasing tracks from Freudian to a large audience.[29] Earlier that year, on March 25, 2018, Caesar won the Juno Award for R&B/Soul Recording of the Year for Freudian, affirming his standing in the Canadian music industry.[30] In October 2018, he released the single "Who Hurt You?", which accumulated over 300 million streams on Spotify by subsequent years, signaling continued fan engagement.[31] The release of CASE STUDY 01 on June 28, 2019, marked a pivotal point in Caesar's rising prominence, debuting at No. 17 on the Billboard 200 chart.[32] This 10-track project, featuring collaborations with artists such as Brandy on "Love Again" and Sean Kaikai on "Open Up," demonstrated his evolving production and songwriting approach while building on prior acclaim.[33] The EP's tracks, including "Love Again," contributed to the album's total exceeding 773 million Spotify streams, reflecting strong digital consumption and industry validation.[34] By late 2019, Caesar's Spotify metrics underscored his transition toward mainstream viability, with growing monthly listener bases driven by streaming platforms and playlist placements. High-profile inclusions, such as festival appearances and award recognitions, further solidified his position, though CASE STUDY 01 received a Juno nomination in 2020 categories without a win in the immediate period.[35] This phase highlighted quantifiable commercial peaks, with chart performance and stream data indicating sustained upward trajectory prior to subsequent career developments.[32]Never Enough era and career introspection (2020–2023)
In the years following the release of Case Study 01, Daniel Caesar maintained a lower public profile amid personal and professional reflection, with no major album output until 2023. This period encompassed recovery from prior controversies and a deliberate slowdown in creative endeavors, allowing focus on mental health and artistic reevaluation, as Caesar later described the era's "hazy uncertainty" influencing his songwriting.[36][37] The third studio album, Never Enough, marked his major-label debut on Republic Records after signing in late 2021, released on April 7, 2023.[38] Production for Never Enough involved key collaborators including executive producer Sir Dylan, who had worked with artists like SZA and Solange, alongside Caesar's brother Zachary Simmonds, Sevn Thomas, Rami, and Raphael Saadiq.[39] Tracks such as "Do You Like Me?" (produced by Sir Dylan and Saadiq) and "Valentina" previewed the album's blend of soulful introspection and experimental elements. The single "Toronto 2014," featuring Mustafa, evoked nostalgic reminiscence of Caesar's early career struggles in his hometown, with lyrics pondering dreams and authenticity amid fame's illusions.[40] A music video for the track followed on May 30, 2023, reinforcing themes of personal origin and hindsight.[41] Never Enough debuted at No. 14 on the Billboard 200, Caesar's highest-charting album to date, driven by approximately 30 million first-week streams across platforms.[42] It also reached No. 5 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[32] Reviews highlighted mixed reception regarding innovation; while praised for soulful heartbreak ballads and experimental production, critics noted the album's sleepy pacing and reliance on familiar R&B tropes sometimes overshadowed bolder risks compared to prior works like Freudian.[43][38] The title itself stemmed from Caesar's self-doubt about adequacy in fame and creativity, framing the project as a introspective pivot toward emotional vulnerability over commercial reinvention.[37]Son of Spergy and ongoing evolution (2024–present)
Daniel Caesar released his fourth studio album, Son of Spergy, on October 24, 2025, via Republic Records under Hollace Inc.[44] The 12-track project, lasting 51 minutes and 44 seconds, draws its title from the nickname of Caesar's gospel-singer father, serving as a recalibration following years of commercial success and a focus on reconnecting with family and past relationships.[44][45] Advance promotion included presave campaigns on platforms like Spotify and the reveal of singles "Have a Baby (With Me)" and "Call on Me," alongside a tracklist announcement featuring collaborations with artists such as Sampha on "Rain Down," Bon Iver, Clairo, Mustafa the Poet, and Norwill Simmonds on "Baby Blue."[46][47][48] The album incorporates gospel-infused elements characteristic of Caesar's roots, presented in a slower, introspective format that hints at personal insights into his life and relationships, though critics noted uneven pacing and over-reliance on familiar motifs amid its candid emotional highs.[49][50] Initial reception highlighted its soul-baring quality, with early streaming activity contributing to re-entries of prior albums like Never Enough (2023) and Freudian (2017) on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart, spurred by surprise pop-up concerts in Canadian cities.[51][52] As of late October 2025, fan responses on social media varied, with some praising its acoustic gospel cadence and others critiquing its consistency, signaling Caesar's adaptability in blending vulnerability with sonic experimentation post-hiatus.[53][54] Ongoing activities include performances such as "Call on Me" showcased ahead of release, underscoring a shift toward intimate, family-oriented themes while maintaining commercial viability through vinyl and CD merchandise availability.[55][56] This phase reflects Caesar's evolution toward more personal songwriting, building on prior introspection without delving into full tour logistics.[57]Controversies
2019 defense of YesJulz and public backlash
In March 2019, Daniel Caesar went on Instagram Live while intoxicated and defended social media influencer YesJulz, who had faced prior accusations of cultural appropriation—such as wearing cornrows and promoting merchandise with the phrase "Ni**as lie a lot"—and making anti-Black remarks, including criticisms of Black media figures like Scottie Beam and Karen Civil.[58][59] Caesar questioned the criticism directed at YesJulz, asking, "Why are we being so mean to Julz?" and extended his defense to broader claims that Black people were mistreating white allies who supported Black culture.[60][61] During the session, Caesar asserted that "white women saved R&B," citing examples like Amy Winehouse and Adele as evidence of non-Black artists revitalizing the genre when he perceived Black contributors as complacent or underperforming.[62][63] He further argued that Black individuals needed to show more gratitude toward white supporters, stating, "Black people need to be nice to white people who love you back," and accused the community of hypersensitivity that alienated potential allies.[58][62] The remarks triggered swift backlash on platforms like Twitter, where #DanielCaesar trended amid accusations from users—particularly within Black online communities—that his statements promoted anti-Black rhetoric, internalized self-hatred, and undermined efforts to address cultural exploitation by non-Black figures.[61][58] Critics, including music commentators, highlighted the comments as dismissive of legitimate grievances against YesJulz's history of boundary-crossing behavior, leading to widespread calls for boycotts of Caesar's music and performances.[60][62] A smaller contingent of supporters pushed back against the intensity of the response, contending that it exemplified selective outrage that ignored intra-community dysfunction—such as violence or neglect within Black spaces—while fixating on inter-racial dynamics, and that Caesar's point about non-Black influences on R&B held factual merit given the commercial resurgence driven by artists like Winehouse.[59] These defenders framed the episode as overreach in cancel culture, arguing it punished candid discussion of alliances and contributions over performative solidarity.[63]Response, apology, and career impact
Following the 2019 backlash, Caesar initially issued a brief apology days after his Instagram Live remarks but largely maintained silence on the matter for several years.[7] In a 2023 Apple Music interview with Nadeska Alexis, he offered a more detailed accountability statement, admitting that intoxication impaired his judgment during the rant and that he was "wrong" for the comments, while emphasizing personal responsibility without fully dismissing the public's reaction as unjust.[59][64] He reiterated taking ownership in subsequent reflections, stating the episode stemmed from being "drunk and foolish in public."[6] Critics argued the apologies lacked sufficient contrition, viewing them as belated and incomplete given the initial defense of the remarks.[65] Defenders, however, contended the backlash was disproportionate, prioritizing individual free speech and Caesar's authentic Black perspective over performative outrage, with some attributing the intensity to broader cultural pressures on public figures.[66] The controversy led to a temporary career setback, including reduced radio play and underwhelming performance for his 2019 album Case Study 01 compared to prior releases.[60] Yet evidence indicates no permanent "cancellation": his 2023 album Never Enough achieved his highest Billboard 200 debut at No. 14 with strong first-week sales, alongside No. 2 placement on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[42][67] By 2025, Caesar framed the incident as a catalyst for personal growth in a Billboard cover story, coinciding with rebounding streams nearing pre-2019 levels and the release of Son of Spergy, alongside active touring.[7][59] This resilience underscores sustained output and audience retention despite the fallout.[8]Artistry
Musical style and production
Daniel Caesar's music primarily operates within alternative R&B and soul genres, distinguished by minimalist arrangements that prioritize emotional intimacy through sparse, organic builds rather than dense electronic maximalism.[68][69] His tracks frequently incorporate live instrumentation, including acoustic guitars and subtle percussion, to evoke a sense of raw vulnerability, as evidenced in performances with full bands emphasizing instrumental interplay over synthesized layers.[70] Vocally, Caesar employs falsetto and mixed registers to layer harmonies, creating a choir-like effect that enhances the mid-tempo grooves typical of his catalog, with many songs clocking in at 70-80 BPM to sustain introspective pacing.[71][72][73] Production on debut album Freudian (2017) utilized atmospheric techniques akin to a "soft rain," fostering tranquility via restrained dynamics and avoiding the trap or hip-hop fusions prevalent among contemporaries.[74] Co-produced with Jordan Evans and Matthew Burnett, it highlighted Caesar's instrumental contributions on guitar, aligning with his guitar-driven songwriting approach.[75] This contrasts with peers' reliance on heavy synths, favoring instead builds rooted in live-feel elements for a grounded, non-maximalist sound.[76] By Son of Spergy (2025), production evolved to incorporate richer layering of vocal harmonies and intricate arrangements alongside minimalist cores, with Caesar credited as co-producer on multiple tracks using both organic and subtle electronic elements to maintain journey-like track structures.[47][77] BPMs remained in the 70-100 range, preserving intimacy while allowing for expanded textural depth without shifting to high-energy electronic dominance.[78] This progression underscores a deliberate avoidance of genre-blending excess, prioritizing verifiable sonic restraint for emotional resonance.[79]Themes and influences
Daniel Caesar's songwriting recurrently delves into romantic vulnerability, the ephemerality of love, and quests for spiritual redemption, often framing relationships as profound yet precarious commitments akin to sacrificial rites. On Freudian (2017), the title track equates devotion to human sacrifice, probing whether endurance outweighs surrender amid inevitable relational flux.[80] These elements reflect his Toronto upbringing in a strict Seventh-day Adventist family, where gospel hymns and biblical teachings instilled motifs of divine grace amid human frailty, manifesting in lyrics that blend secular longing with redemptive hope, as in explorations of loss and renewal across albums like Case Study 01 (2019).[7][81][82] His influences encompass neo-soul innovator D'Angelo, whose introspective vulnerability shaped Caesar's raw emotional core, alongside gospel trailblazer Kirk Franklin and eclectic acts like the Beatles and Frank Ocean, fostering a fusion of spiritual fervor and modern R&B introspection.[83] Caesar eschews prevalent auto-tune saturation for unadorned vocal authenticity, prioritizing unfiltered conveyance of lived truths over polished trends, a stance rooted in his church-honed emphasis on sincere testimony.[82] Certain critiques label tracks as excessively sentimental, yet empirical listener engagement counters this, with Caesar amassing over 6.2 billion Spotify streams by 2025, signaling algorithmic preference for his philosophically laced relational candor that sustains high replay rates among audiences drawn to substantive emotional narratives.[84][85]Collaborations and songwriting approach
Daniel Caesar has collaborated with several artists, notably co-writing "Best Part" with H.E.R. alongside producers Jordan Evans, Matthew Burnett, and Riley Bell, which appeared on his 2017 album Freudian and her self-titled project, earning both Grammy nominations for Best R&B Performance.[86][87] This partnership highlighted shared songwriting credits, with Caesar contributing lyrics and vocals that complemented H.E.R.'s, fostering a mutual creative exchange evident in the track's chart success, peaking at number 18 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[88] Another key collaboration is "Toronto 2014" with Mustafa, released in 2023 on Caesar's album Never Enough, originally conceived for Mustafa's debut When Smoke Rises but finalized through their joint efforts, reflecting Toronto's cultural influences and personal nostalgia.[89][41] Caesar's approach to such features involves co-production to elevate collaborators, as seen with frequent partners Evans and Burnett, who co-founded his label Golden Child Recordings and contributed to multiple tracks, ensuring balanced input without overshadowing individual voices.[90] In songwriting, Caesar often begins with acoustic guitar foundations, as detailed in discussions of his process for early singles like "Get You," building melodies iteratively before refining with producers.[91] His lyrics emphasize realistic portrayals of human relationships, grappling with flaws, agency, and emotional coping rather than idealized narratives, as articulated in reflections on fame and interpersonal dynamics.[37] This method underscores self-sufficiency in solo work, where collaborations extend rather than define his output, with features like those on Never Enough prolonging chart presence—such as "Toronto 2014" sustaining streams—while tracks like "Pain Is Inevitable" affirm independent compositional strength.[37]Personal life
Relationships and privacy
Daniel Caesar has consistently prioritized privacy in his personal relationships, rarely disclosing details about romantic partners amid his professional success. As of 2025, no marriages or long-term relationships have been publicly confirmed, with sources indicating he remains single or keeps such matters undisclosed.[92] This approach aligns with his broader minimalist personal branding, avoiding the tabloid scrutiny common among contemporaries in R&B and neo-soul genres. Unverified social media speculation has occasionally linked Caesar to women such as an individual named Emily during the Freudian era (2016–2018), purportedly based on event photos from awards shows, but these claims lack substantiation from primary interviews or official statements. Similarly, professional collaborations, including with artists like H.E.R., have fueled transient rumors of personal ties, though both parties have framed interactions as strictly artistic without addressing romantic implications. Caesar's reticence extends to public commentary, where he has expressed skepticism toward conventional notions of love in early profiles, further underscoring his guarded stance.[93] In contrast, Caesar openly acknowledges the centrality of family in his life, crediting siblings and parents as key support systems. His father, a gospel singer, profoundly shaped his early musical exposure, with Caesar detailing a process of reconciliation over past estrangements in a October 2025 interview, describing it as pivotal to his personal growth and forthcoming work.[94] His mother, Hollace Simmonds, has appeared in family-oriented discussions, highlighting nurturing dynamics that inform his views on partnerships, as reflected in recent social media reflections on relational standards drawn from female relatives.[95] Sporadic Instagram posts nod to these bonds, portraying family as a stabilizing force without delving into granular personal anecdotes, consistent with his aversion to oversharing.[96]Beliefs and worldview
Daniel Caesar was raised in a Seventh-day Adventist household in Oshawa, Ontario, where his father, Norwill Simmons, a Jamaican-born gospel singer and pastor, instilled a deep foundation in Christian faith through music and worship.[7][16] Though he distanced himself from organized religion during high school, Caesar has articulated an evolving faith journey marked by reconnection to these roots, describing music as a "roadmap back to God" and a bridge to reconciling with his father.[12] This spiritual framework informs his optimism, as evidenced by his affinity for Jeremiah 29:11—"For I know the plans I have for you... plans to give you hope and a future"—which he cites as a source of assurance amid personal trials.[12] His 2025 album Son of Spergy further reflects this, framing religion not as rigid doctrine but as an updatable personal operating system inherited from upbringing, prioritizing relational and introspective dimensions over institutional adherence.[7] Regarding race, Caesar has challenged prevailing victim-oriented narratives within Black communities, positing in a 2019 Instagram Live that perpetual focus on external oppression yields no tangible advancement and that adopting proven strategies of self-advancement—rather than grievance—better serves progress.[97] Following ensuing backlash, he apologized for the intemperate phrasing while underscoring the value of internal accountability over deflection.[98] In subsequent reflections, he expresses doubt about facile interracial reconciliation, noting "too many scars" impede such ideals, and instead highlights uncolonized Black societies like Ethiopia as exemplars of cultural resilience and self-sustained unity, free from external dilution.[7] Caesar espouses self-reliance through rigorous mental discipline and iterative self-improvement, viewing accountability for personal flaws—such as selfishness or emotional misdirection—as essential to growth rather than evasion via external justifications.[7][8] He prioritizes artistic autonomy by reverting to core collaborators after industry missteps, emphasizing lessons learned through solitude over handouts or unvetted alliances, and frames ongoing evolution as a deliberate process of processing fears and refining one's inner narrative.[7] This worldview favors substantive individual agency and introspection over performative gestures, aligning with his broader critique of unexamined sensitivities that prioritize optics over efficacy.[97]Discography
Studio albums
Freudian is the debut studio album by Daniel Caesar, released independently on August 25, 2017, through Golden Child Recordings. It debuted at No. 25 on the Billboard 200 chart. The album was certified platinum by the RIAA on January 20, 2022.[99] Case Study 01, the second studio album, was released on June 28, 2019, via Golden Child Recordings.[100] It peaked at No. 24 on the Billboard 200.[32]| Title | Release date | Label | Billboard 200 peak | Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Never Enough | April 7, 2023 | Republic Records | No. 14 | Gold (Canada) |
| Son of Spergy | October 24, 2025 | Republic Records | — | — |
Extended plays and mixtapes
Daniel Caesar's early extended plays, distributed via platforms such as SoundCloud and iTunes, featured shorter tracklists and lo-fi production that emphasized his raw vocal style and spiritual undertones, differing from the polished structures of his later studio albums.[17] Birds of Paradise, his debut EP, emerged in December 2013 under the Toronto-based IXXI collective, comprising three tracks including "Medulla Oblongata" and "Scream," which showcased nascent neo-soul experimentation produced by Matthew Burnett and Jordan Evans.[102][103] In September 2014, Caesar self-released the seven-track Praise Break EP on SoundCloud, with production again by Evans and Burnett; it integrated gospel roots from his upbringing alongside R&B and classic rock elements across songs like "Violet" and "Casablanca," establishing a template for introspective, emotive releases.[17][18][104] Pilgrim's Paradise, issued November 12, 2015, functioned as a mixtape-style EP with seven tracks available digitally via iTunes under Golden Child Recordings, delving into spiritual motifs through pieces such as "Death & Taxes" and a collaboration with BADBADNOTGOOD and Sean Leon on "Paradise."[20][105][106]Notable singles
"Get You", featuring Kali Uchis and released independently in October 2016, served as Daniel Caesar's breakthrough single, propelling him into mainstream recognition within the R&B genre. The track debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 2018, marking his first entry on the chart, and peaked at number 63.[107] By late 2025, it had accumulated over 1.46 billion streams on Spotify, reflecting sustained popularity driven by its soulful production and themes of enduring love.[108] "Best Part", a collaboration with H.E.R. released in October 2017, became one of Caesar's most commercially successful singles, topping the Billboard Adult R&B Songs chart for multiple weeks and reaching number one on the Adult R&B Airplay chart.[3] Certified 5x platinum by the RIAA, the duet's introspective lyrics and harmonic interplay contributed to its Grammy win for Best R&B Performance in 2019, shared with H.E.R.[109] It has surpassed 1.92 billion Spotify streams, underscoring its enduring appeal in R&B playlists and radio rotation.[110] From his 2023 album Never Enough, "Buyer's Remorse" featuring Omar Apollo highlighted Caesar's evolving sound with introspective regret motifs, though it achieved modest chart traction compared to earlier hits, amassing around 33 million Spotify streams by mid-2025.[111]Awards and nominations
Grammy Awards
Daniel Caesar has received nine Grammy nominations across multiple ceremonies, securing one win for Best R&B Performance for "Best Part" featuring H.E.R. at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019.[5] At the 60th Annual Grammy Awards in 2018, his debut album Freudian was nominated for Best R&B Album, while the single "Get You" featuring Kali Uchis earned a nomination for Best R&B Performance; neither won.[112] The following year at the 61st ceremony, in addition to the win for "Best Part," Caesar received further recognition tied to Freudian material, though the primary accolade was the performance category victory. Subsequent nominations include Best R&B Performance for "Love Again" featuring Brandy from Case Study 01 at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2020, which did not result in a win.[113] At the 64th Annual Grammy Awards in 2022, Caesar's feature on Justin Bieber's "Peaches" (with Giveon) garnered four nominations: Record of the Year, Song of the Year, Best Pop Duo/Group Performance, and Best Music Video; all were unsuccessful.[114][115] No additional nominations or wins followed for his 2023 album Never Enough at the 66th or 67th ceremonies, with the album absent from R&B categories in 2024 announcements.[37]| Year | Category | Work | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 (60th) | Best R&B Album | Freudian | Nominated[116] |
| 2018 (60th) | Best R&B Performance | "Get You" feat. Kali Uchis | Nominated |
| 2019 (61st) | Best R&B Performance | "Best Part" feat. H.E.R. | Won |
| 2020 (62nd) | Best R&B Performance | "Love Again" feat. Brandy | Nominated[113] |
| 2022 (64th) | Record of the Year | "Peaches" (Justin Bieber feat. Daniel Caesar & Giveon) | Nominated[114] |
| 2022 (64th) | Song of the Year | "Peaches" (Justin Bieber feat. Daniel Caesar & Giveon) | Nominated[114] |
| 2022 (64th) | Best Pop Duo/Group Performance | "Peaches" (Justin Bieber feat. Daniel Caesar & Giveon) | Nominated[114] |
| 2022 (64th) | Best Music Video | "Peaches" (Justin Bieber feat. Daniel Caesar & Giveon) | Nominated[115] |