1959 • 1st Annual GRAMMY® Awards

In the beginning, there was heaven and earth and the 1st Annual GRAMMY Awards—more or less in that order.

On May 4, 1959, many of music’s elite—including Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Gene Autry, Johnny Mercer, Henry Mancini and André Previn—gathered for a black-tie dinner and awards presentation inside the Grand Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton. At the same time, other new Academy members were gathering at a function held simultaneously in New York City. “The GRAMMY Awards were a formal event from the beginning and very much in keeping with the times,” says Christine Farnon, who was instrumental in organizing the first show and would go on to become The Academy’s Executive Vice President. “As I recall, no one objected to dressing black-tie back then, though like so much else, that would change eventually.”

But this GRAMMY night, and several to follow, was held in hotel ballrooms on both coasts. The Los Angeles event was emceed by popular political comedian Mort Sahl and featured a musical sketch titled “How South Was My Pacific.” The night was by numerous accounts a significant success. Billboard—then actually still called The Billboard—ran its account of the first night of Music’s Biggest Night with a headline declaring that “Academy Smoothly Moves Into Orbit: First Awards Well-Organized Affair As Top Stars Go On Parade.” The trade magazine even favorably compared the GRAMMY’s debut to the far more established Oscars and Emmys: “It sharply contrasted similar affairs staged by the two older entertainment academies in its precision-like pace in handling the presentations.”

As well organized as the night may have been, from the very start at the GRAMMYs, there would be surprises on GRAMMY night. While Sinatra led all nominees with a grand total of six nominations, he would not turn out to be the night’s biggest winner. Rather the very first Record of the Year and Song of the Year awards both went to “Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare)” by Domenico Modugno, while Album of the Year went to The Music from Peter Gunn by Henry Mancini.

As for Sinatra, he fortunately didn’t go home empty-handed. He won his first GRAMMY not for singing, but rather as art director for his Only the Lonely album that won Best Album Cover. And though only 28 categories were presented on this first GRAMMY night—the least ever—the first winners suggested the diversity that would come to mark the GRAMMY Awards, with winners that ranged from Ella Fitzgerald (Best Vocal Performance, Female, and Best Jazz Performance, Individual) to David Seville and the Chipmunks (Best Comedy Performance and Best Recording For Children, while Best Engineered Record—Non Classical went to Ted Keep for “The Chipmunk Song”), from the Kingston Trio’s “Tom Dooley” (Best County & Western Performance) to the Champ’s “Tequila” (Best Rhythm & Blues Performance).

Much more—in every conceivable way, and some ways still inconceivable—was still to come.

Winners

Category Winner Work Actions
Record Of The Year Domenico Modugno Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare) All Nominees
Album Of The Year Henry Mancini The Music From Peter Gunn All Nominees
Song Of The Year/New Song Of The Year Domenico Modugno Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare) All Nominees
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance Ella Fitzgerald Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Irving Berlin Song Book All Nominees
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Perry Como Catch A Falling Star All Nominees
Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal Keely Smith, Louis Prima That Old Black Magic All Nominees
Best Pop Instrumental Performance Billy May Billy May's Big Fat Brass All Nominees
Best Pop Instrumental Performance Count Basie Basie All Nominees
Best R&B Recording - Best Rhythm & Blues Performance Champs Tequila All Nominees
Best Country & Western Performance Kingston Trio Tom Dooley All Nominees
Best Instrumental Jazz Album Count Basie Basie All Nominees
Best Jazz Performance, Soloist Ella Fitzgerald Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Duke Ellington Song Book All Nominees
Best Recording For Children - Single or Album, Musical or Spoken David Seville And The Chipmunks (Ross Bagdasarian, Sr.) The Chipmunk Song All Nominees
Best Spoken Word Or Non-musical Album Stan Freberg The Best Of The Stan Freberg Shows All Nominees
Best Comedy Album David Seville & The Chipmunks (Ross Bagdasarian, Sr.) The Chipmunk Song All Nominees
Best Musical Theater Album Meredith Willson The Music Man All Nominees
Best Sound Track Album - Original Cast (Not A Composer's Award) Andre Previn Gigi All Nominees
Best Instrumental Composition Nelson Riddle Cross Country Suite All Nominees
Best Arrangement Accompanying A Vocalist Or Instrumentalist Henry Mancini The Music From Peter Gunn All Nominees
Best Album Package - Incl. Album Cover, Graphic Arts, Photography Frank Sinatra Only The Lonely All Nominees
Best Engineered Recording, Non Classical Ted Keep The Chipmunk Song All Nominees
Best Classical Engineered Recording Sherwood Hall III Duets With A Spanish Guitar All Nominees
Best Classical Orchestral Performance Felix Slatkin, conductor Gaiete Parisienne All Nominees
Best Classical Performance, Operatic or Choral Roger Wagner Virtuoso All Nominees
Best Classical Performance-Instrumental Soloist(s) (with orchestra) Van Cliburn Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat Minor, Op. 23 All Nominees
Best Classical Performance-Instrumental Soloist(s) (without orchestra) Andres Segovia Segovia Golden Jubilee All Nominees
Best Chamber Music Performance Alvin Dinkin, Paul Shure, Eleanor Aller Slatkin, Felix Slatkin Beethoven: Quartet 130 All Nominees
Best Classical Vocal Performance Renata Tebaldi, soprano Operatic Recital All Nominees

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