Grammy Award

American award for achievements in music
(Redirected from Grammy awards)

The Grammy Awards (first named the Gramophone Awards and often called just Grammys), are awards given yearly by the Recording Academy (an association of Americans professionally involved in the recorded music industry) for outstanding work in the music and spoken recording industry. The Grammys have 128 categories with 16 genres. The Grammys are awarded once each year and are a major televised event. The award show has its shares of criticism as being biased.

Gramophone
Current: 66th Annual Grammy Awards
2003 Technical Grammy Award
Awarded forOutstanding achievements in the music industry
CountryUnited States
Presented byThe Recording Academy
First awardedMay 4, 1959; 65 years ago (1959-05-04) (as Gramophone Award)
Websitegrammy.com
Television/radio coverage
NetworkNBC (1959–1970)
ABC (1971–1972)
CBS (1973–present)

The name "Grammy" comes from the word "gramophone". A gramophone was an old machine that played music on records.[1]

The British equivalent is the Brit Awards. The Canadian equivalent is the Juno Awards.

Georg Solti has won 31 Grammy Awards, more than any other person.[2]

Categories

change

General Field

change

Genre-specific categories

change

Dance/Electronic

change

Alternative

change

Country

change

Gospel/Contemporary Christian

change

American Roots

change

Reggae

change

Global Music

change

Children's

change

Spoken Word

change

Comedy

change

Musical Theatre

change

Music for Visual Media

change

Composing

change

Arranging

change

Package, Notes & Historical Field

change

Engineered Album

change

Production Field

change

Remixer

change

Songwriting

change

Classical

change

Music Video/Film

change

References

change
  1. "About this Collection | Emile Berliner and the Birth of the Recording Industry | Digital Collections | Library of Congress". Archived from the original on 2009-05-07. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
  2. Tommasini, Anthony (23 February 2003). "MUSIC: THE GRAMMYS/CLASSICAL; Fewer Records, More Attention". The New York Times.

Other websites

change