Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo

Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo
Awarded for quality classic vocal solos
Country United States
Presented by National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
First awarded 1959
Last awarded 2017
Website grammy.com

The Grammy Award for Best Classical Vocal Solo has been awarded since 1959. There have been several minor changes to the name of the award over this time:

  • From 1959 to 1960 and from 1962 to 1964 the award was known as Best Classical Performance - Vocal Soloist (with or without orchestra)
  • In 1961 it was awarded as Best Classical Performance - Vocal Soloist
  • In 1965 it was awarded as Best Vocal Soloist Performance (with or without orchestra)
  • In 1966, 1968 and from 1971 to 1990 it was awarded as Best Classical Vocal Soloist Performance
  • In 1967 it was awarded as Best Classical Vocal Soloist Performance (with or without orchestra)
  • In 1969 it was awarded as Best Vocal Soloist Performance
  • In 1970 it was awarded as Best Vocal Soloist Performance, Classical
  • In 1991 it was awarded as Best Classical Vocal Performance
  • In 1992 it was awarded as Best Classical Vocal Soloist
  • From 1993 to 2011 it returned to being awarded as Best Classical Vocal Performance
  • From 2012 to 2014 it was awarded as Best Classical Vocal Solo
  • From 2015 the award has been known as Best Classical Solo Vocal Album and is open for albums only (in previous years single tracks were also eligible for the award, although in most cases the awards and nominations went to albums)

Up to and including 2015, the Grammy was awarded to one or more vocal soloist(s). Accompanying musicians, orchestras and/or conductors were not eligible for the award. From 2016, "collaborative artists" (such as (solo) accompanists, conductors or chamber groups) were also included.[1].

Years reflect the year in which the Grammy Awards were presented, for works released in the previous year.

2010s

Grammy Awards of 2018

  • Barbara Hannigan - Crazy Girl Crazy - Music by Gershwin, Berg & Berio
  • Nominees:
    • Philippe Jarousky (soloist); Petra Müllejans (conductor) - Bach & Telemann: Sacred Cantatas
    • Nicholas Phan (soloist); Myra Huang (accompanist) - Gods & Monsters
    • Joyce DiDonato (soloist); Maxim Emelyanychev (conductor) - In War & Peace - Harmony Through Music
    • Dmitri Hvorostovsky (soloist); Constantine Orbelian (conductor) - Sviridov: Russia Cast Adrift


Grammy Awards of 2017

and Ian Bostridge (soloist), Antonio Pappano (accompanist) for Shakespeare Songs (TIE)



Grammy Awards of 2016

    • Joyce DiDonato (soloist), Antonio Pappano (accompanist) for Joyce & Tony - Live From Wigmore Hall
  • Nominees
    • Mark Padmore (soloist), Kristian Bezuidenhout (accompanist) for Beethoven: An Die Ferne Geliebte; Haydn: English Songs; Mozart: Masonic Cantata
    • Jonas Kaufman (soloist), Antonio Pappano (conductor) for Nessun Dorma - The Puccini Album
    • Talise Trevigne (soloist), David Alan Miller (conductor) for Rouse: Seeing; Kabir Padavali
    • Cecilia Bartoli (soloist), Diego Fasolis (conductor) for St. Petersburg

Grammy Awards of 2015

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2014

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2013

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2012

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2011

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2010

Nominees

2000s

Grammy Awards of 2009

  • Hila Plitmann (soloist), John Corigliano, Tim Handley & Tom Lazarus (engineers), John Corigliano & Tim Handley (producers) for Corigliano: Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems Of Bob Dylan

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2008

  • Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (soloist), John Newton & Mark Donahue(engineers), Dirk Sobotka (producer) for Lorraine Hunt Lieberson Sings Peter Lieberson: Neruda Songs

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2007

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2006

  • Thomas Quasthoff (soloist), Jürgen Bulgrin & Rainer Maillard (engineers), Christopher Alder (producer) for Bach: Cantatas

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2005

  • Susan Graham for Ives: Songs (The Things Our Fathers Loved; the Housatonic at Stockbridge, etc.)

Nominees

  • Angela Maria Blasi and Stella Doufexis for Marx: Orchestral Songs (Songs for High & Middle Voice; Verklartes Jahr)
  • Lorraine Hunt Lieberson for Handel: Arias (Theodora; La Lucrezia-Cantata; Serse)
  • Karita Mattila for Grieg and Sibelius Songs
  • Thomas Quasthoff for A Romantic Songbook (Strauss, Schumann, Schubert, Mendelssohn, etc)

Grammy Awards of 2004

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2003

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2002

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2001

  • Cecilia Bartoli (artist), Jonathan Stokes (engineer), Christopher Raeburn (producer) for The Vivaldi Album (Dell'aura al sussurrar; Alma oppressa, etc.)

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 2000

Nominees

1990s

Grammy Awards of 1999

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1998

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1997

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1996

Nominees

  • Roberto Alagna for Roberto Alagna - Operatic Arias (Works of Donizetti, Massenet, etc.)
  • Wolfgang Holzmair for Schumann: Dichterliebe; Liederkreis, Op. 24; Heine Lieder
  • Sergei Leiferkus for Mussorgsky Songs (Songs and Dances of Death, The Nursery, etc)
  • Bryn Terfel for The Vagabond (Songs by Vaughan Williams, Butterworth, etc.)

Grammy Awards of 1995

Nominees[2]

  • Dmitri Hvorostovsky for Songs and Dances of Death (Works of Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakoff, Borodin, etc.)
  • Peter Schreier for Mendelssohn: Lieder (Der Mond; Reiselied, etc.)
  • Bryn Terfel for An Die Musik - Favorite Schubert Songs (Die Forelle; An Die Leier, etc.)
  • Anne Sofie von Otter for Love's Twilight - Late Romantic Songs by Berg, Korngold, R. Strauss

Grammy Awards of 1994

Nominees

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1992

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1991

Nominees

  • Elly Ameling for Schubert: The Complete Songs, Vol. 7
  • Jan DeGaetani for Berlioz: Les Nuits d Ete, Op. 7; Mahler: 5 Wunderhorn Songs and 5 Ruckert Songs
  • Thomas Hampson for Songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn (Mahler, Brahms, Schumann, Loewe, Strauss, Zemlinsky, von Weber)
  • Sanford Sylvan for Adams: The Wound-Dresser

Grammy Awards of 1990


Nominees

1980s

Grammy Awards of 1989

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1988

Nominees

  • Elly Ameling for Soire Francaise (Debussy, Faure, Poulenc, Franck, Canteloube, Roussel, Chausson, Messiaen, etc.)
  • Arleen Auger for Villa-Lobos: Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 for Soprano and Orchestra of Violincellos
  • Marni Nixon for Copland: 8 Poems of Emily Dickinson
  • Jessye Norman for R. Strauss: Lieder (Including Malven)

Grammy Awards of 1987

Nominees

  • Elly Ameling for Soire Francaise (Debussy, Faure, Poulenc, Franck, Canteloube, Roussel, Chausson, Messiaen, etc.)
  • Arleen Auger for Villa-Lobos: Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 for Soprano and Orchestra of Violincellos
  • Marni Nixon for Copland: 8 Poems of Emily Dickinson
  • Jessye Norman for R. Strauss: Lieder (Including Malven)

Grammy Awards of 1986

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1985

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1984

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1983

Nominees

  • Elly Ameling for Faure: La Bonne Chanson; Debussy: Chansons de Bilitis and Ariettes Oubliees
  • Jessye Norman for Berlioz: La Mort de Cleopatre
  • Kiri Te Kanawa for Mozart: Concert Arias (Andromeda, Il Burbero di Buon Core, Artaserse, Idomeneo, Cerere Placata)
  • Frederica von Stade for Frederica von Stade Live!

Grammy Awards of 1982

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1981

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1980

Nominees

1970s

Grammy Awards of 1979

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1978

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1977

Nominees

Grammy Awards of 1976

Grammy Awards of 1975

Grammy Awards of 1974

Grammy Awards of 1973

Grammy Awards of 1972

Grammy Awards of 1971

Grammy Awards of 1970

1960s

Grammy Awards of 1969

Grammy Awards of 1968

Grammy Awards of 1967

Grammy Awards of 1966

Grammy Awards of 1965

Grammy Awards of 1964

Grammy Awards of 1963

Grammy Awards of 1962

Grammy Awards of 1961

Grammy Awards of 1960

1950s

Grammy Awards of 1959

References

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