Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album

The Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album has been awarded since 1959. The award is generally given to the album producer, principal vocalist(s), and the composer and lyricist if they have written a new score which comprises 51% or more playing time of the album.

Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album
Awarded forquality musical theater cast recordings
CountryUnited States
Presented byNational Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
First awarded1959 (The Music Man)
Currently held byHadestown (2020)
Websitegrammy.com

Process

Over the years, the qualifications for the individual nominees has fluctuated with principal artists, composers, and producers at one point being the sole eligible nominee, to the current (as of the 63rd Grammy Awards) standard which is as follows: "Award goes to the Album Producer(s) and Principal Vocalist(s) with significant contributing performance. The Lyricist(s) and Composer(s) of at least 51% of a new score are eligible for an award if they have written and/or composed a new score that comprises 51% or more playing time of the album. As many as four Principal Vocalist(s) may be awarded. If the winning recording is an "ensemble-driven" piece with no principal vocalist(s), the members of the ensemble may receive a Winners Certificate.[1]

Years reflect the year in which the Grammy Awards were handed out, for music released in the previous year.

Name changes

This award has had several minor name changes:

  • In 1959 the award was known as Best Original Cast Album (Broadway or TV)
  • In 1960 it was awarded as Best Broadway Show Album
  • In 1961 it was awarded as Best Show Album (Original Cast)
  • From 1962 to 1963 it was awarded as Best Original Cast Show Album
  • From 1964 to 1973 it was awarded as Best Score From an Original Cast Show Album
  • From 1974 to 1975 it was awarded as Best Score From the Original Cast Show Album
  • From 1976 to 1986 it was awarded as Best Cast Show Album
  • From 1987 to 1991 it was awarded as Best Musical Cast Show Album
  • From 1992 to 2011 it was awarded as Best Musical Show Album
  • From 2012 it has been known as Best Musical Theater Album.[2]

Winner and nominees

1950s

Year[I] Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
1959 Meredith Willson (composer) The Music Man [3][4]

1960s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
1960 Ethel Merman (artist) (TIE)
Gwen Verdon (artist) (TIE)
Gypsy (TIE)
Redhead (TIE)
[3][5]
1961 Oscar Hammerstein II & Richard Rodgers (composers) The Sound of Music [3][6]
1962 Frank Loesser (composer) How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying [3][7]
1963 Richard Rodgers (composer) No Strings [3][8]
1964 Jerry Bock & Sheldon Harnick (composers) She Loves Me [3][9]
1965 Bob Merrill & Jule Styne (composers) Funny Girl [3][10]
1966 Alan J. Lerner & Burton Lane (composers) On a Clear Day You Can See Forever [3][11]
1967 Jerry Herman (composer) Mame [3][12]
1968 Fred Ebb & John Kander (composers)
 · produced by Goddard Lieberson
Cabaret [3][13]
1969 Galt MacDermot, Gerome Ragni & James Rado (composers)
 · produced by Andy Wiswell
Hair [3][14]

1970s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
1970 Burt Bacharach & Hal David (composers)
 · produced by Henry Jerome & Phil Ramone
Promises, Promises [3][15]
1971 Stephen Sondheim (composer)
 · produced by Thomas Z. Shepard
Company [3][16]
1972 Stephen Schwartz (composer)
 · produced by Stephen Schwartz
Godspell [3][17]
1973 Micki Grant (composer)
 · produced by Jerry Ragavoy
Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope [3][18]
1974 Stephen Sondheim (composer)
 · produced by Goddard Lieberson
A Little Night Music [3][19]
1975 Judd Woldin & Robert Brittan (composers)
 · produced by Thomas Z. Shepard
Raisin [3][20]
1976 Charlie Smalls (composer)
 · produced by Jerry Wexler
The Wiz [3][21]
1977 Hugo Peretti & Luigi Creatore (producers) Bubbling Brown Sugar [3][22]
1978 Charles Strouse & Martin Charnin (composers)
 · produced by Charles Strouse & Larry Morton
Annie [3][23]
1979 Thomas Z. Shepard (producer) Ain't Misbehavin' [3][24]

1980s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
1980 Stephen Sondheim (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Thomas Z. Shepard
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street [3][25]
1981 Andrew Lloyd Webber (composer) & Tim Rice (lyricist)
 · produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber & Tim Rice
Evita: Premier American Recording [3][26]
1982 Quincy Jones (producer) Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music [3][26]
1983 Henry Krieger (composer) & Tom Eyen (lyricist)
 · produced by David Foster
Dreamgirls: Original Broadway Cast Album [3][26]
1984 Andrew Lloyd Webber (producer) Cats: Complete Original Broadway Cast Recording [3][26]
1985 Stephen Sondheim (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Thomas Z. Shepard
Sunday in the Park with George [3][26]
1986 John McClure (producer) West Side Story [3][26]
1987 Thomas Z. Shepard (producer) Follies in Concert [3][26]
1988 Claude-Michel Schönberg (composer)
 · lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer;
 · produced by Alain Boublil & Claude-Michel Schönberg
Les Misérables (Original Broadway Cast Recording) [3][27]
1989 Stephen Sondheim (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Jay David Saks
Into the Woods [3][26]

1990s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
1990 Jay David Saks (producer) Jerome Robbins' Broadway [3][26]
1991 David Caddick (producer) Les Misérables: The Complete Symphonic Recording [3][26]
1992 Cy Coleman (composer)
 · lyrics by Adolph Green & Betty Comden;
 · produced by Cy Coleman & Mike Berniker
The Will Rogers Follies [3][26]
1993 Jay David Saks (producer) Guys and Dolls (The New Broadway Cast Recording) [3][26]
1994 Pete Townshend (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by George Martin
The Who's Tommy [3][26]
1995 Stephen Sondheim (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Phil Ramone
Passion [3][26]
1996 Arif Mardin, Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller (producers) Smokey Joe's Cafe: The Songs Of Leiber And Stoller [3][26]
1997 Bill Whelan (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Bill Whelan
Riverdance [3][26]
1998 Jay David Saks (producer) Chicago: The Musical (1996 Broadway Revival Cast)
  • Jekyll and Hyde – Karl Richardson & Frank Wildhorn (producers)
  • The Life – Cy Coleman (composer); Ira Gasman (lyricist); Mike Berniker & Cy Coleman (producers)
  • Songs from Ragtime: The Musical (1996 Concept Album) – Stephen Flaherty (composer); Lynn Ahrens (lyricist); Jay David Saks (producer)
  • Titanic – Maury Yeston (composer & lyricist); Tommy Krasker & Maury Yeston (producers)
[3][28]
1999 Mark Mancina (producer) The Lion King
  • Cabaret (New Broadway Cast) – Jay David Saks (producer)
  • Chicago: The Musical (1998 London Cast) – Thomas Z. Shepard (producer)
  • Ragtime (1998 Original Broadway Cast) – Jay David Saks (producer)
  • The Wizard of Oz (1998 Cast Recording) – Robert Sher (producer)
[3][29]

2000s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
2000 John McDaniel & Stephen Ferrera (producers) Annie Get Your Gun (The New Broadway Cast) [3][30]
2001 Elton John (composer)
 · lyrics by Tim Rice;
 · produced by Chris Montan, Frank Filipetti, Guy Babylon & Paul Bogaev;
 · engineered/mixed by Frank Filipetti
Elton John and Tim Rice's Aida
  • Kiss Me, Kate (New Broadway Cast) – Hugh Fordin, Paul Gemignani & Don Sebesky (producers)
  • The Music Man (New Broadway Cast) – Hugh Fordin (producer)
  • Swing! – Steven Epstein (producer)
  • The Wild Party – John LaChiusa (composer & lyricist); Phil Ramone (producer)
[3][31]
2002 Mel Brooks (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Hugh Fordin;
 · engineered/mixed by Cynthia Daniels
The Producers [3][32]
2003 Marc Shaiman (composer)
 · lyrics by Marc Shaiman & Scott Wittman;
 · produced by Marc Shaiman;
 · engineered/mixed by Pete Karam
Hairspray [3][33]
2004 Jay David Saks (producer)
 · engineered/mixed by Ken Hahn, Todd Whitelock & Tom Lazarus
Gypsy: A Musical Fable [3]
2005 Stephen Schwartz (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Stephen Schwartz;
 · engineered/mixed by Frank Filipetti
Wicked [3]
2006 Eric Idle & John Du Prez (composers)
 · lyrics by Eric Idle;
 · produced by Eric Idle & John Du Prez;
 · engineered/mixed by Frank Filipetti
Monty Python's Spamalot [3]
2007 Bob Gaudio (producer);
 · engineered/mixed by Pete Karam
Jersey Boys [3]
2008 Duncan Sheik (composer)
 · lyrics by Steven Sater;
 · produced by Duncan Sheik;
 · engineered/mixed by Michael Tudor
Spring Awakening [3][34]
2009 Lin-Manuel Miranda (composer & lyricist)
 · produced by Alex Lacamoire, Andres Levin, Bill Sherman, Joel W. Moss, Kurt Deutsch & Lin-Manuel Miranda;
 · engineered/mixed by Joel W. Moss & Tim Latham
In the Heights [3][35]

2010s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
2010 David Caddick & David Lai (producer)
 · engineered/mixed by Todd Whitelock
West Side Story (New Broadway Cast Recording) [3][36]
2011 Billie Joe Armstrong (producer)
 · engineered/mixed by Chris Dugan & Chris Lord-Alge
American Idiot (featuring Green Day) [3][37][38]
2012 Andrew Rannells & Josh Gad (artists)
 · music & lyrics by Matt Stone, Robert Lopez & Trey Parker;
 · produced by Anne Garefino, Matt Stone, Robert Lopez, Scott Rudin, Stephen Oremus & Trey Parker;
 · engineered/mixed by Frank Filipetti
The Book of Mormon [3][39]
2013 Steve Kazee & Cristin Milioti (principal soloists)
 · produced by Steven Epstein & Martin Lowe;
 · engineered/mixed by Richard King
Once: A New Musical [3][40]
2014 Billy Porter & Stark Sands (principal soloists)
 · music & lyrics by Cyndi Lauper;
 · produced by Sammy James, Jr., Cyndi Lauper, Stephen Oremus & William Wittman;
 · engineered/mixed by Derik Lee & William Wittman
Kinky Boots [3][41]
2015 Jessie Mueller (principal soloist)
 · produced by Jason Howland, Steve Sidwell & Billy Jay Stein
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical [3]
2016 Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Christopher Jackson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, Anthony Ramos & Phillipa Soo (principal soloists)
 · music & lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda
 · produced by Alex Lacamoire, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Bill Sherman, Ahmir Thompson & Tarik Trotter
Hamilton
2017 Danielle Brooks, Cynthia Erivo & Jennifer Hudson (principal soloists)
 · produced by Stephen Bray, Van Dean, Frank Filipetti, Roy Furman, Scott Sanders & Jhett Tolentino
The Color Purple (2015 Broadway Cast) [42][43]
2018 Laura Dreyfuss, Mike Faist, Rachel Bay Jones, Kristolyn Lloyd, Michael Park, Ben Platt, Will Roland & Jennifer Laura Thompson (principal soloists)
 · music & lyrics by Pasek & Paul
 · produced by Pete Ganbarg, Alex Lacamoire, Stacey Mindich, Benj Pasek and Justin Paul
Dear Evan Hansen (Original Broadway Cast)
  • Come from Away (Original Broadway Cast) – Ian Eisendrath, August Eriksmoen, David Hein, David Lai & Irene Sankoff, (producers); David Hein & Irene Sankoff (composers/lyricists)
  • Hello, Dolly! (2017 Broadway Cast)Bette Midler (principal soloist); Steven Epstein (producer)
2019 Etai Benson, Adam Kantor, Katrina Lenk & Ari'el Stachel (principal soloists)
 · music & lyrics by David Yazbek
 · produced by Dean Sharenow and David Yazbek
The Band's Visit (Original Broadway Cast)

2020s

Year Winner(s) Work Nominees Ref.
2020 Reeve Carney, André De Shields, Amber Gray, Eva Noblezada & Patrick Page (principal soloists)
 · music & lyrics by Anaïs Mitchell
 · produced by Mara Isaacs, David Lai, Anaïs Mitchell & Todd Sickafoose
Hadestown (Original Broadway Cast) [46]
2021 Winner TBA on 14 March 2021

[47]

Shows with multiple wins and nominations

Shows with multiple wins

2 wins:

Shows with multiple nominations

4 nominations

  • Gypsy
  • West Side Story

3 nominations:

2 nominations:

Individuals with multiple wins

6 wins:

5 wins:

3 wins:

2 wins:

References

  1. Grammy.com, 10 June 2020
  2. Grammy Awards restructuring
  3. "Past Winners Search". Grammy.Com.
  4. "Grammy Awards 1959". Awards & Shows.
  5. "Grammy Awards 1960". Awards & Shows.
  6. "Grammy Awards 1961". Awards & Shows.
  7. "Grammy Awards 1962". Awards & Shows. Archived from the original on 2016-06-02. Retrieved 2015-03-26.
  8. "Grammy Awards 1963". Awards & Shows. Archived from the original on 2016-12-07. Retrieved 2015-03-26.
  9. "Grammy Awards 1964". Awards & Shows.
  10. "Grammy Awards 1965". Awards & Shows.
  11. "Grammy Awards 1966". Awards & Shows.
  12. "Grammy Awards 1967". Awards & Shows.
  13. "Grammy Awards 1968". Awards & Shows.
  14. "Grammy Awards 1969". Awards & Shows.
  15. "Grammy Awards 1970". Awards & Shows.
  16. "Grammy Awards 1971". Awards & Shows.
  17. "Grammy Awards 1972". Awards & Shows.
  18. "Grammy Awards 1973". Awards & Shows.
  19. "Grammy Awards 1974". Awards & Shows.
  20. "Grammy Awards 1975". Awards & Shows.
  21. "Grammy Awards 1976". Awards & Shows.
  22. "Grammy Awards 1977". Awards & Shows.
  23. "Grammy Awards 1978". Awards & Shows.
  24. "Grammy Awards 1979". Awards & Shows.
  25. "22nd Grammy Awards". RockOntheNet.Com.
  26. "Grammy Award® Winners: Best Musical Show Album". RateYourMusic.
  27. "Grammy Awards 1988". Awards & Shows.
  28. "40th Annual Grammy Award Nominations". DigitalHit.
  29. "41st Annual Grammy Award Nominations". DigitalHit.
  30. "42nd Grammy Award Nominations". DigitalHit.
  31. "43rd Grammy Award Nominations". DigitalHit.
  32. Complete List Of Grammy Nominees — CBS News
  33. "45th Grammy Award Nominations Coverage". DigitalHit.
  34. "50th Grammy Awards". RockOntheNet.Com.
  35. "51st Grammy Awards". RockOntheNet.Com.
  36. "52nd Grammy Awards". RockOntheNet.Com.
  37. "53rd Grammy Awards". RockOntheNet.Com.
  38. "Grammy Nominations Announced". BroadwayWorld.Com.
  39. "54th Grammy Award Nominations Coverage". DigitalHit.
  40. "Full Nomination List of the 55th Annual Grammy Awards". New York Daily News.
  41. "56th Grammy Award Nominations Coverage". DigitalHit.
  42. "Grammy Nominations: Full List of Nominees for 59th Annual Awards". Variety.
  43. "59th Grammy Award Winners". Grammy.org The Recording Academy.
  44. Variety Staff (2017-11-28). "Grammy Nominations 2018: Complete List". Variety. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  45. "THE BAND'S VISIT, CAROUSEL & More Nominated for 2019 GRAMMY AWARDS". BroadwayWorld. December 7, 2018. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  46. Meyer, Dan (January 26, 2020). "Hadestown Cast Recording Wins 2020 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album". Playbill. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
  47. 2020 Nominations List
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